adobe audience manager readiness playbook

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Adobe Audience Manager Operational Readiness Playbook Created by: Scott Rigby and David Contreras Date: June 2015

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Page 1: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Adobe Audience Manager

Operational Readiness Playbook

Created by: Scott Rigby and David Contreras

Date: June 2015

Page 2: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Playbook Objective

The objective of this document is to get your business operationally ready for the

implementation and deployment of Adobe Audience. This will help you and your organisation –

as new Adobe Audience Manager user – to drive maximum value from your investment in

Adobe technology.

Although we have seen many projects succeed, others have faltered due to a lack of internal

investment in the business to ensure they are operationally ready to adopt this new technology.

This playbook will help guide you to avoid some of the common areas we have identified as

missing in less successful implementations.

The recommendations and best practices in Adobe playbooks are ideally intended to be applied

to your business in parallel to your technology solution deployment, to ensure that by the time

you go-live with your solution your business is best positioned to realise value from your

investment.

Adobe playbooks use a common digital governance structure focusing on the key areas of

leadership, strategy, people, product and process to deliver a robust approach to readying your

business whether you are deploying one Adobe solution or multiple.

This playbook should be read by:

Chief Marketing Officer Head of Digital, Head of Strategy, Head of Marketing Head of Analytics, Customer Insights Lead, Digital Channel Analyst Solution Architects, Head of Implementation, Digital Implementation Leads Program Managers, Project Managers, Business Analysts

Page 3: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Contents

1 INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................... 6

1.1 About Adobe Audience Manager ..................................................................................6

1.1.1 Types of Data Collected .........................................................................................6

1.1.2 Custom Segment Generation .................................................................................7

1.1.3 Performance Reporting ..........................................................................................7

1.1.4 Ad Server Integration .............................................................................................8

1.1.5 Destination Publishing ...........................................................................................8

1.1.6 Tag Management ...................................................................................................9

1.1.7 Data Security and Privacy ......................................................................................9

1.2 About this Playbook ......................................................................................................9

2 LEADERSHIP......................................................................................................... 10

2.1 Sponsorship ................................................................................................................11

2.2 Buy-In .........................................................................................................................12

2.3 Communication ...........................................................................................................12

2.3.1 Communication management ..............................................................................12

2.3.2 Recommended communications process and principles ......................................13

2.3.3 Setting communication goals ...............................................................................13

2.3.4 Recommendations on a communication approach ...............................................14

2.4 Accountability ..............................................................................................................15

2.4.1 Steering committee ..............................................................................................16

2.4.2 Common roles and responsibilities within a steering committee ...........................16

2.4.3 Setting up a working group ..................................................................................19

3 STRATEGY ............................................................................................................ 19

3.1 Digital Marketing Maturity Model .................................................................................20

3.2 Focus ..........................................................................................................................25

3.2.1 Digital Strategy ....................................................................................................25

3.2.2 Key Performance Indicator: ..................................................................................29

3.3 Alignment ....................................................................................................................30

3.3.1 Targeting and Personalisation Strategy ...............................................................31

3.3.2 Building your segments ........................................................................................32

Page 4: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

3.3.3 Targeting and Personalisation .............................................................................33

3.4 Innovation ...................................................................................................................33

4 PEOPLE ................................................................................................................. 33

4.1 Expertise .....................................................................................................................33

4.2 Structure .....................................................................................................................34

4.2.1 Structures Types ..................................................................................................35

4.2.2 Project Based Recommended Organisational Structure ......................................36

4.2.3 Business Recommended Organisational Structure ..............................................37

4.2.4 Roles & Responsibilities ......................................................................................38

4.3 Resources...................................................................................................................44

4.3.1 Resource Model ...................................................................................................44

4.4 Community..................................................................................................................45

4.5 Culture ........................................................................................................................46

5 PROCESS .............................................................................................................. 47

5.1 Deployment.................................................................................................................47

5.1.1 Implementation Methodology ...............................................................................48

5.1.2 Data Integration Methods .....................................................................................53

5.2 Usage .........................................................................................................................55

5.2.1 Administration ......................................................................................................56

5.2.2 Access Levels ......................................................................................................56

5.3 Sustainability ...............................................................................................................58

5.3.1 Maintaining a Single View of the Customers ........................................................58

5.3.2 Process to Adopt Traditional or Emerging Channels ............................................58

5.3.3 Track and Upgrade ..............................................................................................58

5.3.4 Optimise and Report for Success .........................................................................58

6 TECHNOLOGY / PRODUCT .................................................................................. 59

6.1 Solution fit ...................................................................................................................59

6.1.1 Solution Architecture ............................................................................................59

6.2 Integrations .................................................................................................................62

6.2.1 Marketing Cloud Integrations ...............................................................................62

6.2.2 Common Third-Party Integrations ........................................................................63

6.3 Data Security and Privacy ...........................................................................................65

Page 5: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

6.4 Democratisation ..........................................................................................................70

6.4.1 Automation ..........................................................................................................71

6.5 Leveraging your investment (The Big Picture) .............................................................71

7 CHECKLIST ........................................................................................................... 73

8 ADOBE AUDIENCE MANAGER PRODUCT MATURITY ACTIVITIES ................. 74

9 ASSISTANCE CONSULTING OPERATIONAL MATURITY REVIEW .................. 75

10 ADOBE AUDIENCE MANAGER GLOSSARY OF TERMS ................................ 75

11 ADOBE AUDIENCE MANAGER TEMPLATES .................................................. 78

11.1 Customer Profile Template .........................................................................................78

11.2 Deep dive insights request template: ..........................................................................79

Page 6: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

1 Introduction

1.1 About Adobe Audience Manager

Adobe Audience Manager is the industry’s first data management platform that consolidates

audience information from all available sources. It identifies, quantifies and optimises high-value

target audiences, which can then be offered to advertisers via an integrated, secure, privacy-

friendly management system that works across all advertising distribution platforms.

Adobe Audience Manager helps you manage your data pipeline by bringing your audience data

sets together, making it easy to collect commercially relevant information about site visitors,

create marketable segments and serve targeted advertising and content to the right audience.

The solution also offers easy tag deployment and

management with robust data collection, control and

protection.

1.1.1 Types Of Data Collected

Adobe Audience Manager helps you collect and manage

first-party, second-party and third-party data.

Unlocking customer information assets stored in multiple

silos is one of the biggest data challenges faced by

companies today. From CRM databases, to registration

systems, to ad servers and so forth, companies require tools

that help centralise valuable data and manage customer and

audience information as a single strategic data asset. Adobe

Audience Manager helps you unlock isolated customer

information and manage data collection from multiple

sources. Collected data can be managed based on data

element time-to-live (TTL) values, which helps your

organisation control data expiration across all sources.

Audience Manager is designed to help you manage the

following types of data:

First-party data collection (own data): First-party data collection is a main Adobe

Audience Manager feature. This core competency addresses the needs of publishers or

advertisers who want to use proprietary data as the cornerstone of their marketing

programs or for targeting and modelling against other data sources.

Second-party data collection (partner data): Second-party data comes from a

strategic business partner (it's not publisher data). This information is collected and

managed just like first-party data.

Tip

Publishers: Companies

that manage the placement

of advertisements, texts

and other product links on

behalf of a company

(advertiser). Industries

associated in this category

are Media, Entertainment,

Loyalty and Retail.

Advertisers: Companies

that own sales, inventories

and marketing activities of

products or services.

Advertisers partner with

publishers to promote their

offerings. Common

industries associated to the

advertisers are automobile,

finance, insurance

manufacturers, and travel.

Page 7: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Third-party data collection (purchased data): Third-party data is information

purchased, collected and shared by vendors outside of Adobe Audience Manager.

1.1.2 Custom Segment Generation

Data sources are represented in a client-specific trait taxonomy. Publishers can customise and

modify this taxonomy based on their data source and business use cases. Within the Adobe

Audience Manager interface, publisher team members can browse traits and segments to

combine them into new marketing segments.

You can also report on historical trait and segment size as segments are created. This helps

publisher team members understand potential inventory and lets them adjust segment

composition based on reporting data.

Qualification begins after a segment is saved in the Adobe Audience Manager interface. The

system uses two complimentary methodologies that help ensure full segment coverage across a

publisher’s entire user base:

Instant segment qualification: Qualifies users based on real-time data collection

processes.

Processed segments: Back-end processing of users not yet seen again who qualify

based on new segment rules criteria.

1.1.3 Performance Reporting

Adobe Audience Manager offers standard reporting interfaces for all data stored on user traits

and segments, including segment sizes, segment composition, targeting platform mappings

(destinations) and custom reports.

Overlap analysis and lookalike modelling

In addition to custom segment generation and standard reporting, publishers are interested in

understanding data relationships between all of their data elements and segments. Adobe

Audience Manager can create data overlay reports based on a publisher’s specific needs. Some

examples might include:

Third-party data overlaid against first-party data.

Third-party to third-party overlap for data analysis and scoring (e.g. gender across four

providers).

First-party data relationships.

Segment-to-segment overlap and analysis for additional lookalike modelling.

Page 8: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

The Adobe consulting teams and partner solutions can work with you to understand your data

and reporting needs, create report templates, create custom reports and schedule delivery of all

overlap and lookalike reports.

Inventory and audience insight

Inventory and audience insight is closely tied to segment generation and overlay reporting.

Inventory and audience insight reports help you understand:

How audiences overlap, or trend, against individual sites and domains.

Potential ad inventory based on unique users within audience segments.

Audience overlap against sites and domains

As part of a data collection strategy, publishers can capture site, domain and site groupings in

the standard data. This gives publishers full visibility into overlap across sites, by data segment

across sites or overlap of any data combination of trait, segment, site, domain or site grouping.

Data is available in a number of areas depending on the specific use case:

Standard reporting based on overlap segments generated.

Custom overlay report templates as defined above.

Segment creation wizard available via the user interface.

1.1.4 Ad Server Integration

The platform allows you to manage a single data repository and then leverage that data across

all your channels. This can include ad servers, content optimisation, creative optimisation, video

delivery and search.

Adobe Audience Manager has developed a central interface for managing new targeting

destinations that provide multiple integration points depending on the use case and technical

implementation of the external system.

1.1.5 Destination Publishing

With data management platforms, it is important to standardise the data transfer mechanisms

so they can be easily configured and managed by Adobe’s systems. When the data arrives to

the target system (ad server, DSP, ad network, etc.) that system is called the destination. Adobe

Audience Manager allows publishers to easily set up new destinations in the interface with the

Page 9: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

“destination builder” which helps you manage URL, cookie-based or server-to-server

destinations.

1.1.6 Dynamic Tag Management

Dynamic tag management is a key feature of the Audience Manager platform. Dynamic tag

management consists of two core components: JavaScript container code and a graphical user

interface that helps you manage tags for deployment and data collection on your Web site.

The system lets customers create, schedule, deploy and manage their own tags. Additionally,

the intuitive management interface uses conditional logic that provides flexibility when managing

tags across a complex site environment. Adobe is committed to developing this platform and

supporting our clients and partners. We are also working to integrate our platform into the

Adobe Marketing Cloud.

1.1.7 Data Security And Privacy

Data security is an important part of any data

management system. Adobe Audience Manager has

controls and systems designed to improve data

security and prevent data leakage.

1.2 About This Playbook

This document follows a structure that will help you understand the key focus areas to nurture

the implementation of Adobe Audience Manager. This structure is based the digital governance

framework, which creates the appropriate business environment for digital to succeed. It

includes:

Leadership—Executive buy-in and support for the implementation and adoption.

Strategy—Clarity and alignment around key business goals for evaluating digital

performance.

People—Resources, expertise and the appropriate team structure to run Adobe

Audience Manager effectively.

Process—Procedures, project management and workflows for deploying and using

Adobe Audience Manager effectively.

Product—Solution fit, common integration and automation.

Tip

Click here to read more on the

Data Security and Privacy

Page 10: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

What’s different about digital? Everything.

2 Leadership

Leadership is critical — it provides the foundation for successful

digital transformation.

C-Suite involvement is needed to drive a digital transformation

program, budget and outcome. Your role as the project sponsor is

to contribute with a strong understanding of how Adobe Audience

Manager and digital in general will transform the business.

Position yourself as the subject matter expert and functional

leader in a hands-on mode.

A common trait you will find in successful digital teams is that they

are owned and managed by people who are prepared to make the

necessary investments in talent, equipment and training. Leaders are skilled at extracting

Tip

Projects which have

an executive

sponsor, project

name, defined

budget & KPIs set

across the team

outperform those

that don’t.

People

Culture shift, new skills, strategic in-sourcing, diverse talent and skillset.

Strategy - Aligned to business goals, common goals and KPIs, communicated to business.

Process

‘Always-on marketing’, testing and next-best offer. A single source of truth. Digital and traditional merge.

Product (Technology)

Deploy the right technology to deliver the best customer

experience.

Leadership

Stakeholder buy-in, single executive sponsor, defined program of work and Budget, insight-driven culture.

