In a rapidly evolving digital landscape, Eric Stine, CEO of Sitecore, is drawing from his diverse background as a Tony Award-winning Broadway producer to reshape marketing strategies for the modern era. Stine, who previously co-produced the 2024 Best Musical, The Outsiders, emphasizes the importance of digital marketing in driving ticket sales, stating, “We have to sell a million a week in ticket sales to pay our cast, pay our crew, pay rent on the theatre, run marketing.”
Stine’s approach underscores a significant shift in how brands engage with consumers. “I have a website. It exists to sell tickets,” he explains, highlighting the need for content to be discoverable in a digital environment saturated with information. “When agents crawl it, it’s found. We are the answer to a question in Perplexity, the answer to that question in ChatGPT, the answer to a search in Google that comes up in Gemini.”
This perspective illustrates the broader challenges faced by marketers today. Stine argues that the traditional model, where websites anchor experiences and search delivers traffic, is becoming obsolete. “The starting point for the customer journey is no longer a homepage. It is an answer,” he states, emphasizing that brands must now focus on being the solution to consumer inquiries.
For nearly two decades, digital marketing revolved around the concept of search, where brands optimized pages and purchased keywords to drive traffic. Stine observes that discovery is evolving from links to responses, moving from search engines to “answer engines.” Customers increasingly expect direct answers to their questions, regardless of the source. “Do you know what question you are the answer to? Do you know what questions you need to be the answer to?” he asks, challenging brands to rethink their content strategies.
Roger Connolly, Sitecore’s chief product officer, reinforces this shift, noting that the challenge lies not just in producing more content but in ensuring it is intelligible to both machines and humans. “Natural prose that you might use to effectively communicate with a human on your website is actually not as effective when an agent is exploring your site,” he explains, urging marketers to embrace content structuring and information architecture as essential skills.
This transition calls for a reevaluation of content hygiene. Stine raises a pertinent question: “Do you have old pages with inaccurate, irrelevant or outdated information?” In an answer-driven environment, outdated content is not merely inefficient; it can be detrimental to a brand’s credibility.
The Collapse of Channels
Stine’s insights extend to the notion of marketing channels, which he argues should not be treated as distinct entities. Instead, social media, search, websites, and content are interconnected surfaces of a singular system. His Broadway experience serves as an example of how a blog series featuring an actor can enhance social engagement, while clips on social media can generate interest among specific demographics, ultimately driving ticket sales.
He posits that the traditional separation between channels is increasingly artificial, asserting that what truly matters is whether content contributes to a coherent narrative and is accessible, relevant, and actionable in context. Connolly elaborates on this shift, indicating that successful companies are becoming more agile, able to react to signals in real-time rather than relying on static campaigns.
In response to this evolving landscape, Sitecore is developing a signals engine designed to integrate data related to brand performance, competitor activity, and market conditions. This new tool aims to transform traditional upfront marketing strategies into adaptive systems. “Upfront planning… is becoming less predictable,” Connolly notes, emphasizing the need for a feedback loop in marketing that allows for constant adjustment based on new information.
Stine is candid about Sitecore’s challenges, admitting that the company has previously focused too heavily on products rather than clearly articulating the problems they solve. “I don’t think we told a story about solutions rather than products,” he says. He argues that enterprise buyers are more interested in increasing customer frequency, improving conversion rates, and reducing costs than in specific tools or systems.
Looking ahead, Stine emphasizes that cloud-native architecture is essential for harnessing the capabilities of modern AI systems, stating, “Without it, the promise of personalisation and real-time decisioning will remain elusive.” This is particularly relevant as the conversation shifts toward artificial intelligence, which Stine believes will play a significant role in marketing’s future, though he expresses skepticism regarding its potential to revolutionize content creation.
While generative tools can enhance production efficiency, Stine contends that true competitive advantage will stem from effective orchestration of marketing efforts. Connolly echoes this sentiment, noting that while many organizations are focused on optimizing existing processes, the real opportunity lies in improving brand reach and conversion rates. “The bigger opportunity presents itself when you start thinking about brand reach and ultimately better converting content which has real revenue outcomes,” he explains.
As the marketing landscape evolves, the challenge for leaders like Stine and Connolly will be to prepare organizations for a future where personalization is not merely about tailored messages but about creating customer experiences that resonate with individual contexts and needs.
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