Services / Practice 05 / Six · The operating layer

Marketing Ops.

Marketing operations across the stack and the channels — accountable.

↓ Scroll

Why most stacks fail

Most MarTech stacks fail. Not because the tools are bad.

Vendor incentives. Most stacks are bought one platform at a time, each platform sold by a vendor whose incentive is to expand its footprint, not to fit the architecture. The result is overlap, redundancy, and integration debt that compounds.

Accretion without architecture. Stacks grow by addition. New CMO arrives, adds a tool. New campaign needs a feature, adds a tool. Five years in, the stack is twenty platforms, four are used at scale, and the architecture is whatever happened to land that way.

No operating model. Even when the architecture is sound, no one is accountable for how marketing actually runs through it. The data flows are best-effort. Attribution is whatever the analytics platform reports. The campaign cadence depends on individual heroes, not a system.

Marketing Ops is not a technology decision. It is an operating-model decision that technology serves.

A framework

The Eight Pillars · what a working marketing ops practice runs on.

A complete marketing operations practice covers eight pillars. Most teams have four. We diagnose which four are missing.

1

MarTech architecture

The platforms, their integrations, the data model. The skeleton.

2

Performance ops

Paid and earned channel operations. Daily-cadence rhythm.

3

Lifecycle ops

CRM, automation, owned-channel motion. Customer-data-driven.

4

Attribution

How outcomes get credited. Honest measurement, not vendor-flattering reports.

5

Content ops

Production pipeline, asset management, publishing rhythm.

6

Creative ops

Brief, review, QA, version-control across creative production.

7

Vendor ops

Agency rosters, vendor governance, fee transparency, onboarding-offboarding.

8

The operating model

RACI, cadence, decision rights, escalation. The connective tissue across all seven.

What we won't do

Lines we hold.

  • We won't recommend a platform we have a financial relationship with. We don't have any.

  • We won't deliver a stack design without an operating model. The architecture is half the work.

  • We won't implement the platforms ourselves. Specialist build partners run the rollout, briefed by us.

  • We won't bring junior consultants.

Discuss marketing ops

A senior partner. A scoped engagement. An outcome we are accountable for.

Discuss marketing ops

FAQ

Practice questions.

How is Dilogic different from a MarTech consultancy or implementation agency?
Implementation agencies are paid to roll out platforms. MarTech consultancies are paid to recommend them. Both have incentives that bend the strategy toward more technology. Dilogic does not implement and does not take vendor partnership fees. The recommendation is honest because the firm has no implementation revenue to defend.
Are Dilogic's recommendations vendor-neutral?
Yes. We have no platform partnerships, no vendor referral fees, no implementation revenue. We recommend the architecture that fits the business, even if that architecture is "buy fewer platforms, run them better."
How long does a marketing ops engagement run?
Audit and architecture: 6-12 weeks. Implementation oversight: 6-18 months depending on scope. We stay through the first full operating cycle (usually a quarter) to make sure the architecture holds.
How does marketing ops apply under regulatory regimes (pharma, fintech)?
The eight pillars apply but with regulatory constraints baked in. For pharma we work alongside our in-house compliance team. For fintech we work with regulatory advisory partners. The architecture serves the regulatory frame, not the other way around.