Page 11: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

optimal performance from team members and developing strategies that take full advantage of

their unique talents.

Leadership consists of four subcomponents: sponsorship, buy-in, communication and

accountability.

2.1 Sponsorship

Having an effective executive sponsor will help the project achieve maximum success. To be

truly effective, this internal executive sponsor should have enough seniority and influence within

the business to get buy-in from other stakeholders across the organisation. Having a high level

of self-interest in the project’s success and a passion for digital transformation — and truly

believing in how Adobe Audience Manager is going to transform the business — are also

critical.

An effective executive sponsor should guarantee the implementation of Adobe Audience

Manager stays in line with the corporate strategy, protecting it from conflicting initiatives or

internal politics and helping address any limiting factors, such as resource or budget constraints.

The Four Ps of Execute Sponsorship

Source: Dykes, Brent. 2011. Web Analytics Action Hero. Adobe Press.

Prioritisation

To be successful, Adobe Audience Manager needs to be aligned with key business goals. The executive sponsor should provide crucial direction to the team, ensuring the implementation is always in line with the corporate strategy and top priorities.

Protection

The executive sponsor will play an important role in protecting you, the digital and the implementation from other conflicting initiatives or corporate politics.

Problem solving

Using their influence within the organisation, the executive sponsor should step in to remove any problems that may impede the success of the implementation, such as resource or budget constraints.

Promotion

The executive sponsor will play a key role in championing the benefits of Adobe Audience Manager, holding people accountable, and promoting digital wins within the organisation, especially among other executives.

Page 12: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

2.2 Buy-In

Achieving management buy-in across your leadership team is

also key. Having multiple change agents will help you drive

adoption easier and faster. The responsibility for the

implementation and deployment of Adobe Audience Manager

needs to be shared by the entire leadership team.

It is then the executive sponsor’s responsibility to win over the

executive team by sharing examples that prove the value of

Adobe Audience Manager and digital. Typically this focuses on

delivering a better customer experience and subsequent

benefits to the business.

When implementing digital projects such as Adobe Audience Manager, leaders will be

responsible for monitoring different departments and teams owning different parts of digital

marketing initiatives. It is critical to make sure that all groups share a common strategy to

achieve common goals. Having an internal roadshow to win support from executives will help

raise awareness towards aligning all teams and obtaining the necessary resources for an

optimal implementation.

2.3 Communication

To get the organisation on board, it is always a good idea to share the vision and repeatedly

reinforce the reason why your company is investing in Adobe Audience Manager technology by

articulating both the customer benefits and business benefits. Sharing documentation such as

success case studies of digital implementations will help you validate why and how this

investment will take the organisation to a new level. If you want the organisation to embrace

digital transformation, it’s important to let employees know it’s a priority.

2.3.1 Communication Management

A communication strategy can lay out the foundation and framework for communicating

initiatives and objectives across business and technology teams. It can also help by:

Providing guidance and a framework for effective communications within and outside of

the project.

Ensuring that proper protocols are always followed when preparing and delivering

communication.

Providing precise and concise project communications at the right time.

Tip

Having cross function

stakeholder

participation in the

vision elicits

stakeholder buy-in

Page 13: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Involving all necessary stakeholders and maintaining regular contact to keep

transparency in all transactions.

Having clear communication channels with well-defined roles and responsibilities.

Clarifying doubts, overcoming challenges and averting risks that affect the project.

Building trust and developing open relationships between the parties.

Promoting openness and transparency.

2.3.2 Recommended Communications Process and Principles

You can build your communication strategy around the following key principles:

Communication is critical to effect change: Ongoing and timely communication is a

fundamental requirement to inform and respond to stakeholders about the change; its

impact on them and its outcomes; to enable feedback; to manage expectations; to

ensure a smooth change transition; and to support uptake and continual improvement.

Communication delivery is local: Communication from the local area will mean that

messages are relayed in a language that is relevant to the audience. Engagement with

local communicators across the business and technology will increase the effectiveness

of the communication.

Communication is consistent and repetitive: With a common approach across the

program, stakeholders will come to expect communication through specific methods

(channels), with given formats (look) and timing. Repeating key messages through

multiple channels will increase the amount of information that is absorbed.

Communication is linked to the project objectives: Linking the communication to the

objectives provides a context and reasoning behind change. Repeatedly providing these

links will serve as reminders as to the wider benefits of the project.

2.3.3 Setting Communication Goals

All communication developed and distributed throughout the project is intended to achieve the

following goals:

• Stakeholders and project team members are aware and informed:

o Stakeholders and project team members should receive timely information about

what is happening (why, when and how and what it means to them). This

information starts at a generic level (which is repeated throughout the project

lifecycle) and becomes more detailed, specific and targeted to the audience as

the project progresses. This information enables stakeholders to think about,

understand and be prepared for change and plan for future project streams of

work.

Page 14: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

• Stakeholders and project team members are engaged:

o Opportunities are created and communicated to key stakeholders to support

them in exploring, becoming involved in and committing to a new way of doing

things, for example:

Different stakeholders and project team members will move through and

transition at different rates and times.

Communication will aim to gain key stakeholders and project team

members’ commitment through implementation.

Strategies and implementation roadmaps can be developed to manage

stakeholders and project team members who are resistant to the change

throughout the transition.

o Communication is two-way, with stakeholder input and feedback sought and

valued at all stages.

o Stakeholders and project team members expectations are managed:

The aim of communication is to provide set expectations of strategic

initiatives, program or project scope, associated constraints, risks and

dependencies, explain why this may differ from expectations (in targeted

messages) and to provide ongoing updates on expected and actual

outcomes.

o Acquisition of skills and knowledge is supported.

o Training is backed up by supporting communication to reinforce the training and

provide opportunities to share knowledge.

2.3.4 Recommendations On A Communication Approach

An approach to communication management for the project may

include:

o Conduct an effective stakeholder analysis:

Stakeholder analysis is developed at the

project board, user group, project team and stakeholder levels.

The stakeholder analysis will focus on all

parties (users, management, executives or third parties) required

to achieve the desired outcomes and any parties impacted by

the change to ensure full coverage.

Tip

Use a DACI model to

categorise

stakeholders and

their communication

needs

Page 15: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Categorise stakeholders into specific audiences (communication

channels).

o Identify information requirements of all parties and establish distribution lists by

subject area:

Have regular meetings. There should be regular meetings organised with

various levels within the project to ensure that there is regular

communication.

Where project team meetings do not meet communication requirements

(for example, where cross-area representation is required for specific

project deliverables) use these sparingly :

One-on-one meetings may be required to obtain specific input or

deliver important messages (as required).

A common wiki or alternate online knowledge management solution to

provide access to all parties and used by some to provide a workspace.

A shared drive to maintain the main reference point for overview of the

project with links to documentation for wide dissemination and feedback.

Electronic newsletter or company-wide communications, providing regular

project news (updates, upcoming events, outcomes) delivered by email.

Email may be used for targeted, individual or group communication —

with a specific purpose.

Standard templates for communicating regular information such as

project status reports, meeting minutes and reports should be used to

ensure communication is consistent and repeatable.

o Track required message delivery.

2.4 Accountability

Your organisation is investing in Adobe Audience Manager

and top executives are expecting results. For this to happen,

it is the job of the leader and senior stakeholders to hold

themselves and their people accountable — employees,

teams, partners and most importantly him or herself. Start

with changing the perception that accountability is about

punishment and hard discipline. It should really be about

learning and improvement.

To define accountability, you can create a project charter.

TIP

Think about how your

team’s bonuses are

measured and if they

are being compensated

appropriately for project

success.

Page 16: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

This document states that a project exists, why it is important, who is involved, its timeframes,

the expected outcomes and the resources needed for it to be successful. It also gives you

written authority to begin work.

2.4.1 Steering Committee

Setting up a group of high-level stakeholders and experts will help you achieve the four

subcomponents of leadership and, at the same time, set the direction of the project. This

steering committee can also help by:

• Prioritising initiatives.

• Reviewing business cases for new initiatives.

• Lobbying for the necessary time, personnel and budget.

• Ensuring quality in decision making.

• Encouraging a collaborative work environment.

• Monitoring progress towards goals.

• Controlling scope and resolving conflicts.

2.4.2 Common Roles And Responsibilities Within A Steering Committee

The following high-level roles and responsibilities are based on industry-standard practices for

steering committees.

Role(s)

Responsibility

Business or

Technology

Sponsor

The sponsor is ultimately accountable for the outcome of the project and is

responsible for securing spending authority and resources.

• Vocal and visible champion.

• Legitimises and lends credibility to the strategic goals and objectives.

• Is the escalation point for changes and issues outside the agreed tolerances?

• Assists with stakeholder engagement where required.

Business

Executives

The executive’s role is to ensure that the project is focused on achieving its objectives

and ensuring a cost-conscious approach, delivering a product that will achieve the

forecast benefits, balancing the demands of the business.

• Designs and appoints the project management teams.

• Oversees the development of the business case, ensuring corporate strategic

alignment.

• Monitors and controls the progress at a strategic level, in particular reviewing

Page 17: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

the business case regularly.

• Escalates issues and risks.

• Is the escalation point for issues and risks and ensures that any risks

associated with the business case are identified, assessed and controlled.

• Makes decisions on escalated issues, with particular focus on continued

business justification.

• Ensures overall business assurance and ensures that the project remains on

target to deliver products that will achieve the expected business benefits.

Business

Owner

This role represents the interests of all those who will use the product, including

operations and maintenance, those for whom the product will achieve an objective or

those who will use the product to deliver the benefits and value drivers.

Provides quality expectations and defines acceptance criteria.

Ensures that the desired outcome is specified.

Ensures that products will deliver the desired outcomes and meet user

requirements.

Ensures that the expected benefits are realised.

Provides a statement of actual versus forecast benefits at the benefits reviews.

Resolves user requirements conflicts.

Technical

Owner

This role represents the interests of those designing, developing, facilitating,

procuring and implementing the product. This role is accountable for the quality of

products delivered by suppliers and is responsible for the technical integrity of the

project.

Assesses and confirm the viability of the approach.

Ensures that proposals for designing and developing the products are realistic.

Advises on the selection of design, development and acceptance methods.

Ensures quality procedures are used correctly so that products adhere to

requirements.

Assurance

Owner

Assurance covers the primary stakeholder interests of the business, technical staff,

end-users and suppliers.

Ensures the right people are planned to be involved in quality inspection at the

correct points in the product’s development.

Sees that staff are properly trained in the quality methods.

Ensures that quality methods are being correctly followed.

Makes sure that quality control follow-up actions are dealt with correctly.

Ensures that an acceptable solution is being developed.

Monitors scope creep to ensure that the scope of the project is not changing

unnoticed.

Oversees internal and external communications to ensure they are working.

Page 18: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Ensures applicable standards are being used.

Ensures the needs of specialist interests (for example, security) are being

observed.

Business assurance responsibilities

Assists to develop the business case and benefits review plan.

Reviews the business case for compliance with corporate standards.

Verifies the business case against external events.

Checks that the business case is being adhered to throughout the project.

Checks that the project remains aligned to the corporate strategy and continues to

provide value for money.

User assurance responsibilities

Ensures that the specification of users’ needs is accurate, complete and

unambiguous.

Assesses whether the solution will meet users’ needs and is progressing towards

that target.

Advises on the impact of potential changes from users’ point of view.

Ensures that the quality activities relating to products at all stages has appropriate

user representation.

Ensures that quality control procedures are used correctly to ensure that products

meet user requirements.

Supplier assurance responsibilities

Reviews the product descriptions (features and capabilities) and aligns to

delivery.

Advises on the selection of the development strategy, design and methods.

Ensures that any supplier and operating standards defined for the project are met

and used to good effect.

Advises on potential changes and their impact on the correctness, completeness

and integrity of products against their product description from a supplier

perspective.

Assesses whether quality control procedures are used correctly so that products

adhere to requirements.

Project

Manager

The project manager has the authority to run the day-to-day operations with the

prime responsibility of ensuring that the project produces the required products within

the specified tolerances of time, cost, quality, scope, risk and benefits.

Effective project management requires that the project management team,

as a whole, possesses and applies the knowledge in several areas:

o Project management itself.

o Business and industry domain knowledge specific to the project.

o Technology knowledge required by the project.

Page 19: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

o Interpersonal and communication skills.

The project management framework consists of five key activity groups:

Initiation, Planning, Execution, Monitoring and Control and Closing. These

are the processes or activities for managing the project and they are different

to the project life cycle.

The project life cycle activities are generally sequential while project

management activities are performed as below because project

management activities may overlap and repeat along the timeline depending

on risks (for example, the controlling activities may lead back to planning to

revise the project plan as a result of changes).

You can also include partners and key vendors as part of the steering committee. Their broad

understanding and experience with Adobe Audience Manager technology can positively benefit

the outcomes of your Adobe Audience Manager implementation.

