Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Data Scientists and Analysts on the Rise

Analysts and data scientists are in high demand in all industries and departments but especially in digital marketing.  The abundance of online customer data has grown exponentially over the past decade making it no longer optional for marketing teams to track, access, and analyze data to make informed marketing decisions for their respective businesses.

Why is the analyst skill set so in demand for marketers? As Eric Bryn, Digital Analyst and Adjunct Professor, told Master’s in Data Science, “A marketing analyst will understand consumer expectations and use this understanding to work with a data science team to drive better product development, campaign management, and advertising messaging strategies. The more targeted these strategies are for consumers, the more profitable companies can become.”  As consumers we have flooded the internet world with raw data and now businesses need to utilize that data to sell their products to us.  Which is why they need analysts.

Now most employers who are looking to hire a marketing analyst are more interested in candidates who have a bachelor’s degree in statistics or computer science than someone who had a non-STEM degree in marketing.  This has been proven evident even in the tech company that I currently work for.  We were looking for an entry level marketing analyst and the hiring manager said, “we need someone who is closer to an engineer, who can understand large amounts of data and how to navigate through it, I can teach them the marketing stuff.”  This shows a very different strategy and trend for marketing departments than what we may have heard from a marketing manager 10 years ago.

While the marketing analyst provides a huge asset to the department, every marketing department needs a data scientist.  With the rise of technology, data is power in business.  The data scientist on your team will be able to tell you when is the best time to post a Facebook ad to sell makeup to young professional women.  As Marketing Land points out, a fresh-out-of-college data scientist can make a better decision when to post your ad because the data scientists have access to every campaign you have run and the corresponding results along with the data that is out there on the “interwebs.”  People aren’t turning to the most tenured marketer on the team for this type of decision, they are turning to the folks with the data.  Having a data scientist on your marketing team is going to give you an advantage to help rise over competitors and make smarter decisions as to where to spend your marketing dollars.

In my personal experience from working in a technology company and in talent acquisition, every department can benefit from having a data scientist and analyst on their team.  I have seen the rise of this first hand from our sales department, business development, and even HR department adding on analysts or data scientists dedicated to their department.

Data science is the most in demand skill set in marketing and in all industries.  As the American Marketing Association cited, Gartner and McKinsey put out reports that say there will be between 100,000 and 190,000 more data science jobs than there are data scientists.  These numbers paint a real picture that many hiring managers will struggle to hire this skill set.  Companies should look at what is that is expected of data scientists and what is that makes one great and start putting together their hiring strategy to attract this talent. 


When hiring a for a marketing department we expect them to be able to manage the big data to generate insights as to how to run our marketing efforts.  These people need to be statisticians, part computer scientists, be able to work with people and understand/communicate the larger picture of the business; they’re not there to only identify insights but also identify and solve problems in the business.  No wonder they’re in such high demand…

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