A new study suggests operational inefficiencies, underused martech tools, and weak measurement practices are holding back marketing performance across UK organizations.
A new study has revealed that half (50%) of senior UK marketers score their business’s overall campaign execution as below average (less than 11 out of 20) – and only six percent would rate their teams’ performance as genuinely agile when it comes to defining, creating, and executing marketing campaigns.
One in eight (13%) also admits they don’t have a content strategy, while more than half (56%) either don’t gather content and campaign performance insights at all or produce reports but don’t act on the findings.
When it comes to delivering campaign ROI, just over a third of marketing departments (38%) say they measure ROI for some of their campaigns but not all, while a quarter (25%) say they have no visibility into ROI.
The analysis comes from the Marketing Experience (MX) readiness survey, developed by Intermedia Global (IMG), which evaluates how effectively an organisation’s marketing operations are functioning across several core areas. These include data and insight maturity, technology integration, campaign execution, operational efficiency, and process alignment.
Steve Kemish, CEO of IMG, comments: “Many teams have invested in platforms and data, but still struggle to execute campaigns efficiently and at speed. This suggests that operational friction remains one of the biggest hidden barriers to marketing performance today.”
The survey also revealed a huge gap between the best and worst performers in technology maturity, which recorded the widest spread in overall scores across all areas covered.
For example, nearly half (44%) say that their key martech tools (CRM, automation, analytics, DAM) work well together and would call their current setup ‘pretty good’, while a quarter (25%) say those tools in their organization are ineffective and aren’t fit for the future.
The human element remains another significant area of potential concern for many: half of marketing teams either offer only minimal onboarding and training for marketing technology when people first join, or leave it to new users to figure it out on their own.
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Even more (56%) say that their teams understand the main features of the martech stack but underuse the advanced ones.
Steve Kemish adds: “The findings found that technology itself isn’t necessarily the problem; it’s consistency. Some businesses are moving well along their martech journeys, while others are still stuck in the Stone Age. It adds to the friction that prevents their campaigns from being effective.
“Overall, the research reinforces that modern marketing success is no longer just about creativity or investment in technology. It’s about operational maturity — how effectively organizations connect their data, systems, processes, people, and execution to create a stronger Marketing Experience.”