2.4.3 Setting Up A Working Group

Having a working group with subject-matter experts working below a steering committee will

help achieve specified goals. In your Adobe Audience Manager implementation, this working

group includes the practitioner leads executing the project. They would meet more regularly and

report upwards to the steering committee.

The working group should have a weekly discussion where issues and risks are addressed and

the status, progress and approach of the project are discussed.

3 Strategy

Gaining a clear vision of what it takes to be able to assess and measure your audience

management efforts is critical to becoming a high-performing business.

“74% of business executives say their company has a business strategy.

Only 15% believe that their company has the skills and capabilities to

execute on that strategy.”

Forrester: Accelerating your digital business, 2013

Page 20: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

3.1 Digital Marketing Maturity Model

The first step to craft your digital marketing strategy is to

evaluate the level of maturity of your digital marketing

landscape. To help you in this endeavour, Adobe has

designed a self-assessment tool which indicates the key

drivers of success in a digital, data-driven organisation across

seven digital marketing dimensions – channels, audiences,

context, content, assets, campaigns and data.

Digital Marketing Dimensions

Channels

Channels refers to the various locations and touch points where customers can interact with

your brand and how your digital strategy enables social engagement, paid and organic search

visibility, email deliverability and site optimisation among other functions.

Tip

Check the self-assessment

tool to assess your

organisation’s Digital

Marketing maturity.

Page 21: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Audiences

Audiences refers to the activities and actions taken to define and target specific customer

segments. It also refers to the skillsets necessary to analyse and create segments used for

targeting.

Context

Context refers to the circumstances and events that would comprise a customer’s master

marketing profile. Organisations nowadays gain a competitive advantage by leveraging

technology to contextualise messaging and reach segments through statistical modelling and

data mining which allows you to identify and refine targeting based upon customer touch points.

Content

Content refers to the asset management, creative workflows and tools needed to publish and

optimise digital experiences. It is determined by the activities undertaken to schedule, publish,

promote track and monitor the content throughout channels and its performance.

Assets

Assets refers to having the resources necessary to support the creation and management of

digital assets published and used for marketing messages and to meet the organisation’s

needs.

Campaigns

Campaigns refer to the activities and operations to manage the messaging of brand and

marketing portfolios to measure performance in addition to having the skills to create a master

strategic plan for campaign development and delivery and owning the systems that enables its

execution.

Data

Data refers to the data collection, definition and reporting on the performance of key metrics,

performance indicators and goals

Page 22: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

INITIATED EMERGED FOCUSED ADVANCED OPTIMISED

Channels Simple impression

or click tracking.

Single or limited

used channels.

Limited media

mix.

Engaging with

customers in

several outbound

channels.

Ability to start

conversation

based on

customer actions

on the Web site

and social media

channels.

Engaging with

customers in

several outbound

and inbound

channels.

Start relevant

conversation

based on user

activity,

segmentations.

Several channels

are managed in a

centralised

manner.

Activities and

behaviours are

tracked and

analysed.

Have a strategic

plan for

communicating and

interacting with

customers across

channels in real

time.

Listen, track and

react to social

activities in real

time.

Have an attribution

model that credits

marketing efforts

with direct results.

Have a strategic

plan for

communicating and

interacting with

customers across

channels in real

time.

Target and optimise

digital content

based on channel

and customer

interaction point.

Marketing spend is

automated based

on performance.

Listen, track and

react to social

activities in real

time.

Have an attribution

model that credits

marketing efforts

with direct results.

Audiences Basic

understanding of

customer profiles.

Optimisation is

done as ideas

strike.

An optimisation

and

personalisation

roadmap is

created.

Using audience

segment profiles

to inform

advertising and

offers.

Optimisation and

personalisation

roadmap is

influenced by a

range of

stakeholders

across the

business.

Discipline-based

testing.

Own necessary

skills to analyse and

create audience

segments used for

targeting.

Ability to leverage

targeted customer

lists from ad-hoc

analysis.

Deliver tailored

content and

experiences to

unknown visitors

Own necessary

skills to analyse

and create

audience segments

used for targeting.

Use analytics data

to refine and adjust

segment

definitions.

Ability to leverage

targeted customer

lists from ad-hoc

analysis.

INITIATED EMERGED

FOCUSED ADVANCED

OPTIMISED

Page 23: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

based on

behavioural data,

lookalike modelling

or third-party data.

Deliver tailored

content and

experiences to

unknown visitors

based on

behavioural data,

lookalike modelling

or third-party data.

Context Basic testing is

undertaken to

personalise email

marketing

campaigns and

offline material.

Own a customer

database used for

basic

personalisation.

Access

demographic

information to

deliver basic

personalised

campaigns.

Initial steps on

channel targeting.

Web site, email

communication

and advertising

channels are

being

personalised.

Cross-site

targeting.

Leverage

segmentation data

to personalise

basic workflows

across various

channels.

Ability to capture,

store and analyse

all touch points in

the customer

journey.

Geo-location,

demographic and

other third-party

data sets are

integrated with

Adobe analytics

data and used as

traits in the

customer profile.

Ability to capture,

store and analyse

all touch points in

the customer

journey.

Ability to tailor

experiences based

on the customer

recent online

behaviour.

Geo-location,

demographic and

other third-party

data sets are

integrated with our

analytics data and

used as traits in the

customer profile.

Content Sporadic

optimisation

activities are done

by isolated teams

or individuals.

All Web site and

campaign

variations are

managed

independently.

Basic

understanding of

content

effectiveness.

Content is

integrated with the

use of third-party

tools.

Limited support

from IT to allow

content flow

across campaign

channels.

There are

activities in place

to measure

content

effectiveness for

further

optimisation.

There are testing

variables to

optimise content.

IT and systems

established to

share content

across business

units.

Own sufficient

resources to

manage the content

necessary to meet

the organisation’s

needs.

Own the marketing

technology strategy

and defined

technology roadmap

using assistance

from IT/IS as

needed.

Social content

publishing is

scheduled and

coordinated across

the various social

networks and

performance is

included in your

Web analytics data.

Own sufficient

resources to

manage the content

necessary to meet

the organisation’s

needs.

Own the marketing

technology strategy

and defined

technology road

map using

assistance from

IT/IS as needed.

Social content

publishing is

scheduled and

coordinated across

the various social

networks and

performance is

included in your

Web analytics data.

There are strong

mechanisms to

assess content

usage and

cleansing.

Page 24: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Assets Limited Ad-hoc inventories

and asset

classification.

One-way

syndication of

assets.

Document and

test plans,

requirements

insights and

posts in a shared

space.

Enterprise

repository for

digital assets and

formal asset

lifecycle.

Own a searchable

central repository

for digital asset

management that

catalogues current

and historical

assets.

Effective

communication and

production with

agencies.

Create sufficient

assets for effective

A/B testing and

personalisation.

Own a searchable

central repository

for digital asset

management that

catalogues current

and historical

assets.

Effective

communication and

production with

agencies.

Ability to create and

deploy once across

multiple channels

and devices.

Create sufficient

assets for effective

A/B testing and

personalisation.

Campaigns Basic customer

profiling for

marketing tactics.

Channels not

integrated. Deliver

messages and get

results in different

advertising

channels.

Create automated

responses to

customer action in

Web sites.

Campaigns are

mostly reactive.

Execute

campaigns in

various

decentralised

channels.

Capacity to report

on key metrics.

Campaigns are

refined

periodically when

required.

Online and offline

channels are

employed to

deliver marketing

messages.

Business units

work in isolation to

produce content

and execute

marketing

campaigns.

There are

measurement

mechanisms in

place.

Ability to launch and

manage campaigns,

including analysis to

measure campaign

performance.

Deliver campaigns

across multiple

online and offline

channels.

Use an agile,

iterative or test-and-

learn process in the

design, execution

and analysis of

campaign

programs.

Ability to launch

and manage

campaigns,

including analysis

to measure

campaign

performance.

Ability to alter

campaigns based

on real-time

performance data.

Deliver campaigns

across multiple

online and offline

channels.

Use an agile,

iterative or test-and-

learn process in the

design, execution

and analysis of

campaign

programs.

Data Limited data

management

strategy.

Few business

units analyse

data.

There is a basic

data management

strategy.

Key business

units use data to

understand

customers and

crate meaningful

decisions.

Key stakeholders

are

knowledgeable on

There is a data

management

strategy in place

integrating various

first, second and

third party data

sources.

There are

mechanisms in

place for reporting

and decision

making.

Analytics processes

have executive

sponsorship and

support.

Team is

knowledgeable and

has skillset for

analytics and

reporting needs.

Online and offline

data integrated and

provide a single

Analytics processes

have executive

sponsorship and

support.

Team is sufficiently

trained and has

skillset for analytics

and reporting

needs.

Online and offline

data integrated and

provide a single

Page 25: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

the use of data.

Reporting is basic.

Some business

units work

cooperatively

towards goal

achievement.

view of the

customer.

Data is readily

available and used

throughout the

organisation.

Reporting is

automated and

distributed.

view of the

customer.

Data is readily

available and used

throughout the

organisation.

Reporting is

automated and

distributed.

Own data mining

tools that allow

search through

large volumes of

data.

Analytics program

uses statistical

modelling to identify

trends and predict

outcomes.

3.2 Focus

Focus means understanding and focusing on the organisation’s key business goals and

strategic initiatives to achieve objectives. It is also important to prioritise these goals as well as

their scope and timing for completion. As business competitive environments change it’s also

important to review your business strategy and goals on a quarterly or bi-annual basis to ensure

they remain relevant to the current environment.

3.2.1 Digital Strategy

One of the biggest digital challenges organisations face is being able to define what they are

trying to achieve through digital channels. In many cases, corporate Web sites aren’t owned by

a single manager leading to a mix of different or, even worse, competing interests and

purposes. This causes a mixture of counterproductive results.

A clear digital strategy enables your digital team to align its activities to the key priorities of your

business and succeed as an integral part of your organisation. A key point to consider is that

your digital strategy should always be aligned to the overall business goals of the organisation.

These are steps you can follow to craft your digital strategy:

Identify all of the key stakeholder groups that have input into your company’s d igital

approach.

Gather key business objectives from each group separately.

Merge the goals into a set of four to five key objectives.

Page 26: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Based on your understanding of the corporate strategy, prioritise and rank the list of

goals.

In a group meeting, review and refine the goals with key stakeholders. If needed, involve

a neutral third party to mediate potential disagreements.

Based on stakeholder feedback, finalise the business objectives and define KPIs to

measure these by.

Share an overview of the agreed upon digital strategy with key stakeholders.

Page 27: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

A Suggested Digital Strategy Framework

Key terminology

Enterprise goals:

• Strategic business goals and objectives.

• Aligned across the business at an enterprise level.

• Tied to increased revenue (or decreased costs).

• Can include medium to long-term vision of the company.

Examples: Increase revenue (by five per cent), expand product line (new line of business),

improve customer satisfaction (by five per cent).

Digital goals:

• Strategic business goals and objectives for your digital channel.

• Identify how the digital channel will contribute to achieving the enterprise goals.

• There can be more than one digital goal for each enterprise goal.

Page 28: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Examples: Increase online sales (by five per cent), increase online audience (by 10 per cent),

increase online customer satisfaction (by five per cent).

Below is the Adobe business optimisation for success framework. Defining your business goals

is the key first step in this process so it is paramount to have these communicated and agreed

upfront.

Initiatives:

• Strategic digital goals.

• Actionable projects.

• Relates to digital channel as a whole (not just Web analytics).

Examples: reduce shopping cart abandonment, increase mobile content and increase new

visitors.

Tactics:

• Specific actionable online business requirements.

• Gaps in achieving online initiatives and goals.

• Achievable end goal.

Examples: measure shopping cart abandonment, measure application form abandonment and

report mobile usage.

Page 29: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Key performance indicator (KPI):

Key metric to evaluate business success of digital activities.

Example (business objectives and metrics)

Business objective Metric

1. $500M in sales through digital channels Revenue

2. Increase brand awareness Visitors

3. Drive deeper and enduring customer

relationships

Logins

Digital Strategy Framework

3.2.2 Key Performance Indicators

Focus also includes defining the key performance indicators (KPIs). In digital, these indicators

can be metrics such as online revenue or applications, along with associated targets for those

metrics (for example, increase application rate by 30%).

A common mistake when setting KPIs is selecting random metrics from an industry-related list

and expecting they will fit and perform towards achieving your unique business goals. Make

sure you always start with understanding your business goals before selecting appropriate KPIs.

As you deploy your digital properties using Adobe Social you will be able to use these KPIs to

understand the impact changes in content, design and architecture have had as an impact on

your business.

Page 30: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

What are Key Performance Indicators?

Source: Dykes, Brent. 2010. KPIs: Focus on the Special ‘K”.

When implementing Adobe Audience Manager, ensure that

your KPIs are measured. Do not waste time on non-strategic

measures. Ask yourself this: if your CEO was stuck on an

island and you could tell him only three things about your

business so he would know the business was healthy, what

would you tell him? If you said the average time spent on a

page was one minute 30 seconds that tells him nothing.

