Marketers often treat Mops as order-takers for quick tasks. Instead, view them as strategic partners managing complex systems. This reframes the relationship from transactional to collaborative, acknowledging the intricate "plumbing" behind a simple request like an email send.

Related Insights

To succeed, marketers must stop passively accepting the data they're given. Instead, they must proactively partner with IT and privacy teams to advocate for the specific data collection and governance required to power their growth and personalization initiatives.

Mops teams become respected strategic partners when they stop passively accepting requests and start asking "why." By questioning the goal behind a task and suggesting better approaches, they demonstrate expertise and train stakeholders to treat them as advisors, not a fast-food drive-thru.

Adopt engineering methodologies like sprints, story points, and capacity dashboards for marketing operations. This provides the data needed to manage stakeholder expectations, prioritize requests transparently, and move the team from reactive order-takers to strategic partners with a defensible roadmap.

To avoid biased prioritization, structure Marketing Ops as an independent unit rather than placing it under Demand Gen or a sales-led RevOps team. This allows Mops to be a neutral hub, prioritizing projects based on their impact on total company revenue, not just one department's goals.

The team moves beyond surface-level KPIs like open and click rates. They measure success by its contribution to broader business objectives: generating more value with less cost and investment. This focus on operational efficiency ensures marketing activities are directly tied to tangible financial outcomes and long-term customer value.

Treat Your Marketing Ops Team Like a Michelin Star Restaurant, Not a Drive-Thru | RiffOn