Implementing a print management, branded merchandise, or marketing asset management platform rarely tops any business leader’s list of exciting initiatives. But when your business is growing, the real question isn’t whether or not to install one. It's how to make the transition successful.
For some leaders, they’re replacing a platform that no longer delivers the service, reporting, flexibility, or user experience they need. For others, they’re implementing a marketing fulfillment program for the first time. Their business growth makes existing manual processes, spreadsheets, and disconnected vendors harder to manage.
No matter if you’re switching from another provider or starting fresh, selecting a platform is an important step. However, what happens before that will determine whether your investment delivers lasting value. Early planning is essential. Focus less on the technology itself and more on preparing your data, processes, inventory, and people for the transition.
Here are several best practices that can help reduce risk and set your implementation up for success.
Before discussing platforms, take a close look at your current program and systems.
What’s working well?
What frustrates users?
Which processes create delays?
Where have your teams developed workarounds?
What reporting or visibility is missing?
Many leaders focus on the features they want in a new system. Along the way, they overlook the operational issues that led them to consider a change in the first place. This is where strategy is essential to successful execution.
A transition provides an opportunity to simplify workflows, improve governance, and eliminate inefficiencies that have stacked up over time. Your goal shouldn’t be to recreate your existing system. Instead, use this as an opportunity to build a better one that supports the business more effectively now and in the future.
A marketing fulfillment platform impacts far more than the marketing department. Procurement needs to be involved in purchasing controls and budget visibility. Finance requires accurate reporting and approval workflows. Sales teams rely on marketing materials and branded merchandise. Operations depend on real-time inventory visibility. IT needs to oversee integrations, security, and user access.
When your departments don’t align around a new system early in the transition, you’ll encounter delays, conflicting requirements, and last-minute changes. Establish departmental decision-makers from the start. Define who owns approvals, workflows, reporting, budgets, and success metrics. This keeps the implementation process on track.
One of the most common implementation mistakes is treating data migration as a simple transfer exercise.
Your product catalogs likely contain outdated SKUs, inconsistent descriptions, duplicate products, missing images, and inaccurate pricing. Moving poor-quality data into a new platform simply recreates the same problems.
Do these important tasks before implementation begins:
Review all products and SKUs
Remove obsolete items
Standardize product descriptions
Verify pricing accuracy
Organize product categories
Confirm inventory counts
Clean data improves reporting accuracy. It also simplifies the administration process and boosts the user experience after launch.
Inventory migration is often one of the most visible and time-consuming parts of a platform transition. You may have accumulated years of marketing materials, promotional products, apparel, signage, and branded merchandise. The instinct is often to move everything to the new provider. However, that approach often creates unnecessary costs and operational complexity.
Before moving anything, take the time to evaluate:
Which products are still actively used
Which items can be depleted before migration
Which products should be retired
Which items may be better suited for print-on-demand production
Whether current inventory levels reflect actual demand
You may discover that you’re storing products that are rarely used or no longer align with current brand standards. Or, you've found a way to produce some products with greater efficiency on demand.
If you’re building a marketing fulfillment program for the first time, you’re facing different challenges. Without existing inventory, legacy workflows, or established user expectations, your focus is on strategic planning and foundational operational decisions.
Here are some examples:
Defining governance and approval processes
Organizing product categories and catalogs
Determining inventory versus print-on-demand strategies
Establishing user permissions, access levels, and approval processes
Defining reporting requirements and success metrics
These choices influence how users order materials, manage budgets, establish approval workflows, and preserve brand standards. In short, you're creating the foundation for the program.
Your advantage is a clean slate. You can design processes around your current business needs rather than adapting legacy systems and workflows to fit a new platform.
Even when employees feel frustrated with an existing platform, they still understand how it works. They’ll naturally compare a new system to the one they've used for years. Even if the new experience is better, unfamiliar processes can cause resistance. This happens when leaders fail to manage expectations.
Invest time and resources in:
User communication
Training
Documentation
Internal champions
Rollout planning
Smart leaders also use the implementation process to simplify unnecessary workflows and eliminate friction points that have developed over time. User experience is critical to success. Look for a platform that builds a branded, user-friendly digital space. It should easily fit into each department's daily tasks.
Assuming your teams will simply figure it out is a landmine. It'll lead to low adoption, dissatisfaction with the new platform, and unnecessary support requests.
Every transition involves many moving parts. Be ready to handle whatever challenge comes up.
Product data may be incomplete, or inventory counts may not match records. Integrations may need extra configuration. Approval workflows that appear straightforward on paper may reveal unexpected exceptions.
Scope changes can also create challenges. Requirements that seemed settled early in the project sometimes evolve as you gain a better understanding of the platform's capabilities.
Most implementation delays aren’t caused by the software. They’re caused by missing information, unclear ownership, competing priorities, and slow decision-making. Leaders who acknowledge these realities upfront are often better able to navigate them successfully.
Across industries, successful platform transitions typically share these characteristics:
Executive buy-in
Clearly defined goals
Clean product and inventory data
Active stakeholder participation
Realistic timelines
Timely decision-making
A thoughtful user rollout plan
Most importantly, successful business leaders view implementation as a partnership.
The vendor handles guiding the process, configuring the platform, and executing the implementation. The client provides detailed information and makes timely decisions. They also review deliverables and maintain momentum throughout the project.
The strongest outcomes occur when both sides are engaged and maintain clear, consistent communication. Successful implementations depend on this shared ownership.
When leaders begin evaluating marketing fulfillment platforms, they are rarely looking solely for technology. They’re also looking for greater visibility, improved service, stronger reporting, greater flexibility, and a better user experience.
As their businesses grow, their requirements become more complex. For example, there may be additional user groups needing access. Approval structures are more complex and product catalogs have expanded. They may have more reporting requirements or need more powerful integrations. As a result, systems and platforms that worked well for years struggle to keep up with changing needs.
Because of this complexity, many growing businesses are moving away from rigid, off-the-shelf solutions. Instead, they're looking for platforms that can adapt to their needs.
We developed MediaLink as a proprietary platform that configures workflows, permissions, reporting, and user experiences to match clients’ needs. Additionally. our in-house development team can create custom functionality to meet specific business requirements.
That flexibility is valuable. It also reinforces the importance of clearly defining requirements early in the implementation process. Leaders who distinguish between must-have functionality and future updates tend to have smoother implementations and better long-term outcomes.
The best platform for your business may not necessarily be the one with the longest feature list. Instead, it may be the one that best supports your users, aligns with your business processes, and can evolve alongside your organization.
Moving to a new marketing fulfillment platform is a significant undertaking. It’s also a chance to improve processes, strengthen governance, simplify ordering, and enhance the user experience.
Successful implementations rely on clean data, clear goals, and stakeholder alignment. They also need thoughtful planning and strong collaboration during the process.
If you're evaluating a new marketing fulfillment platform or planning a transition from an existing provider, reduce your risk and set your program up for success by understanding the best practices of a successful technology implementation.
To learn more about MediaLink, the implementation process, and how clients use it to upgrade their marketing fulfillment, contact Phase 3 for a demonstration.