If you tell him your campaign generated two million visits to

the Web site and the average revenue generated from a

specific channel was $2. That is something he will

understand as a true measure of business success. There is

so much opportunity to measure initiatives and improve on

them based on four or five metrics that you can keep yourself

busy for months or even years. Don’t fret about measuring

every little last detail, you’ll drive yourself crazy and you

won’t be supporting your business goals.

“Companies with greater digital capabilities were able to convert sales at a

rate 2.5 times greater than companies at the lower level did.”

McKinsey & Co. March 2015

3.3 Alignment

What they are:

• Quantifiable, measurable and

actionable

• Measure factors that are critical to

the success of the organisation

• Tied to business goals and targets

• Limited to 5 to 8 key metrics

• Applied consistently throughout the

company

What they are not:

• Metrics that are vague or unclear

• “Nice-to-knows” or metrics that are

not actionable

• Reports (e.g., top search engines,

top keywords)

• Exhaustive set of metrics

• Refutable

Tip

When creating your KPIs

remember the acronym

S.M.A.R.T. Performance

indicators must be:

Specific: to precisely define

the goal and it’s expected

outcome.

Measurable: to be able to

understand what success

means.

Assignable: to individuals

or teams

Realistic: and yet

challenging to drive great

results.

Time-based: built to drive

Page 31: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Organisations are dynamic: Business strategy changes; leadership changes; Web sites and

communications in general are redesigned; the market landscape changes; services and new

products are introduced; marketing campaigns are launched; new channels appear; and new

competitors are born. All these changes make it difficult for leaders to ensure alignment

between the company’s current strategy and the implementation of digital solutions.

To make sure there is a proper alignment between your Adobe Audience Manager

implementation and your digital strategy, your measurement strategy needs to be dynamic and

adjust as changes occur within your business. Having a member from the digital team sitting in

the steering committee can ensure that the team knows what is happening within the business

and any possible changes in priorities.

3.3.1 Targeting And Personalisation Strategy

Your organisation needs to be able to craft and deliver relevant experiences for your audiences

to increase your conversion rates, your customer engagement and brand value which therefore

will lead to effectively achieving your corporate goals. Data provides you with the means to

understand in detail your audiences and segment them. Segmentation allows you to create a

targeting schema which allows you to gain a better understanding of how to align your

customer’s desires, requirements, needs and expectations along with your organisation’s

principles, values and goals, which then empowers you with the ability to deliver truly

personalised experiences that your customers will love and your organisation will benefit from.

This is the core of what marketing technologies such as Adobe Audience Manager enables you

to do.

3.3.1.1 Data Modelling

Data modelling is the method by which organisations analyse, define and align the data flow

requirements needed to support key business processes. Aligning your data structure with

Adobe Audience Manager is key to getting the most value from the solution as it provides

marketing and technical users with the means necessary to respond effectively to your

organisational targeting and personalisation requirements. This ultimately strengthens the way

your clients experience your marketing communications.

The consulting team conducts a “data model” workshop to support your organisation in the

alignment of your data structure. In this workshop, which is typically conducted for one day, you

will be able to understand your organisation’s data needs in addition to the architecture of an

efficient data model. Although the process may vary the team usually undertakes your data

management strategy in three phases:

Page 32: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

3.3.2 Building Your Segments

Understand what your ideal buyer profile would look like and how you can leverage the data that

is (or will be) available to create further targeting strategies. The idea behind creating buyers ’

profiles is to craft relevant content for each segment group to better understand what type of

communication will work best — this is typically achieved through experimentation or advertising

platforms which allow you to set testing variables and gather data to see how certain

campaigns perform.

Some ways you can segment your audiences are as follows:

Demographical and firmographic

Job title: By separating key influencers from other stakeholders.

Functional area: Segmenting by department or business unit. For example, human

resources and marketing.

Company size: By prioritising, for example, Fortune 500 companies and then medium

sized business.

Geographical location: Sales territory, country or region where they operate.

Behavioural data

Product interests: Such as the product category your customer is showing interest in.

On-site activities: Such as pages visited, content downloads, research queries and

time per visit.

1. I

den

tifi

cati

on • Identify all data that is

located in the working environment and is available for use by marketing end-users.

•Map how the data flows from external sources and how it will interact within the data lifecycle in Adobe Audience Manager and other business systems.

2. P

rep

arat

ion •Specify the dimensions that

determines how the data will be targeted (i.e recipients as opposed to contracts).

• Identify filtering and query dimensions that create relationships within data targets (i.e recipients who hold life insurance).

•Create the union, exclusion and intersection dimensions to enable you to consolidate and process multiple targets.

3. D

ata

Use

•Direct use of (targeting and personalisation) data in outbound deliveries.

•Direct use of (targeting and personalisation) data to enrich a data template.

Page 33: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Off-site activities: Social media interactions (likes, shares, comments), event

participation and clicks from advertising campaigns.

Campaign activities: Number of emails opened, links the customer interacted with and

other engagement touch points.

3.3.3 Targeting And Personalisation

Once you have gained a clear understanding of your audiences (in size, frequency interest, etc.)

you have to find an alignment and shape your content structure to appropriately approach them

— it is critical that the content in your communication efforts is relevant and contextual for your

multiple segment audiences. To achieve this, your organisation can leverage the segmentation

criteria established in the previous step to truly deliver relevant content to specific users.

You can further enrich the personalisation strategy by integrating other digital data, CRM,

transaction, point of sale, fulfilment and call centre data to orchestrate experiences across all

your marketing channels in real time. These include online as well as offline channels.

Find recommendations on how you can deepen the scope of your audience management

strategies in the integrations section.

3.4 Innovation

Once your organisation is consistently delivering relevant marketing messages across multiple

channels, you will be ready to continue gaining competitive advantage by finding the means to

expand the possibilities and generate greater value to your stakeholders. Gather a team of

visionary innovators and use the data collected from your ongoing campaigns and digital tactics

and empower them to generate new creative ways to improve your consumer’s lifecycle.

4 People

4.1 Expertise

Expertise refers to the different skills required by your organisation’s digital and technical staff,

business users and senior executives. Not every group will need the same skills, but an overall

understanding of how a digital strategy and Adobe Audience Manager will help the organisation

is fundamental.

Page 34: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Investing in training is a key activity when implementing new technologies. Make sure you have

training programs not only for on boarding new staff, but also for current employees so they can

continue growing their expertise over time.

Adobe offers a wide range of courses that can help you with your Adobe Audience Manager

implementation. These courses are available in multiple formats to suit your needs — at one of

Adobe’s regional training centres, online as virtual learning or on-site at your company.

To see all Adobe Audience Manager courses go to Adobe Audience Manager Course Catalog.

4.2 Structure

A well designed organisational structure will give you and your staff clear guidelines about how

the organisation is put together, who they have to report and delegate to and how information

flows across different levels. Defining an organisational structure, including roles and

responsibilities, before starting with your Adobe Audience Manager implementation will also

ensure the project runs efficiently.

Page 35: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

4.2.1 Structures Types

Below is a common list of organisational structures we see in digital organisations.

Dispersed: This structure is typically an early

stage, organic and reactive response to initial

staffing and resourcing requirements arising in

local or specific departments. While this works

well initially, it has limited strategic scalability and

can prove problematic in coordinating a top-down

strategic vision for the long term structure and

direction of digital capability, particularly within a

large and diverse organisation.

Centralised: Digital marketing roles and

capability are centralised into a single area or

team. This is typically characterised by a reporting

structure through to one head of digital, e-

business or e-commerce.

Hub and Spoke: A combination of both, typically

whereby digital marketing expertise is split - some

positioned at the centre looking across the whole

organisation and some sat within divisions or

departments often acting as a connection point

between the CoE and local non-digital teams.

‘Dandelion’ structure: Organisations which have

a hub and spoke approach, but across multiple

units or divisions. This is usually found in larger

corporations that are operationally divided around

key audiences (B2B and B2C, for example) that

might centralise some key digital capability across

the entire corporation, but also could have some

hub and spoke arrangements in each of the key

divisions.

‘Honeycomb’ structure: One additional structure

is the holistic, or ‘honeycomb’, structure, where

each employee is empowered with capability. This

structure might be interpreted as the equivalent of

a fully integrated digital capability where digital

expertise and skills are the domain of a broad

range of people and roles throughout the

organisation. In this scenario no specialist digital

roles exist and no single role has digital capability

as its sole remit.

Page 36: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

4.2.2 Project-Based Recommended Organisational Structure

Management sponsorship:

Establish relationships with executives, remove barriers, create a point of escalation, frequently

touch base with engagement leads, understand goals and progress of engagements.

Enterprise architect

Multi-solution engagement lead, aligns all solutions and integrations to business needs and

objectives, solidifies and follows through on delivery execution, partners with the project

management office (PMO) on timelines and risks, fosters greater teamwork among various

solution leads and consultants, delivers on engagement promises, communicates value

realisation with consultants, the PMO and AM.

Adobe project manager

Responsible for positioning, scoping and providing consulting services. This person is in charge

of communications between Adobe and the organisation.

Product Lead

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Product Lead

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Product Lead

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Solution Lead

Business Consultant

Technical Consultant

Creative Consultant

Partner / GDC

Management Sponsorship

Enterprise Architect (Strategy Owner)

Adobe Project Manager (Communication Owner)

Page 37: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Solution lead

Assigned to lead engagements for particular solution. Strong collaboration with the EA and

other solution leads. Ensures high quality, strategic consulting and successful delivery. May

lead out on multi-product engagements if there is no PM or EA.

4.2.3 Business Recommended Organisational Structure

Organisations commonly use a centralised model for digital implementations. In this structure,

all of the digital resources are centralised into a single area or team often with a reporting

structure through to one head of digital, e-business or e-commerce. This is a generic example of

an organisational structure and hiring recommendation:

The main advantages of having a centralised model are:

• Consistency and control: Consistent methods,

procedures and terminology.

• Governance and focus: Unified commercial entity,

strategy and budgets; ease of securing senior management

buy-in to digital marketing strategy and projects; and

consistent standards, greater efficiency in the allocation of

resources, ease of project prioritisation across the

organisation.

Hiring phase 1 (0-6 Months)

Hiring phase 2 (6 - 12 Months)

Hiring phase 3 (12 – 18 Months)

TIP

The above model will

need to be right-sized

for your business

depending on its size,

structure and

geographical nature.

Page 38: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

• Scalability and support: The application of digital expertise to support the wider

business and clarity on where to go for support and advice.

4.2.4 Roles And Responsibilities

4.2.4.1 In A Centralised Model

Here are suggested responsibilities for each of the roles described above.

Director of Digital

• Director of digital analytics, marketing analysis, CRM or business intelligence.

• Position of authority to influence others.

• Key point of contact for executives, business owners and analysts.

• Focuses on corporate-level issues, but maintains visibility into regional or business unit

issues.

• Works closely with executive sponsors to drive value from analytics across the

organisation.

• Drives cultural change and product adoption within the organisation via user education

and other interactions.

• Manages the core team and commercial relationships with analytics vendors.

Head of Strategy

• Drives and owns the digital strategy roadmap.

• Coordinates ongoing strategy workshops with stakeholders.

• Ensures the business is continually focused and aligned with business objectives.

• Determines the priority of new implementation projects.

• Drives the digital steering committee, not just a “Web analytics” steering committee.

• Manages the business analyst and project management resources.

Head of Optimisation

• Owns the testing roadmap.

• Drives the personalisation targeting strategy.

• Works collaboratively with the senior analytics team on supporting analytics optimisation

actions through testing.

• Manages the testing resources.

• Manages ongoing relationships with testing product vendors.

• Coordinates with the head of implementation on testing implementation needs.

Page 39: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Head of Analytics

• Focused on overall digital performance with Web analytics being the barometer of that

performance.

• Runs regular, recurring meetings (weekly or monthly) with stakeholders on digital

channel performance.

• Establishes enterprise-wide standards.

• Manages ongoing relationships with analytics vendors.

Head of Implementation

• Owns the analytics solutions design architecture.

• Key point of contact for technical aspects of Web analytics for one or more business

units.

• Works collaboratively with the core team on enhancements.

• Manages the implementation resources.

• Manages ongoing relationship with internal integration teams.

Business Requirements Specialist

• Defines prioritised projects.

• Runs workshops to gather business analytics implementation reporting requirements.

• Develops the business requirements document for each project.

• Gathers business sign-off.

• Works collaboratively with the core team on requirements gathering enhancements and

documenting the process.

• Acts as project manager.

Targeting Lead

• Drives the testing roadmap.

• Owns the key and complex testing campaign initiatives.

• Key point of contact for testing technical aspects.

• Owns the testing deployment and QA process and manages ongoing data accuracy.

• Mentors the testing specialists.

Digital Analyst Lead

• Focused on measuring business unit key performance indicators (KPIs) and optimising

business units online.

• Owns the analytical reporting requests log.

