In November, I attended and moderated a panel at the MOps-Apalooza conference from the marketingops.com community. This post covers some of the sessions I attended, as summarized for LinkedIn posts and now here in one place, for your convenience. A previous post can be viewed here.
A MOps-Apalooza panel on ‘Certifying the Future of Marketing Ops: Beyond the Tools’ featured Naomi Liu, Eric Hollebone, Britney Young, and Mary Souza.
The current state:
52% of companies offer no formal training.
33% of marketing ops pros have no clear career path.
65% rely on on-the-job experience for growth.
A professional certification for marketing ops would be valued by 75% of people surveyed, for increased clarity, confidence, structure, validation, and benchmarks for growth.
How can a standardized, tech-agnostic certification elevate credibility and career paths?
Eric said software certifications don’t reflect a person's value. The certification has to enable people to speak in revenue terms to the rest of the company, such as the CFO. If we get certification programs into universities, marketing ops professionals can learn to be business-savvy from the start.
Mary spoke about the need to speak financial-ese to get buy-in and how a certification can help define the role of marketing ops, which currently looks different for everyone. It would help move it away from technical, ticket-taker roles and toward greater credibility and visibility within companies.
What should a certification measure to validate strategy, systems thinking, and cross-functional leadership —not just tool clicks?
Britney talked about how certifications should teach how to measure outcomes with strategic impact, so you need to learn a business mindset.
Eric said we need to teach problem-solving and critical thinking. Engineering is problem-solving with constraints, so borrow their curriculum.
In other fields, certification drives measurable results:
81% of graduates see promotions.
33% salary increase for PMP-certified professionals.
Marketing Ops mirrors that need:
27% cite leadership misalignment.
26% lack of recognition as the top barrier.
How do we keep certification relevant as trends and tech evolve?
Mary talked about understanding that things will change and rolling with it, as other certifications compensate for changes. At the beginning of our careers, a lot of us got certifications for our resumes, but we need ‘soft’ skills: communicating, problem-solving, and more than the technical piece.
Britney said so much has changed in tools, but soft skills and the need for a strategic mindset don’t change.
Eric spoke about a 3-track system, with higher leadership tracks being peer-reviewed:
Tech, always evolving
Business sense
Change management, people management – people haven’t evolved in 10,000 years, while tech evolves constantly
What skills are most important in marketing ops?
Mary and Britney said how to interact with stakeholders, such as reading the room, explaining issues and fixes concisely, and making future predictions.
Eric emphasized the importance of active listening for identifying triggers throughout the conversation and conflict resolution skills. Thinking in other people’s shoes to get agreements.
Thank you for this great panel!
Akande Davis spoke at MOps-Apalooza on marketing ops earning influence in the company.
When everything is on FIRE…
Who cares about alignment?
How do we get into those conversations before things break?
During Akande’s time as an in-house resource, he wanted to help the company grow in a meaningful way; however, he was typically:
Troubleshooting sync issues
Approving, changing, re-approving emails
Chasing down unsubscribes
List imports
Figuring out why Outlook hates everyone
Explaining GDPR
Fighting for budget
Where he really wanted to spend time:
Designing scalable campaign architectures
Testing new Martech tools and emerging channels
Developing long-term frameworks for attribution, lead scoring, and more
Translating data into insights for leadership
Partnering with Sales, Product, & RevOps to align on data and process
He found out that he wasnʼt alone!
These were challenges that EVERYONE ran into.
Ops gets locked into doing things we’re not passionate about.
How do you transition from tech to strategy?
Getting a seat at the table is challenging.
But you can get leadership visibility even if you're not in a boardroom.
How to translate Ops Into Revenue:
A roadmap for influence:
A simple view could look like:
Tactical: Navigating the conversation
Translational
Strategic: Doing more than execution
Influential: Where you have your seat at the table
Great Execution Is Brass Tacks For Everything.
Marketing ops is the foundation behind Marketing, Sales, Customer Success, and even impacts Company Goals and Market and Board Influence.
