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YES.
This is the best (and really only) way to do this. Your RCM transitions have a basic trigger like "Revenue Stage Changes", but you put all of the logic into a series of campaigns in an Operational Program.
Depending on your transitions and other data needs, you may end up with 15-30 campaigns to manage it all.
YES.
This is the best (and really only) way to do this. Your RCM transitions have a basic trigger like "Revenue Stage Changes", but you put all of the logic into a series of campaigns in an Operational Program.
Depending on your transitions and other data needs, you may end up with 15-30 campaigns to manage it all.
In re-opening this discussion, I'm taking this approach in updating a RCM; however, I'm curious about one thing. What is the advantage of having a lifecycle status field AND the revenue stage, when the revenue stage always tracks the lifecycle stage and the lead lifecycle campaigns are always updating both? Is it because you can use the lifecycle stage field as a column in a view but not the revenue stage? I think I've answered my own question, but it is worth putting it up here because I couldn't find this info anywhere.
Josh Hill Kristen Malkovich would appreciate any further insights on this?
Thanks
There's a presentation I did with Jeff last Summit. Please look it up.
The advantage of the separate field is you can then display this data in SFDC and retain it, rather than relying on having Marketo. So it's not just about data retention in case you switch vendors, but also so you can use the data in SFDC or other reporting tools.
I did look it up, had referred to it extensively and downloaded the ebook - found it very helpful, thank you. But I didn't see this particular question addressed.
Thanks, the answer makes good sense.
I agree with Josh. A combo of both is best.
I use the modeler to move leads to different stages based on our funnel definitions, then have an operational program that consists of trigger campaigns waiting for these stage transitions to update the stages within the operational programs.