• Single point of contact for end-users within business units and understands end-users’

changing needs.

• Validates data collection for business units.

Page 40: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

• Meets with business unit reporting owners and the core team on a regular basis

(monthly).

• Informs the core team of business unit activity and champions its needs to the core

team.

• Coordinates QA efforts and manages ongoing data accuracy.

Digital Implementation Lead

• Drives the testing roadmap

• Owns the key and complex implementation initiatives.

• Key point of contact for technical aspects.

• Owns the testing, deployment and QA process.

• Mentors the implementation resources.

• Owns the testing deployment and QA process.

• Maintains a library of implementation documentation and shares knowledge within the

organisation.

• Active, not passive, participants in the deployment enhancement process.

Content Strategist

• Drives the content strategy.

• Owns the content delivery roadmap.

• Manages the content delivery team.

Technical Requirements Specialist

• Defines prioritised projects.

• Runs workshops to gather technical requirements and identify risks.

• Develops the technical documents and deployment plan for each project.

• Gathers sign-off.

• Works collaboratively with core team on requirements gathering enhancements and

documenting the process.

Targeting Specialist

• Owns the testing and targeting campaign initiatives.

• Gathers the individual campaign objectives and requirements.

• Coordinates implementation campaign needs with the targeting lead.

• Key point of contact for individual campaigns.

• Delivers the individual campaign reporting and analytical insight.

Page 41: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Digital Analyst Specialist

• Gathers analysis requirements from the business.

• Delivers reporting requirements analysis, insight and actions.

• Presents analysis back to the report owner.

Digital Implementation Specialist

• Drives individual implementation projects.

• Coordinates with internal and external development resources on implementation

requirements.

• Creates the individual project technical specification documents.

• Provides assistance on deployment and testing.

• May be assigned to a specific business unit.

Content Producer

• Maintain communication among cross-functional teams.

• Owns the process for creating, enforcing and managing the content production plan.

• Collaborate with all departments to define and manage goals, scope, specific

deliverables and scheduling needs.

• Aggregate and distil input from all areas of the organisation and develop the best

approach for incorporating feedback into project executions.

• Contribute to strategic thinking around content models that adapt, scale and expand

over time and distribution platforms.

Project Manager

• Outsourced initially and then established as a FTE.

• Responsible for costing, estimating and planning projects.

• Prepares project initiation documentation (PID).

• Responsible for ensuring best value is obtained for the project including from the

supplier base and use of internal and external resources.

• Maintaining and completing project KPIs.

• Writing detailed and summarised project progress reports.

• Identifying, costing and processing any contract variations.

• Tracking activities against the detailed project plans.

Creative & UX Designer

• Conceptualise and create design content for all campaign testing and targeting

experiences.

• Test concepts, perform task and user analysis and assist with user acceptance testing.

• Develop prototypes that succinctly illustrate hierarchy and navigation.

Page 42: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

• Strategise and drive interactive product development from site map to launch.

• Create compelling online consumer experience that drive business results.

• Possess knowledge of prototyping and wireframe creation tools.

Channel Analyst

• Specialises in a particular channel: SEO, SEM, display, social, affiliate, etc.

• Understands online strategy and how this breaks down into multi-channel Web

marketing elements.

• Expert knowledge of key analytics tools and the ability to setup advanced tracking and

reporting mechanisms and capture key metrics.

• Monitor and analyse Web related data “across the board” and analyses key metrics.

• Understand how different elements of Web strategy relate to, and complement, each

other (e.g. organic search engine optimisation, social media PPC) and create metrics to

monitor and measure this.

• Real-time, daily and weekly campaign performance reporting. Presentation of key data

and conclusions to management.

Mobile Implementation Analyst

• Drives individual implementation projects around mobile.

• Coordinates with internal and external development resources on implementation

requirements.

• Creates the individual project technical specification documents.

• Provides assistance on deployment and testing.

• May be assigned to a specific business unit.

Mobile Content Specialist

• Maintain communication among cross-functional teams.

• Own the process for creating, enforcing and managing the content production plan for

mobile.

• Collaborate with all departments to define and manage goals, scope, specific

deliverables and scheduling needs.

• Aggregate and distil input from all areas of the organisation and develop the best

approach for incorporating feedback into project executions.

• Contribute to strategic thinking around content models that adapt, scale and expand

over time and distribution platforms.

Head of Social

Solution expert.

Maintain communications among cross-functional teams to execute on social media

campaigns.

Drives the implementation of social media projects.

Page 43: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Identifies opportunities for expansion.

Responsible for reporting on the performance of social media channels.

Publishing Lead

Responsible for the execution of content across social media channels.

Ensures internal workflows deliver the content and social media strategy.

Ensures tracking mechanisms have been implemented appropriately.

Monitoring and Moderating Lead

Represents the organisation across multiple channels.

Maintains the wellbeing of the communities.

Provide support to the communities when required.

Listening and Analytics Lead

Responsible for the monitoring of several social media channels to analyse the channel

sentiments.

Measures channel performance in terms of key business goals.

Measures channel sentiment and provides immediate feedback when required.

4.2.4.2 Key Teams And Roles

Business users: Product owners and input providers

• Provide overall business strategy and goals for products.

• Develop key messaging and customer segmentation strategy for online sales.

• Not involved in day-to-day management of the Web site.

Marketing: Brand awareness and site management

• Develop strategy for product marketing across all channels, including Adobe.com.

• Drives day-to-day site marketing (content changes, testing, etc.) activities.

• Provides market research and analytic support for site management.

• Partner with sales to deliver online revenue.

Sales: Online revenue and e-commerce business strategy

• Own strategy and execution for all e-commerce related aspects of the site.

• Develop growth plans and deliver to business objectives.

• Partners with marketing on delivering online revenue.

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IT: Implementation and Delivery

• Delivery support to site strategies and objectives.

• Develop technical strategy to deliver business vision.

• Partners with marketing product owners to enhance platform framework with new

templates, components and capabilities.

4.3 Resources

You will need to decide the right balance and allocation of internal staff and external

consultants. This will be determined by your organisation’s previous experience with digital

implementations — less experienced organisations may require more help from consultants.

Internally speaking, your organisation will need to implement a talent strategy to determine how

best to hire and retain digital and analytic talent.

“Having the right talent and sufficient resources on your digital team is

crucial to your long-term, data-driven success.” Brent Dykes – Adobe

4.3.1 Resource Model

To get the most out of Adobe Audience Manager and to deliver a better digital experience to

your customers, you need to get the most out of your implementation. Investing in external

resources will help you optimise your investment, mitigate project risk and identify new

opportunities.

4.3.1.1 Adobe Consulting And Partners

Organisations are facing a deficit of digital marketing expertise and Adobe consulting and

partners can play a critical role in making Adobe Audience Manager operational within your

business — implementing it, running and operating the solution and realising value through

business optimisation. Based on your resources and project scope, working with Adobe

consulting and partners can help you in many different ways: from developing your customer

journey, creative and user experience to building your content strategy, defining your workflow

processes, training and enablement, building your page template and components, making

necessary customisations to the implementation, integrating with other technology platforms

and providing general guidance on how to use the solution.

Page 45: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Roles and responsibilities, critical success factors, post implementation review and sales alignment.

4.4 Community

It is key to encourage the creation of a digital community within your organisation. Invest in

creating an environment where all members can learn from each other and share experiences,

Page 46: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

ideas, best practices and campaign wins. When you have distributed analysts and business

users across different business units and countries, the digital marketing community provides

valuable support to new users as well as opportunities for more advanced users to share their

collective knowledge. This is especially important in traditional businesses where upskilling

traditional skillsets with digital ones is vital. It can be a useful forum in which to educate the

traditionally minded people within your business. Community can be fostered in a number of

different ways, such as a simple email distribution list, internal wiki, corporate chat groups and

workshops.

4.5 Culture

Adopting marketing technologies influence a great number business processes and practices

changing the nature of how teams work to achieve common goals. Despite the fact that your

organisation has invested in Adobe Audience Manager, some leaders and employees may still

have doubts about the benefits of the solution. They probably do not fully understand what

audience segmentation and targeting, social media marketing, display advertising, analytics,

automation, content management, user experience and other components of digital bring to the

table. This is common in a business world that is still adapting and changing to digital.

The first step is to have a clear vision for your culture as well as having the right mindset to shift

activities and thinking within your digital organisation. Second, involve key stakeholders and

share that vision of that future across the organisation. One of the main reasons why

organisations fear change is because they have little or no information about where the change

is taking them. Third, invest in individuals who embrace opportunities and are the right cultural

fit. These will find it easily to work in teams and emerge in more complex problem solving

situations.

Additionally, C-level executives can leverage two basic steps to embed a new way of thinking

into business operations regardless of the scale of the organisation. These steps fall into two

categories:

The formal levers: These are adoption and adaptation of processes and structures

such as leadership policies, role definitions and people processes to support

digitalisation. These stakeholders will be responsible for the introduction of new digital

channels into traditional operations.

The informal levers: These relate to the key behaviours, role models and networks that

help employees set a mindset aligned to the cultural structure of your organisation.

Page 47: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

The following are the common traits in a digital organisation1:

5 Process

In this section of the document, you will find the information to effectively deploy and use Adobe

Audience Manager. There are four main types of processes: deployment, usage, sustainability

and change management.

5.1 Deployment

Adobe Audience Manager implementations are

consultative engagements that focus on data collection

and aggregation strategy, audience profile planning

and targeting consultation. The implementation

methodology has been standardised by your assigned

Adobe Audience Manager consultant, who will guide

you through a code deployment and configuration

process with consultation around data collection and

audience strategy. The transition from implementation

to launch is designed to be seamless as the teams

1 Adapted from: Strategy&, 2013, ‘Building a Digital Culture: How to meet the challenge of multichannel digitalisation’, p. 10.

Customers and demand

• Pulls ideas from the market

• Driven by demand

Organisation

• Flat Hierarchy

• Rapid decision making

• Result and product orientation

• Empower employees to find ways to achieve goals

Work Environment

• Understand needs of digital customers

• Driven by innovation, improvement and overcoming constraints

• Cross-functional teams

• Rapid, unpredictable career progression

• Focus on rapid learn and launch

Tip

Depending on the service

associated to your account,

the Adobe Audience

Management team will

conduct periodical account

monitoring to help you

leverage the usage of your

solution. Ask your account

manager for more information.

Page 48: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

work together to help your organisation define and develop the qualitative and quantitative

metrics to measure the success of your accounts.

Getting started with Adobe Audience Manager can take approximately six weeks to three

months, depending on your data collection needs. Our implementation techniques help create a

consultative partnership with new clients. This process is designed to:

Discover and understand your business requirements.

Produce an actionable plan to address those demands.

Develop custom solutions to help meet unique requirements or use cases.

Ensure that your proprietary data is imported and made available in Adobe Audience

Manager.

Our partner solutions and account management teams will work closely with you before, during

and after the implementation process.

5.1.1 Implementation Methodology

Before the implementation project kicks-off, it is key to have a well-defined success criteria for

the program (refer to the S.M.A.R.T KPIs outlined in the strategy section), a comprehensive

change management and communication plan and be committed to the ongoing training Adobe

will provide during the implementation. Adobe provides optional post-deployment resources for

further upskilling in the Adobe Marketing Cloud solutions.

Page 49: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.1.1.1 Define Phase

This phase is designed to help customers to define and agree on project scope, understand

custom requirements, establish milestones and setup communication.

DEFINE DISCOVERYBUILD, TEST &

TRAINLAUNCH, SUPPORT

& OPTIMISECODE

IMPLEMENTATION

Key Activities

Kick off meeting

Introduce project leads

Provide access

Status reports and project team

calls

Participants

Business teams Technical team

Deliverables

Documents identifying roles

and responsiblities

Processes to share resources

and acces

Scope of work

A plan to schedule project

meeting and calls

Page 50: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.1.1.2 Discovery Phase

The discovery phase is dedicated to gathering requirements, conducting research and working toward a deeper understanding of your business needs and data collection strategies.

The following table describes key activities that take place during this phase:

DEFINE DISCOVERYBUILD, TEST &

TRAINLAUNCH, SUPPORT

& OPTIMISECODE

IMPLEMENTATION

Key Activities

Requirements and goal setting

Brekout sessions

Discover sources of your first-

party, second-party and third-

party data

Follow-up communications

Develop plans for tag

management and data collection

Participants

Business teams Technical team

Deliverables

A completed first-party,

second-party, and third-party data collection

strategy

A completed data taxonomy

A developed third-party data integration plan

A completed CRM or data warehouse

ingestion plan

Defined audience-

segmentation requirements

Page 51: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.1.1.3 Build, Test And Display

During the build, test and train phase, you will review the data collection strategy and prototype

with a designated partner solutions lead.

Your data collection strategy will undergo end-to-end QA testing. Partner solutions will track

discovered bugs and coordinate problem resolutions with Adobe systems engineers. Customer

training can start in parallel with these other efforts.