Thank you, Akande!
Todd Sprinkel did indeed give a wide variety of advice! Some of which included or related to:
General marketing ops:
Always plan for scale. Spend 8 hours now to save yourself 10 minutes 100 times in the future.
Use ISO 8601 Date Formats (e.g. 2025-10-29)
Don’t create ‘wait steps” to allow X to happen
Indent your formulas and code, instead of using an unformatted paragraph/list, and add /Comments*/ to your Salesforce formulas: /****DO NOT TOUCH BELOW THIS LINE****/
Excel:
Date to ISO 8601 String =TEXT(A2,"yyyy-mm-dd")
Useful Keyboard Shortcuts (too many to summarize!)
Is Duplicate? =IF(A2=A1,1,0)
In other list?= IF(ISNUMBER(MATCH(A2,DD,0,))1,0)
Get list of related records = TEXTJOIN(",",TRUE,FILTER(E:E,A2=D:D))
Use Office scripts for repetitive work
HubSpot:
Verify Sync to SFDC Before Adding to Campaign
Advanced logic is now possible. No more duplicating logic groups!
Marketo:
There is a direct link to double click into any Contact record from Lead Database
Use the Marketo /supportTools
Use the new global token to avoid an unnecessary folder in your tree
Executable vs Requestable, Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Processing - DO or QUEUE. Do I need this RIGHT NOW? Or can queue because I don't care when it finishes?
Salesforce:
Inspector Reloaded browser extension
UnofficialSF AppExchange
15-to-18 Digit IDs. You can also create a formula field CASESAFEID( Id )
Campaign Structure
Classic Merging in Lightning
Custom Metadata Types, Custom Labels, etc.
Power of 1. Custom Formula Field on main objects - Return 1
Difference in Business Hours Formula
Run Rate Formula
Get All Fields from an Object
Trailhead/Free Developer Edition
How to Get FREE Help from Experts:
Meet people where they are. Join Slack communities, product communities, user groups, etc.
Post publicly. Ask your question in public. Feel free to tag anyone specific, but don't message unless it's specifically about their work. Give others a chance to help.
Have a reasonable, specific question (Not just saying Hello --> Go straight to jail.). Provide details of your ask upfront–don't wait for someone to reply before providing details like expectations, or steps to reproduce and any error messages. If you can, provide links, screenshots, etc.
Demonstrate that you've already tried. Use Google, reference documentation/forums related to what you're trying to do. Put in the effort before asking for help and SHOW that you made the effort.
Value their time. Say thank you. Offer to pay for their time if what you need is beyond a quick question.
Pay it forward. Network religiously. Help others where you can. They are much more likely to want to help you if they see you giving back to the community.
Thank you, Todd!
Frans Riemersma spoke about ‘Three learnings from Mopza2025.’
With all the tech and data we have access to, why don’t we have excellent customer experiences?
What if we didn’t have all that tech and data? What would we do?
Ingvar Kamprad, the founder of IKEA, was dyslexic and didn’t have easy access to technology/data. It made him always start with the customer. He is talking to you through the furniture, connecting with the customer, in a constant dialogue in the store. He invented the furniture names due to dyslexia, so he wouldn't have to use SKU numbers.
With clients, the first question Frans asks is: What can you switch off?
The BIG skills shift.
From Technology to Customer Value.
Software is easier to operate now; you don't need years of engineering to create it.
Drive Technology Value with Martech.
Drive Technology Value with AI – new org charts, startups with one marketer and 40 AI agents.
Drive Technology Value with Martech + AI:
How is your Technology Aligned with Strategy?
Assess the company across strategy, process, and tech maturity.
Strategy maturity should be higher than process maturity, which should be higher than tech maturity.
How Do Your Tools Compare to Outperformers?
How Well are your Requirements Aligned?
What if we benchmark stacks based on value?
“Stop implementing software.
