Today I’ll present the third and (mercifully?) final installment in my series of posts on leaders in the different B2B marketing automation sectors, as determined by the ratings in our VEST report. I’ve saved the best for last, in the sense that the small to mid-size sector is the heart of the industry and its most complicated arena.
We define small to mid-size business as companies with $5 million to $500 million revenue. This covers a broad range of marketing users with widely varied needs. Most require the full set of marketing automation functions but apply these in simple ways. They have one to fifteen marketing automation users. This sector generates nearly 60% of 2012 revenue ($200 million) from 33% of the installations (9,400 as of mid-2012). The VEST report provides separate client counts for small business ($5 million to $20 million revenue) and mid-size business ($20 million to $500 million). These account for 16% and 41% of revenue and 16% and 17% of installations, respectively. Although small businesses generally buy lower-priced systems, they have largely the same requirements as mid-size companies.
The leaders quadrant in this sector is quite crowded, with Act-On, Eloqua, Pardot, and Marketo all jostling for position. Silverpop, Neolane, and Genius are all lurking nearby. In case you haven’t caught on to my color coding, blue type indicates that Eloqua and Neolane are leaders in the large company segment, while red type shows the others have their strongest position in this sector.
The variety of users within this segment is reflected by the differences among the leaders. Act-On, Pardot, and Genius specialize in smaller companies than Marketo or Silverpop, which in turn serve generally smaller clients than Eloqua or Neolane. Act-On’s position on top of the product fit range is a bit misleading: when you look at the components of that score (see below; this comparison chart is another VEST feature), the vendors are all very close. In fact, the only category where Act-On scores higher than everyone else is pricing.
This isn’t at all to say that the products are equivalent. Rather, it means they each have different strengths and weaknesses that balance each other out when measured with generic scoring weights. For actual buyers with clear priorities, the difference among these vendors’ scores will almost always be much larger.
As with the other sector charts, the vendors in the upper left are also worth considering: they have strong product fit but relatively low market position. SalesFusion appears here as it did in the micro- and large-business charts: what can I say, they have rich features at a good price. (And, no, they’re not my client.) eTrigue is the other noteworthy contender; it and LeadFormix are both close to the leader quadrant based on their vendor fit.
If there’s any one lesson from all these charts, it’s that picking the “leading” vendor is no guarantee of making a good choice. Our three sets of weights yield different sets of leaders, and even those vendors have different strengths and weaknesses. I’ve said it a million times but I’ll say it again: there’s no substitute for understanding your own needs and finding out which vendors match them best.
David, thanks for sharing your insights about B2B tech solutions. Great stuff!