The following table describes key activities that take place during this phase:

DEFINE DISCOVERYBUILD, TEST AND

TRAINLAUNCH, SUPPORT

AND OPTIMISECODE

IMPLEMENTATION

Key Activities

Enable third-party data provider

integration. And perform cross-

browser compability testing

Create instance in Adobe Tag

Manager and provide log-in information

Onboarding of CRM and other data sources

Load data and segment storage

Create initial batch of segments,

audiences for the segmentation plan

First-party data collection, Traffic

Adobe Tag Manager onto first-

party pages

Build reporting methods based on gaps and custom

reporting requirements, create relevant custom queries

Environment provisioning

Key Participants

Business teams Technical teams

Deliverables

A completed and accepted data-collection plan

End-to-end QA testing

Acceptance and sign off

Basic instruction on AAM user interface

features

Page 52: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.1.1.4 Launch, Support And Optimise Phase

During the launch, support and optimise phase, your data collection and prototyped

implementation moves from development to a live production environment. We’ll continue

training on product familiarisation and strategies that can help increase your ROI through data-

driven optimisation.

The following table describes key activities that take place during this phase:

5.1.1.5 Code Implementation

Though the deployment process may seem complex, the code implementation is as simple as

adding a few lines of JavaScript adjacent to the closing </body> tag of your Web site.

Deployment

The Adobe Audience Manager code snippet calls Akamai to download the business rules set up

previously in the user interface. Furthermore, client browsers cache this information, which

DEFINE DISCOVERYBUILD, TEST AND

TRAINLAUNCH, SUPPORT

AND OPTIMISECODE

IMPLEMENTATION

Key Activities

Data analysis and optimisation

Further training

Create traits and segments

Follow-up communications

Deliverables

Generating and interpecting report data

How to get product support

Depending familiarity with AAM

Understanding custom reports

Responding to, or soliciting, feature requests, bugs, and user feedback

Page 53: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

helps reduce page and server load times. Our code and data collection methodology is

designed to maintain the user experience across your inventory.

Participants

Adobe partner solutions can work directly with your technical teams to help deploy code,

address final concerns and fulfil other requirements.

5.1.2 Data Integration Methods

Adobe Audience Manager exchanges visitor information with other data providers by either of

the following methods:

Real-time: Transfers data immediately as a user visits your site. This method is also

known as a synchronous integration.

Batch (server-to-server): Transfers data between servers on a set schedule after a

visitor has left the page. This method is also known as an out-of-band, or asynchronous,

integration.

Choosing the right integration method depends on a combination of business requirements and

the technical capabilities of your data partner.

5.1.2.1 How To Choose A Data Delivery Method

Describes technical and business reasons for sending data via synchronous (real-time) or

asynchronous (server-to-server) methodologies.

Selecting a data delivery type

Technical considerations: Data delivery depends on the technical capabilities of the data

partner. Adobe Audience Manager can send and receive data in real-time from the browser or

by batch updates through offline, server-to-server communication processes.

Business considerations: The business reasons for selecting one delivery method or another

depend on the technical capabilities of your destination partner and how you want to use this

data. Typically, synchronous data transfers are useful when you need to take action on user

data immediately. Asynchronous data transfers may be useful when immediate action is not

required and when you have time to build deeper user profiles for later use.

Page 54: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.1.2.2 Real Time Server-To-Server Integration

A real-time server-to-server data integration rapidly synchronises user data between Adobe

Audience Manager servers and another targeting system. In most cases, data exchange takes

place within seconds or minutes, depending on the refresh rate of the targeting system. Note,

however, the targeted system determines this refresh interval, not Adobe Audience Manager.

Furthermore, the refresh rate can vary between different systems. A real-time, server-to-server

integration is the preferred integration type for data exchanges. Adobe Audience Manager uses

this method whenever targeting partners can support it.

Advantages: Allows you to qualify users for segments without seeing them again on the

page, in a video player, etc.

Reduces the number of HTTP calls from the page. Fewer calls helps preserve

the user experience.

Helps with time sensitive targeting so you can take action on a qualified user

quickly.

Useful when moving to a DSP for offsite targeting.

Disadvantages: Less useful for onsite targeting when you need to target the user on the same

page, or the next page, based on qualifying a user for that segment.

5.1.2.3 Server-To-Server Batch Integration

A server-to-server batch integration bundles data and sends it to other systems at set intervals rather than in near real time. Data transfer intervals can range from two to 24 hours. Some data providers support this integration type only. However, we've seen a general trend away from batch integrations towards real-time integration methodologies.

Advantages: Allows you to qualify users for segments without seeing them again on the page, in a video player, etc.

Useful for targeting that is not time sensitive.

Disadvantages: The synchronisation interval can delay targeting against the most current data.

5.1.2.4 Real Time Calls

Real-time calls exchange data with Adobe Audience Manager immediately, as a user visits your site or takes action on the page. With this method, targeting systems get the most updated

Page 55: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

segment qualification data and can take that information into account during a content or ad delivery decision. Also, this process works with publisher ad servers where we update qualified segments to a first-party cookie that is read into an ad call as key-value pairs. Currently, Adobe Audience Manager uses real-time calls to integrate with Target, Adobe Primetime and other

content management systems.

Future developments include making these calls between servers rather than directly from the page. For example, Adobe Target could make a single request for a new content area and then message Adobe Audience Manager via server-to-server protocols. This helps reduce calls made to the page. However, this process is in a proof-of-concept phase only. A production release has not been scheduled. Furthermore, most external systems do not support this type of server-side call, although Audience Manager can support it now.

Advantages: Allows you to target the next page, content area, or ad impression based the most recent segment qualification.

Disadvantages: Adds a call to Adobe Audience Manager from the page.

5.1.2.5 Pixels Syncs To Targeting Systems

Pixel synchronisation maps segments to pixels on the page. The pixel fires and transmits data

when a user qualifies for a particular segment. Pixel synchronisation is a rudimentary and

unreliable data transfer mechanism. Top tier data providers and systems rarely use it.

Advantages: Real-time data transfers.

Disadvantages: Can add a lot of client-side calls from the page.

Unreliable for data transmission (5% to 20% loss is normal).

5.2 Usage

Usage is all about establishing and leveraging best practices that will help you with your overall

reporting, analysis and decision making. Understanding how your organisation uses the solution

becomes important because it will help you maximise your investment. Here are a few

questions you will need to consider:

How will you manage time and resources spent on reporting and deep-dive analysis?

If your analysts are going to be overloaded with reporting and analysis requests each

week, what tools and workflows do you need to implement to help them prioritise those

requests?

Page 56: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.2.1 Administration

As a solution in the Adobe Marketing Cloud, Adobe Audience Manager permissions are granted

at two levels: at the marketing cloud level and at the Audience Manager level. Adobe Marketing

Cloud permissions govern access to Adobe Audience Manager and can be used to restrict

visibility to individual report suites and their connected data.

The options under the administration menu let you create Adobe Audience Manager users and

assign them to groups. You can also view limits (traits, segments, destinations and AlgoModel).

Enterprise customers using Audience Manager need one data management platform for all of

their data, but must be able to control the visibility of the different data elements to specific

business units. You can accomplish this using group permissions.

Audience Manager uses groups to assign permissions. Permissions are not assigned at the

user level. Group permissions are tied to objects (traits, segments, etc.) and to actions you can

perform on those objects (edit, view, etc.).

Create users: Create users in Adobe Audience Manager and specify user details, login

status and assign users to groups.

Create a group: A group is a collection of users that share access rights to destination,

segment trait objects. You can limit groups to single objects only or give them broad

access to combinations of different objects.

Edit your account settings: Non-admin users can edit their own profiles, including

changing their email addresses and resetting their passwords.

5.2.2 Access Levels

The following matrix illustrates the different access permissions that Adobe Audience Manager

can assign to user groups:

TRAITS SEGMENTS MODELS DESTINATIONS DERIVED

SIGNALS

TAGS

Available roles Available roles Available roles Available roles Available roles Available roles

View traits View segments View models View destinations View derived

signals

View tags

Create traits Create segments Create models Create

destinations

Create derived

signals

Edit traits Edit segments Edit models Edit destinations Edit derived

signals

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Delete traits Delete segments Delete models Delete

destinations

Delete derived

signals

Available

permissions

Available

permissions

Available

permissions

Available

permissions :

1. Data provider

permissions

1. Data provider

permissions

1. Data provider

permissions

1. Individual

destination

permissions

Read Read Read Read

Write Write Write Write

Create Create Create Delete

Delete Delete Delete 1. Wild card

permissions

Map to segments Map to models View all

destinations

Map to models Edit all

destinations

Create algo trait Delete all

destinations

1. Wild card

permissions

1. Wild card

permissions

1. Wild card

permissions

View all traits View all segments View all models

Create all traits Create all

segments

Create all models

Edit all traits Edit all segments Edit all models

Delete all traits Delete all

segments

Delete all models

Map all to

segments

There is no wild

card permission

for map to model

as that is handled

by model wild

cards.

There is no wild

card permission

for map to model

as that is handled

by model wild

cards

Create permission

is not needed.

Permission is

based on user

role.

There are no

permissions on

derived signals.

Permission is

based on user

role.

There are no

permissions on

tags.

Page 58: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

5.3 Sustainability

Marketers often struggle to create a roadmap of system upgrades, maintenance and resource

management to achieve the envisioned marketing strategy and respective corporate goals over

time. In fact, it is key to start planning as soon as the deployment project kicks off to fully

evaluate and understand how Adobe Audience Manager will align with the overall business

strategy, how it will serve your customer’s journey, how cross-functional channels and

resources will be involved to ensure the solution is maintained, fully used and, most importantly,

scaled.

Constant contact with your account manager.

Explore the market for new opportunities.

Monitor performance and new platform requirements.

5.3.1 Maintaining A Single View Of The Customers

Ensure your data architecture consistently collects and consolidates all customer-related data

into a single marketing view. The more demographical, transactional, behavioural and

aggregated data is gathered in centralised systems, the more challenging it is to keep up to

maintain it consistency. This factor is critical as the solution evolves along with your business.

5.3.2 Process To Adopt Traditional Or Emerging Channels

Channels evolve and serve different objectives over time. In this sense, it is considerably

important to create a mechanism of channels evaluation to seamlessly report and assess

existing ones and integrate new ones with your marketing mix.

5.3.3 Track And Upgrade

There are two views of this topic. The first is related to how you document the past (campaigns,

processes and deployments) and the second relates to how you will ensure the people and

physical resources will be kept up to date with new technological frameworks, new trends in the

market and usage best practices.

5.3.4 Optimise And Report For Success

Maintain constant relevancy and workflow success by investing time measuring channel

success, deliverability and return on investment. Encourage the key stakeholders to have

frequent meetings where they report on testing procedures, success metrics, challenges and

ideas.

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6 Technology And Product

Adobe technology should act as an enabler — empowering your organisation to manage and

obtain data and act on it. This section will take you through how Adobe Audience Manager was

built to fit your business requirements, how it integrates with other platforms to leverage its

power, what best practices ensure the platform is deployed efficiently and has sufficient levels of

support and professional services and how you can leverage its automation capabilities to

manage audience information for marketing initiative improvement and democratise data to

empower disparate business users to answer routine business questions.

6.1 Solution Fit

6.1.1 Solution Architecture

Page 60: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Key components in the Adobe Audience Manager system

Adobe Audience Manager groups its systems and processes into four main categories: Tag

management, data collection, data organisation and data actionability.

TAG MANAGEMENT COMPONENTS

Client Portal

The client portal is the primary user interface (UI) for tag and data management.

Customers use the portal to work with tags, build traits and segments, set up

destinations and monitor campaign performance with reports.

Adobe Tag Manager

(ATM)

Tag Manager helps deploy Adobe Audience Manager data collection code to your

Web site. You use ATM to configure and generate container code that you place

on pages in your inventory. The ATM container works with the data information

library (DIL) to collect data from your site and send it to Adobe Audience

Manager.

Data Information Library

(DIL)

The data information library (DIL) is a self-contained API module that collects data

from your Web site. DIL helps eliminate the need to write special code for data

collection, integration, reading cookie values and recovering page data. DIL

performs these actions automatically. Additionally, DIL is compact. It is a self-

contained code library that helps reduce the amount of code required to collect

data from Web sites. Finally, DIL helps you integrate Adobe Audience Manager

with other products in the Adobe Marketing Cloud.

Akamai

Adobe Audience Manager uses Akamai to host and deliver container code from

our own tag management platform known as TIM (tag insertion manager).

However, code deployment with TIM is being phased out in favour of Adobe Tag

Manager.

Control Database

The control database:

Processes client input from the portal. For example, setting up or

changing scheduled tags, creating traits and destinations and more.

Transmits data to Akamai, which includes data used to build the

container template and destination publishing iFrame.

Returns data for UI reporting systems.

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DATA COLLECTION COMPONENTS

Java Data Collection

Servers

The Java data collection servers (DCS) are key components in the edge data

centre. At its core, the DCS collects and works with user data to make it

actionable by Adobe Audience Manager clients and partners.