Start implementing customer business casesˮ
~ Value Engineering, a method that enables a company to generate revenue by focusing on the customer.
MarketingOps 1.0: Tool admins & data heroes
MarketingOps 2.0: Use Case Onboarders
MarketingOps 3.0: Value Engineers
Storytelling = Data + Soul.
~ Brenée Brown
“The customer talks to you, through the dataˮ
~ Frans
2. Drive Customer Value
Value Engineering = Customer Business Cases.
Make a business case.
ALWAYS.
Build Portfolio: 20% Business Cases drive 80% of revenue.
Segment Sources. Use the Segmentation Matrix.
Not all data is equal. No information is also information.
“The best antidote against uncertainty is experimentation.ˮ
~ Alex Atzberger
“Become the company's Sherlock Holmes with a pitbull mentality. ˮ
~ Value Engineering - Do Whatever It Takes
30% of time management involves dealing with completely unfeasible requests.
Frans also asked the audience to share their top learnings from MOPZA, such as:
Start with the customer experience and work your way back to technology.
“AI doesn’t have to be the answer to everything.” AI is a strategy like a Ferrari is a strategy. It's not. It’s a tool. Even Google doesn't know what to do with AI to make it useful, Frans said.
Focus on the long term.
Frans said that only 10% of CEOs have an affinity for marketing; they have no clue what to do.
Tool utilization: 30% is a high number.
We think it should be 90-100% but that is stressful and unnecessary.
Pendo usage data: only 12% of features are used the most.
Thanks, Frans!
This was the final session I attended in person.
I began watching MOps-Apalooza recordings, starting with: Taking Mops to the Moon: A C-Suite Perspective, with Terri Avnaim, Carla Fitzgerald, Amy Holtzman, and moderated by Grant Johnson.
LinkedIn limits character count, so I chose just a few questions.
How should CMOs coach marketing ops pros who want to take on more strategic roles?
Terri said to expose yourself as much as possible to the other areas of marketing. And always be asking the why behind the projects you're working on, so you get more of the business-centric context.
Carla said to focus on ‘what problem are we trying to solve today?’ so leadership sees you as someone who helps get to the goal. Marketing ops has a tendency to think all problems are solved by technology. But consider a number of different capabilities as solutions, and the way all the components fit together cross-functionally.
Amy said to think beyond marketing. Earlier in our careers, we thought about the impact we have ON marketing. But marketing fits into the much bigger picture of business strategy. Think about who is benefiting from this project? Why is the company doing this, and how does my part fit in?
What’s the right balance between speed and structure in operations?
Amy said it depends on what the project and the ask are. Underlying infrastructure that deeply impacts the business has to be incredibly well thought out and integrated with the bigger picture, and those things take time. Other projects we just need to get out the door; perfect isn’t required, it won’t have a bigger impact, so speed is more important.
Carla said it depends on the maturity and size of the organization. Early-stage companies rely on speed because they are trying to establish themselves in the market. The larger and more mature orgs can’t scale, and are spinning wheels if they don't focus on structure.
Terri said it depends on if it needs to be repeatable. Marketing ops rarely works on a one-and-done project; almost everything is a repeatable process, where structure needs to come before speed.
What challenges have you faced when trying to align marketing ops across departments?
Carla said what’s harder is getting what they do elevated at a strategic level so people can appreciate and understand how valuable that work is and not take it for granted.
Terri said a common tension point is with finance. Finance thinks if you can make it work in a spreadsheet, why can’t marketing make it work in the real world? She’s spending time educating finance about the length of the sales cycle because they think she’s spending this money in March and getting the opportunities in March.
Amy said it depends on where marketing ops sits. Sometimes there is a need to align with marketing. Sometimes, there is a greater need to align with other ops teams. Collaboration & sharing DOCUMENTATION 🎉 become really important. Legal can be hard to align with, since our industry and tools move faster than legal may understand.
I recently watched the recording for ‘Centralized MOPS, Decentralized Impact: Scaling Global Digital Marketing with Limited Regional Resources’ from Ajay Parikh.
