Adobe Marketo Engage (acquired by Adobe in 2018) is a marketing automation platform whose basic features include email marketing, drip nurturing, landing pages, and lead scoring, but other editions offer additional advanced features. Typical customers are B2B firms with complex sales cycles.
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Convertro (discontinued)
Score 5.9 out of 10
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Convertro was a multi-channel marketing attribution modeling and analytics platform developed by a company of the same name in Santa Monica, California. It was acquired by AOL in May 2014 and since discontinued.
We used Adobe Marketo Engage because it is more suited for a B2B environment. We are exploring Adobe Journey Optimizer B2B edition for the future as this can have capabilities for ABM efforts, however we currently use Marketo for the majority of our efforts. Marketo allows us …
Hubspot is a solid platform software that is more user friendly, that being said, I think Marketo Engage is better able to provide reports that are import to us and we can use on a daily basis. It has better data normalization properties than Hubspot that we can utilize easier.
Marketo is a lot more robust and allows for more customization. Workflows require more work but that always for your own take on it. Hubspot is a lot user friendly but doesn't have Marketo's capabilities.
Adobe Marketo Engage is the best since it barely shine on inbound marketing but also focuses on large to global enterprises complex B2B-buying journey, lead management and external CRM integrations which is contrary in Hubspot Marketing Hub
I would say Adobe Marketo Engage is better than other prospect tools because Adobe Marketo Engage uses AI and several tools in one and Adobe Marketo Engage integrates with other software like Microsoft and Google. Adobe Marketo Engage is very smart and intuitive. Adobe Marketo …
Not even clise Marketo is such a better tool. Forms alone. In Marketo you could set one form with an ID and market could use the referring URL as attribution SFMC forces us to remake each and every form for proper attribution. As simple changes need to roll out the level of …
Adobe Marketo Engage is one of the more well known marketing automation tools available and is comparable to Salesforce marketing cloud with its technical lift and robust customization. Hubspot and Pardot are more user friendly and don't require as much custom coding or …
I think Adobe Marketo Engage is the best out of all of them. Well, at least for 85% of the B2B businesses with a single business focus/sales force. For larger organizations with multiple business units and sales teams, all needing to share the same database, I think Oracle …
We started with Adobe Marketo Engage and used them for around 5 years. However, we did not grow much with the tool and support and customer success did little to help us with our growth in the tool. So the cost was not justifiable so we switched to a different provider at less …
[...] is a partner of HubSpot, and we are mutual customers of each other. This may be because HubSpot is a [...] investor, but roughly half of [...]'s customers are Adobe Marketo Engage customers (the other half being HubSpot customers).
If you are looking to, you're looking to scale up your lead gen work. Adobe Marketo was a very good tool for that. You're looking to deliver leads to a sales team from marketing campaigns. It's a very good tool for that. It runs everything we do on the marketing side and I think a small lead gen team or a very large one could use an equally well.
Marketo's email editor is basic in comparison to other cheaper alternatives out there.
Marketo doesn't work as well in B2C scenarios as it does in B2B. One of the painpoints of this is it's difficult to showcase a selection of product recommendations based on purchase behaviour without a very time consuming workaround. It's manageable if you're only selling a handful of products, but it's inefficient when dealing with a large catalogue.
Marketo's form and landing page builder are also behind the times. Perhaps not as bad as the Salesforce Marketing Cloud platform, but for an enterprise company the product should be much better.
In some aspects, the tool can feel quite clunky in parts. But with the rich feature set it has, it's understandable. There is a lot of room for improvement for the user interface. The system itself doesn't have a slick or modern feel, so the usability could feel nicer to use with these areas considered.
Marketo provides different way and abilities to connect. If you are having product support or unexplained errors you can get someone on Marketo support 24 hours a day. One of Marketo's greatest assets in my opinion however would be the community. Often times our company is just looking for case success stories from someone else. In the community you can search for problems you are currently facing and see others having the same issue and solutions for those issues. If not, you can pose a question to the whole community and champions of the product and others can chime in to provide suggestions to fix your needs. The community is truly a 24/7 place to get your answers quickly.
There are times when it is slightly slow for us, where we sit on a screen waiting for it to load. This could be our internet since we have had the same issue occasionally with other systems, but it is enough to make you crazy.
On multiple occasions we've had Marketo support (technical and license based) issues. Technical issues were minor and resolved within a day. License based issues (even things encouraged by Marketo for partners, like provisioning another license) took WEEKS. They actually took so long to respond that the client we were working with withdrew from the contract because they were no longer convinced Marketo was capable of supporting their business. As an agency trying to sell the software, you can only explain away so much before they just made us look silly.
If you are first time user then the training is perfect, but the advance training is not that effective. After working in Marketo for 5 years there is nothing new to learn. The new tools that Marketo have are expensive and too difficult to use. + I would recommend to learn the basic and use Marketo on the daily bases as you will forget everything in a month if you don't use it.
You can get 100% of your training done online. Marketo's community is filled with experts and they list free training videos on marketo.com. They also have user groups in every major city that help you get the most out of your Marketo instance and Marketing Automation in general. It's really easy to pick up this tool and start running on day one.
1. Have a content marketing plan to run in parallel with the marketing automation installation--you'll need a lot of content to make full use of Marketo's capabilities. 2. Work with sales (and ISRs) to define and document a workflow--build your Marketo installation around how you do business--not figure out how to apply your business to the tools 3. Spend time of data cleaning--both an initial project as well as a strategy for ongoing data management. We found some change manaement issues (no more appending ZZZ to the first name to identify contacts who have left the company, for example, or prohibiting the entry of "info@company.com" email addresses). 4. Find some champions in the sales and ISR teams. You'll have both fans and detractors--work with the fans to build some success stories
[...] is a partner of HubSpot, and we are mutual customers of each other. This may be because HubSpot is a [...] investor, but roughly half of [...]'s customers are Adobe Marketo Engage customers (the other half being HubSpot customers).
As we have grown, Marketo has grown with us. We started with simple single email campaigns and are now doing complex campaigns with multiple emails and tracks that we send a contact to if they take certain actions within our emails. We also have a complex integration with several systems and have the visibility into our marketing activities throughout our organization.