Log Files

The DCS creates log files. Log files contain non-personally identifiable (PII) user

data (IDs and associated qualified traits). Log data is sent to Hadoop for

additional trait matching and reporting.

Other DCS Processes:

Privacy Opt-outs and Log

Files

The DCS generates user-data log files and sends them to Hadoop to build

processed segments and for reporting. Also, these server systems handle privacy

and user opt-out requests. User cookie information is not collected in the

log file if a user has opted out of data collection.

DATA COLLECTION COMPONENTS

Hadoop

In the Adobe Audience Manager ecosystem, Hadoop is the master database that

contains everything Adobe Audience Manager ‘knows’ about a user. Hadoop is

used for batch segmentation and synchronisation of collected user data. Other

important Hadoop elements include:

Hive: A data warehouse for Hadoop. Hive manages ad hoc queries to

the data stored in Hadoop.

HBase: A very large Hadoop database.

Elastic MapReduce (EMR)

Amazon's Elastic Map Reduce (EMR) service lets Audience Manager rapidly

increase or reduce the amount of computational power needed to process and

manage data. This technology helps Adobe Audience Manager operate efficiently

at scale and quickly manipulate the tremendous volume of information that flows

through our system.

RedShift

Redshift is used for ad hoc business intelligence and custom analytics queries run

against the large data sets pushed to Hadoop.

SOLR

SOLR is an open-source search platform. It helps optimise report performance by

quickly finding and returning data.

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Tableau

Adobe Audience Manager uses Tableau to display data in the interactive reports.

The interactive reports display performance and overlap data for traits and

segments. Instead of using numbers arranged in columns and rows, they return

data using different shapes, colours and sizes. Additionally, you can choose

individual or groups of data points and drill down into the report results for more

details. These visualisation techniques and report interactivity help make large

amounts of numeric data easier to understand.

DATA ACTIONABILITY COMPONENTS

Profile Cache Server (PCS)

The Profile Cache Server (PCS) is a server-side, memory-based data store

(basically, a huge server-side cookie) that stores user IDs and traits.

The PCS helps overcome the built-in space and storage limits of browser cookies,

including situations when cookies are not available, such as from mobile

applications. Additionally, the PCS receives data from Hadoop, which extends the

number and types of traits to which a user can belong. In addition to traits based

on a user's activity on the edge (in the browser), the PCS stores traits sent by

data providers and traits added via algorithmic modelling.

Feed

Converters/Submitters

The feed converters and submitters receive and send data from internal and

external data sources. These processes can use HTTP, HTTPS, or FTP/SFTP

communication protocols. The feed systems take data and process it into a

useable format for external customers (for example, real-time or server-to-server

data integrations) or other internal processes.

6.2 Integrations

6.2.1 Marketing Cloud Integrations

Today many marketers are working in various tools and systems that do not usually work

seamlessly together. With Adobe Marketing Cloud you can improve your organisation’s

marketing effectiveness using Adobe Analytics for performance management, Adobe

Experience Manager for content delivery and optimisation and Adobe Campaign for cross-

channel campaign management.

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The following are the most commonly integrated solutions with Adobe Audience Manager:

Adobe Audience Manager and Adobe Target: This data integration lets you use

Adobe Audience Manager data in Adobe Target to help improve rules-based content

delivery. The advantages of bringing Adobe Audience Manager segment data

into Adobe Target include access to multivariate testing, AB testing to improve

campaign segmentation and delivery and algorithmic-based targeting and decision-

making.

Adobe Audience Manager and Adobe Experience Manager: Adobe Audience

Manager consolidates audience information from all available sources. It identifies,

quantifies and optimises high-value target audiences, which can then be offered to

advertisers via an integrated, secure, privacy-friendly management system that works

across all advertising distribution platforms.

Adobe Audience Manager and Adobe Campaign: Audience data can also be brought

into Adobe Campaign to further refine and enrich identified customer profiles, allowing

marketers to deliver direct marketing campaigns that are personalised, contextual and

relevant.

Adobe Audience Manager and Adobe Analytics: Adobe Analytics serves as an extra

first-party source of data to more accurately model and forecast audience segmentation

and management.

6.2.2 Common Third-Party Integration

Third-party integration in Adobe Audience Manager facilitate

the flow of inbound and outbound data for data collection and

ID synchronisation, respectively. Audience Manager has a

robust portfolio of third-party integration targets. Below are the

most common third-party solutions integrated with Audience

Manager:

Tip & Trick

Adobe is constantly releasing

new integrated applications.

Check what is new at Adobe

Social Exchange

Page 64: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Adobe Audience Manager Third-Party Integration Targets

PLATFORM TYPE DIRECTION

AdForm Ad Server Outbound

Microsoft Ad Targeting Platform Outbound

Adobe Insight Analytics Inbound / Outbound

Adobe Site Catalyst Analytics Inbound

Google Analytics Premium Analytics Inbound

Adometry Attribution Outbound

AKQA Attribution Outbound

TapAd Cross-Device Identification & Targeting Outbound

LiveRamp Data Match Provider Inbound

Acxiom Data Provider Inbound / Outbound

AddThis Data Provider Inbound

Alliant Data Provider Inbound

BIZO Data Provider Inbound

DataLogix Data Provider Inbound

Datonics Data Provider Inbound

Epsilon Data Provider Inbound

eXelate Data Provider Inbound

Experian Data Provider Inbound

iBehavior/KBMG Data Provider Inbound

Mastercard Data Provider Inbound

Navegg Data Provider Inbound

Nielsen Data Provider Inbound

TargusINFO / Neustar Data Provider Inbound

Transunion Data Provider Inbound

V12 Data Provider Inbound

WhoToo Data Provider Inbound

Quantcast Data Provider / Targeting Platform Inbound / Outbound

AppNexus Demand Side Platform Outbound

Google Bid Manager Demand Side Platform Outbound

Invite Media 1.0 Demand Side Platform Outbound

Media Math Demand Side Platform Outbound

Turn Demand Side Platform Outbound

Yieldex Inventory & Yield Management Outbound

Adelphic Mobile Ad Service Outbound

Millennial Media Mobile Ad Service Outbound

DFP Publisher Ad Server Outbound

DFP Premium Publisher Ad Server Outbound

OAS Publisher Ad Server Outbound

Pubmatic Sell-Side Platform Outbound

Rubicon Sell-Side Platform Outbound

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Janrain Social CRM Data Provider Inbound

33Across Targeting Platform Outbound

AdapTV Targeting Platform Outbound

AdLearn (AOL) Targeting Platform Outbound

Adobe AdLens Targeting Platform Outbound

Brandscreen Targeting Platform Outbound

Brightroll Targeting Platform Outbound

Choicesteam Targeting Platform Outbound

Collective Targeting Platform Outbound

DataXu Targeting Platform Outbound

Distillery Targeting Platform Outbound

Drawbridge Targeting Platform Outbound

Flashtalking Targeting Platform Outbound

Google Display Network - Adwords Targeting Platform Outbound

Ignition One Targeting Platform Outbound

NetMining Targeting Platform Outbound

RadiumOne Targeting Platform Outbound

Rocketfuel Targeting Platform Outbound

Specific Media Targeting Platform Outbound

Specific Media Targeting Platform Outbound

The Trade Desk Targeting Platform Outbound

Think Realtime Targeting Platform Outbound

TubeMogul Targeting Platform Outbound

Twitter Targeting Platform Outbound

ValueClick Targeting Platform Outbound

Videology Targeting Platform Outbound

Weborama Targeting Platform Outbound

x+1 Targeting Platform Outbound

Yahoo! Genome Targeting Platform Outbound

YouTube (via Google) Targeting Platform Outbound

Ziff Davis Audience Targeting Platform Outbound

Adobe Target Testing Targeting Platform Outbound

Adobe Auditude Video Targeting Platform Outbound

Freewheel Video Targeting Platform (publisher) Outbound

Adobe Experience Manager (CQ) Web Experience Management Outbound

6.3 Data Security And Privacy

Data security is an important part of data management. Adobe Audience Manager has controls

and systems designed to improve data security and prevent data leakage.

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Data security

Adobe Audience Manager security practices include external and internal audits, activity

logging, training and other procedures designed to help protect our systems and your data. A

secure product helps build and maintain the trust customers place in Adobe technologies.

In Audience Manager, we think about security in three main categories:

SYSTEMS, TRAINING, AND ACCESS

Processes that help keep our system and your data secure

External Security

Validation:

Adobe Audience Manager tests security on an annual and quarterly basis.

Yearly: Once a year, Adobe Audience Manager undergoes a full

penetration test conducted by an independent third-party company. The

test is designed to identify security vulnerabilities in the application. The

tests include scanning for cross-site scripting, SQL injections, form

parameter manipulation and other application-level vulnerabilities.

Quarterly: Once each quarter, internal teams check for security

vulnerabilities. These tests include network scans for open ports and

service vulnerabilities.

Systems Security

To keep data safe and private, Adobe Audience Manager:

Blocks requests from unauthorised IP addresses.

Protects data behind firewalls, VPNs and in virtual private cloud storage.

Tracks changes in the customer and control-information databases with

trigger-based audit logging. These logs track all changes at the database

level, including the user ID and IP address from which changes are

made.

Security Assets

Adobe Audience Manager has a dedicated network operations team that monitors

firewalls and intrusion-detection devices. Only key personnel have access to our

security technology and data.

Security Training

Internally, our commitment to security extends to developers who work on our

product. Adobe provides formal training to developers on how to build secure

applications and services.

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PRIVACY AND PERSONALLY IDENTRIFIABLE INFORMATION (PII)

Processes that help keep personal information safe

PII Data

Adobe Audience Manager contractually enjoins customers and data partners from

sending PII information into our system. Additionally, the unique user ID does not

contain or use PII data as part of the ID-generation algorithm.

PII Addresses

Adobe Audience Manager does collect IP addresses. IP addresses are used in

data processing and log aggregation processes. They are also required for geo-

location look ups and targeting. Additionally, all IP addresses within retained log

files are obfuscated within 90 days

DATA PARTITIONING

Processes that help protect data owned by individual clients

Trait Data Partitioning

Your data (traits, IDs, etc.) is partitioned by the client. This helps prevent

accidental information exposure between different clients. For example, trait data

in cookies is partitioned by the customer and stored in a client-specific sub-

domain. It cannot be read or used accidentally by another Adobe Audience

Manager client. Furthermore, trait data stored in the profile cache servers (PCS)

is also partitioned by the customer. This prevents other clients from accidentally

using your data in an event call or other request.

Data Partitioning in Reports

Client IDs are part of the identifying key in all reporting tables and report queries

are filtered by ID. This helps prevent your data from appearing in the reports of

another Adobe Audience Manager customer.

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Inbound Server-to-Server (S2S) Transfers

SFTP

For the FTP option, most customers choose to deliver files via the Secure FTP

(SFTP) protocol, which uses the Secure Shell (SSH) protocol. This method

ensures that files are encrypted while in transit between the customer's systems

and Adobe's system. For each customer, we create a jailed “drop box” location on

our SFTP servers, which is tied to a user account on that system. Only the

customer's credentialed and privileged internal system users can access this

jailed “drop box” location. This jail is never accessible to other customers.

Amazon Web Services S3

via HTTPS

For the S3 delivery option, we recommend that all customers configure their S3

clients to use the HTTPS encryption method for file transfers (this is not the

default, so it must be explicitly configured).The HTTPS option is supported both

by the s3cmd command line tool as well as the S3 libraries available in every

major programming language. With this HTTPS option enabled, customer's data

is encrypted while in transit to our systems. For each customer, we create a

separate S3 bucket sub-directory that can be accessed only by that customer's

credentials and those of our internal system users. If desired, we can create a

separate S3 bucket (instead of just a separate directory) for customers who are

especially security-minded.

Data privacy

Describes Adobe Audience Manager integration and compliance with generally accepted best

practices related to consumer privacy and opt-out procedures.

Consumer privacy protection

Adobe Audience Manager recognises the implicit pact between consumers and the online

brands with which they interact. Both parties benefit from the transparent exchange of

anonymous data elements. Consumers receive personalised content, discounted product offers

and streamlined user experiences. Similarly, brands receive vital revenue streams supporting

multiple online business models. In our continuing support of this model, Adobe Audience

Manager remains committed to providing transparency and control to consumers, and meeting

or exceeding the online behavioural advertising (OBA) self-regulatory principles.

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DoNotTarget and partner opt-outs

Adobe Audience Manager owns and operates the portal DoNotTarget.com, which provides opt-

out access to all consumers. Consumers will not be tracked across the Audience Manager

network when they opt-out via DoNotTarget.com.

Privacy integration

Adobe Audience Manager provides the following privacy integration targets:

Do Not Track: Adobe Audience Manager processes recognise and take action on “Do Not

Track” HTTP headers.