He discussed how he scaled global digital marketing by changing the operating model without adding any additional headcount.
Doing more with less using the S3 Framework:
Stabilize
Standarize
Scale
Stabilize:
Fix what’s broken or inconsistent, find and map pain points.
Remove chaos and clarify ownership, roles, and responsibilities.
Standardize:
Stop firefighting, start planning.
Create clear, repeatable processes and templates.
Make best practices the norm.
Scale:
Build on and reuse what works to do more with less.
Replicate success across regions.
When he was interviewing for the job in 2018, on paper it looked good: a familiar tech stack, a large marketing team… but reality quickly set in.
IT was pinch-hitting marketing ops.
No one knew the martech systems… or even the passwords.
Only a few global markets were doing any digital marketing.
AND the brick wall was that their marketers weren’t creating content. They were outsourcing to agencies that built everything in Photoshop and Illustrator, so even the most minor changes required a technical gatekeeper.
This process was slow and expensive.
That’s not how you scale a global business.
Ajay set up a new operating model to centralize the marketing ops team.
Unlocking speed, accuracy, and impact meant building repeatable systems and empowering these regional teams with support, tools, and consistency that they needed.
In the new model, regional marketing teams now handle targeting, claims, messaging, and design.
The centralized ops team does the technical execution.
(See slide photo)
To get out of inbox chaos from global requests, he created an intake workflow for smart prioritization using a single request form.
He also moved marketing ops further upstream, so ops team members talk to marketers to understand their needs, guide them to the best solutions, and ensure the creative work is optimized to best practices before it is approved.
Email previously cost $8-10K to develop each one, so increased speed with governance was really important. He started using no-code tools to multiply output across regions for banner ads (resizing), videos, emails, and landing pages, saving $250K a year.
Compliance = Speed if you:
Standardize where possible.
Localize where Necessary. (only swap out the materials legally required for compliance, and localization of language)
So compliance is the guardrails, not handcuffs.
Foundational S3 Lessons:
Find your Bottlenecks. Tools & headcount won’t solve process debt. Map the pain first.
Divide work based on skills required, not org chart. Let marketers focus on content.
Compliance can be a speed lever. Standardize where you can, localize where you must.
Alignment is the force multiplier to scale global capability.
My final summary of a Mops-Apalooza panel is ‘Plot it Like It's Hot: Building a Marketing Operations Roadmap That Delivers’ from Kelsea Morrison.
She explained the roadmapping process she used in her role that made marketing ops recognized as a strategic partner and innovation leader.🎉
Step 1: Start with a mission – to keep your roadmap aligned throughout changes.
Example: “Our mission is to be the backbone of the marketing organization, ensuring seamless operations and continuous improvement. We use our expertise in data, technology, and process management to drive efficiency, creativity, and measurable resultsˮ
Start with the why
Keep it short & actionable
Involve key stakeholders, but NOT 'decision by committee'
Make it aspirational but realistic
Revisit annually
Step 2: Define your pillars, the key areas of responsibility that give your team clarity, focus, and guardrails.
(Learned from Darrell Alfonso)
Step 3: Brainstorm what *could* be on the roadmap
Step 4: Prioritize what *should* be on the roadmap
Step 5: Build your roadmap as an actionable, time-bound plan
Step 6: Spread the word to earn trust, visibility, and alignment.
Roadmap = Communication Tool
Step 6.5: How to handle curveballs – such as last-minute requests
Use your roadmap as armor to protect your team and strategic vision.
We discuss roadmaps in the RevOps bootcamp, and I think Kelsea provided excellent guidance in this session!
Part of the final event of the conference was a live recording of the podcast 'Pretty Funny Business' from Sydney Mulligan and Lauren Aquilino. If you have a subscription, you can view it here or below.
Then there was a marketing ops trivia contest, ending with the top scorers in a Jeopardy-like showdown.
Learn more about MOps-Apalooza here.