Evidon: Adobe Audience Manager works with Evidon, a leading privacy compliance vendor, to

enhance our commitment to data privacy. Current efforts include:

Enabling Audience Manager and partner-level opt out capabilities within the Evidon "Ad

Choices" interface.

Working as a partner in the Open Data Partnership, which provides segment-level

transparency across multiple data companies to all consumers.

Improved workflow for ad notice tag trafficking.

Other industry affiliations: Adobe Audience Manager understands the benefit of industry

standards and their ability to build scale in emerging sectors of the economy. As a result, we

constantly engage with industry certification providers such as the Network Advertising Initiative,

the Digital Advertising Alliance and TRUSTe.

Collection of IP addresses

Adobe has enabled processes, and offers settings for, allowing customers to use Adobe

Audience Manager in compliance with applicable data privacy laws.

The IP address of a visitor to a customer’s Web site is transmitted to an Adobe data processing

centre (DPC) where the IP address may be stored. Depending on the network configuration for

the visitor, the IP address does not necessarily represent the IP address of the visitor’s

computer. For example, the IP address could be the external IP address of a network address

translation (NAT) firewall, HTTP proxy, or Internet gateway.

Replacement of last octet of the IP address: Adobe

has developed a new “privacy by design” setting that

can be enabled by Adobe Audience Manager

consulting. When this setting is enabled, the last octet

(the last portion) of the IP address is immediately

hidden when the IP address is collected by Adobe.

This anonymisation is performed prior to any

processing of the IP address, including before an

Tip

Contact your Audience Manager

consulting representative to

enable the IP obfuscation

feature.

Page 70: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

optional geo-lookup of the IP address.

For example, 123.45.67.89 is changed to 123.45.67.0.

When this feature is enabled, the IP address is made sufficiently anonymous so it is no longer

identifiable as personal information. As a result, Adobe Audience Manager can be used in

compliance with data privacy laws in countries that do not permit the collection of personal

information. Obtaining city-level information will likely be significantly impacted by the

obfuscation of the IP address. Obtaining region- and country-level information should only be

slightly impacted.

Geo-segmentation: If customers enable the replacement of the last octet of the IP address, the

remaining values of the IP address can still be utilised for geo-segmentation and reporting in

Adobe Audience Manager. If the last octet of the IP address has not been obfuscated, the full IP

address is used. Customers can use the geo-segmentation feature that allows the customer to

map out visitor location by geographic area in either case, but with a slight loss of precision

when IP obfuscation is being used. Geo-segmentation data is granular only to the city or postal

code level and not to the individual level.

6.4 Democratisation

Democratisation refers to the processes that allow the Adobe technology to be more accessible

to more people within your organisation. In this sense, your organisation will be able to gain the

knowledge necessary to understand how the solution operates at its best, how to find

efficiencies and how to further optimise the business processes to democratise the key

learnings across the organisation.

Leverage Adobe Audience Manager reporting capabilities to monitor key business

processes on trends, traits, segments, destinations and data flows from inbound and

outbound sources.

Reflect results on your KPIs for campaign contribution and encourage your team to take

compulsory, periodic training programs.

Reward proactivity and encourage your team to always work towards success. An

incentive may be to promote people thorough authorisation tiers to encourage better

usage. In the long term this may become a badge of honour.

Page 71: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

6.4.1 Automation

Adobe Audience Manager is designed at its core to provide businesses with all the benefits an

audience management system can provide, meaning that your organisation can use its

resources efficiently allowing space for other strategic areas to play as well.

Financial: Adobe Audience Manager allows you to truly integrate multiple disparate data

sources under one online profile. This ensures an incremental gain of operational

efficiency as your origination leverages the data to make stronger business decisions.

On the other hand, if your instance of Adobe Audience Manager is integrated with other

solutions from the Adobe Marketing Cloud, your organisation will be allowed to build

upon what exists and identify new creative opportunities.

Processes: Adobe Audience Manager allows you to leverage its advanced

segmentation capabilities to activate data across multiple channels, providers and

targeting platforms in real-time enabling your organisation to gain competitive advantage

when launching your marketing efforts.

Stakeholders: Adobe Audience Manager was built to guarantee a secure flow of

information among team members restricting how sensitive data is shown or handled.

Reporting: Adobe Audience Manager allows you to monitor and report on key

performance indicators. You can also build customised reports and schedule periodic

deliveries so stakeholders can take action.

6.5 Leveraging Your Investment (The Big Picture)

The Adobe Marketing Cloud, includes powerful Web analytics and Web site optimisation

products that deliver actionable, real-time data and insights to drive successful online initiatives.

It offers an integrated and open platform for online business optimisation. The cloud consists of

integrated applications to collect and unleash the power of customer insight to optimise

Marketing Technolgy

Financial

Cost efficiency ROI efficiency

Processes

Real-time segmentation

capabilityPlanning

Stakeholders

User administration

Consumer profiling

Reporting

Real timeSolution

integration

Page 72: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

customer acquisition, conversion and retention efforts as well as the creation and distribution of

content.

Once you are up running with Adobe Audience Manager and want to grow your digital

capabilities to the next level, you might want to go back to what your business needs are. We

see a common trend of Adobe Audience Manager users purchasing Adobe Experience

Manager as a next step in order to improve their Web and mobile site experiences. Clients who

feel they have a gap in acquisition or want to improve their customer reach opt to follow their

Adobe Audience Manager purchase with Adobe Campaign or Adobe Media Optimiser

depending on their specific needs.

If your objective is to increase personalisation and engagement we suggest you purchase

Adobe Target together with Adobe Audience Manager. This will help you test and personalise

content across channels in addition to extending audiences across solutions. In the specific

case that you manage high volumes of video content and want to improve your video delivery

across channels and devices, Adobe Primetime will do the work.

Adobe Marketing

Cloud Solutions Adobe Creative

Cloud

Manage Digital Experiences

Adobe Experience Manager

Personalise Content

Adobe Target

Build and Deliver Video

Adobe Primetime

Build Audience Profiles

Adobe Audience Manager

Manage Social

Adobe Social

Manage Campaigns

Adobe Campaign

Management Digital Ad

Adobe Media Optimiser

Collect and Analyse Data

Adobe Analytics

ACQUISITION ENGAGEMENT

Digital Asset

Management

Page 73: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Continue growing your digital marketing strength and add a new Adobe Marketing Cloud

solution based on what your business demands. A good level of integration across solutions will

help you make, manage, measure and monetise your content across every channel and screen.

7 Checklist

The following lists highlight some specific high-level points. They are not meant to be

exhaustive, but aim to give some pointers and provide a basis for your own checklists. You and

your Adobe customer success manager can use the first checklist to qualify which or our

recommendations from this document have been put in place.

Item Completed

Executive sponsor named and communicated

Stakeholder buy-in across the business

Communication plan created and announced

Steering committee established

Working groups established

Digital marketing maturity assessed

Digital KPIs defined and agreed upon across business units

Business structure identified, agreed upon and communicated

Project-based organisational structure agreed and communicated

Business partners engaged and involved

Community and culture practices documented and communicated

Trait and segment architecture created

Generate segmentation protocols document

Adobe Tag Manager container code placed and verified

All first, third and CRM data sources identified

Data strategy generated and communicated

Access levels granted to business operators

Review current reporting and roadmap planned for reporting

Automate and schedule

Review privacy policy and plan opt-out and notice and choice configuration

Build, test and deploy

Creation of training roadmap

Forecasting questions

Post production support

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8 Adobe Audience Manager Product Maturity Activities

Are you using Adobe Audience Manager at its full potential?

Have a look at the entire list of features and assess the degree on which your organisation is

using the solution.

Audience Manager Capabilities

Custom segment generation

Ad server integration

Tag management

Performance reporting

Destination publishing

Data security and privacy

Technical Features

Data collection and

normalisation

Segmentation and profile

management

Mobile DMP

1st, 2nd & 3rd party data integration

Decisioning

Advanced reporting and

analytics

Dynamic tag management

Adobe Marketing Cloud Integrations

Adobe Analytics

Adobe Target

Adobe Experience Manager

Adobe Campaign

Adobe Primetime

Audience Manager

Adobe Media Optimizer

Page 75: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

9 Assistance Consulting Operational Maturity Review

Operational readiness assessment and

recommendations - $6000 (per brand/business unit)

Adobe consulting provides a package to review your

operational business readiness and provide a recommended

roadmap of initiatives to accelerate your maturity. This

service is highly recommended if you are new to the solution

and need assistance in evaluating your capabilities.

Activities include:

Conference call or meeting to interview executive sponsor.

Consulting guidance on completing the solution maturity assessment.

Consulting walk through of maturity operational readiness checklist.

Qualification of current documents, templates and processes.

Draft of initial findings, highlight focus themes reviewed with executive sponsor.

Executive sponsor sign off.

High-level roadmap of recommendations presented to stakeholder group.

10 Adobe Audience Manager Glossary of Terms

Term Definition

A/B Test An activity that compares two or more versions of your Web site content to see which best lifts your conversions, sales or registrations.

Audience A group of similar activity entrants who will see a targeted activity.

Big data Describes any voluminous amount of structured, semi-structured and unstructured data that has the potential to be mined for information.

CRM analytics CRM (customer relationship management) analytics is defined as the processes and analysis conducted on customer’s information and presents it so that better business decisions can be made.

Customer data integration Processes of managing customer information from all available sources so better marketing processes can be established.

Tip & Trick

Also use the self-

assessment tool designed to

help you identify your

organisation’s strengths and

prioritise focus areas in

Adobe Audience Manager

and integrated Adobe

Marketing Cloud solutions

Page 76: Adobe Audience Manager Readiness Playbook

Data hygiene Determined by all the processes and mechanisms to improve, update and clean the database so better marketing processes can take place in the organisation.

Data ingestion Data ingestion is the process of obtaining, importing and processing data for later use or storage in a database.

Data management platforms (DMP)

A data management platform (DMP), also called a unified data management platform (UDMP), is a centralised computing system for collecting, integrating and managing data large data sets from disparate sources.

Digital asset manager (DAM) The library containing items to be used as content in marketing campaigns.

Engagement The measurement of a visitor’s interest in a site, measured by time on site, clicks, conversions and other metrics.

Geo location parameter Allows you to target campaigns and experiences based on your visitors’ geography. Also known as geo targeting parameter.

Key performance indicator (KPI) Key performance indicators simplify Web analysis data reporting so that only relevant information is presented in an easily understood and actionable format.

Landing page campaign A landing page campaign allows you to use targeting to display different landing page content for different visits. Otherwise, the landing page shows the same content for each visit. A landing page campaign compares different versions of the page to help you see which version of the landing page produces more successful results. In target standard it is replaced by experience targeting.

Login company A login company is a collection of report suites used by your organisation. Some organisations have multiple login companies that apply to different parts of the organisation. This is especially useful for large organisations that deal with different business units where many report suites are not applicable to others in the company.

Optimisation campaign Ensures the most effective experiences are shown more often by automatically distributing traffic to the best-performing segments.

Profile An entry in the database that contains all the information required for targeting, qualifying and tracking a person. It can be identified by its storage space. A profile can be a recipient, a visitor, an user, a customer, a subscriber, etc.

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Real-time reports Real-time reports display Web page traffic and rank page views in real time so you can more quickly understand what is trending on your marketing landscape.

Segment A specified set of criteria used for targeting a campaign. Only visitors who meet the criteria see the content of a campaign targeted to that segment. Some segments are reusable across multiple campaigns and others are specific to a campaign.

Success metrics The parameters used to measure the success of an activity.

Test A campaign that compares two or more experiences against the success metrics you specify, so you can choose the experience that is most likely to provide the results you want.

Time on site An engagement type that represents the time spent in the visit (in seconds) from the point the visitor sees a campaign until leaving.

Visitor A visitor is any person who accesses your site. A visitor is evaluated against activity criteria to determine whether the visitor is included in an activity. See entrant.

Workflows Set of features grouped into activities that let you schedule and automate specific processes like delivery sending, approval processes, file transfers, etc. The various workflow activities also let you manipulate data, enrich it and collect information stored in an external database.

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11 Adobe Audience Manager Templates

11.1 Customer Profile Template The following template was designed to provide guidance on key traits you can use to build your customer profiles.

Demographic Psychographic Behavioural

B2B B2C B2B B2C B2B B2C

# Employees

Revenue

Industry

# Locations

Age

Markets

Products

Services

Key stakeholders

Level of experience

Age

Income

Marital status

Education

Family size

Geographic location

Social community

Occupation

Level of experience

Resistance to change

Org. Structure

Early adopter

Sophistication

Risk aversion

Loyalty

Likes and dislikes

Preferences

Price sensitivity

Conservative / Liberal

Hobbies

Lifestyle

Service preferences.

Influenced by peers

Relationships

Web site visits

Site interaction

Site engagement

Preferred purchasing

method

Collateral consumed

Media consumptions

Habits and skills

Research methods

Purchase history

Site interaction

Channel engagement

Memberships

Device usage

Buying decision making

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11.2 Deep Dive Insights Request Template