marketing
rapport
Season 3 Episode 18
Why Prudential’s Kalli Chapman Says All Marketing Is Performance Marketing
RESOURCES ❯ The Marketing Rapport Podcast
Episode Summary
Kalli Chapman, VP of Global Media and Sponsorships at Prudential Financial, joins host Tim Finnigan to dismantle the wall between brand and performance marketing. Kalli argues this separation hurts the industry. She believes all marketing efforts must drive outcomes, whether through immediate sales or long-term growth.
The conversation shifts to data strategies. Kalli warns against hoarding data without a plan. She suggests marketers prioritize actionable metrics over vanity numbers. Effective teams use data to tell a clear story about the consumer journey rather than simply reporting statistics.
Finally, they explore the evolution of corporate sponsorships. Kalli shares how Prudential activates major partnerships, like the Rose Bowl, through integrated content and social media. She also advises brands to experiment with emerging search trends while maintaining focus on proven strategies.
Guest-at-a-Glance

- Name: Kalli Chapman
- What they do: VP, Head of Global Media and Sponsorships
- Company: Prudential Financial
- Noteworthy: Leads global media strategy and major brand sponsorship programs
- Where to find them: LinkedIn
Key Insights
- The False Divide Between Brand and Performance
Marketers often create an artificial separation between brand building and performance marketing. This division does a disservice to the industry. In reality, these disciplines are naturally cohesive. Every marketing effort, regardless of the channel, aims to drive an outcome. While the timelines differ—short-term leads versus long-term growth—the ultimate goal remains the same. Performance marketing drives immediate action, while brand building secures future demand. Treating them as opposing forces limits potential. Instead, successful strategies view them as parts of a unified system. Marketers must reject the idea that brand work lacks accountability. All campaigns must contribute to the bottom line, whether through hard sales figures or softer engagement metrics that lead to revenue. It is one cohesive story of growth.
- Actionable Metrics Over Endless Data
Modern marketing teams often fall into the trap of collecting data ad nauseam. There is a common misconception that more data always equals better results. However, collecting information without a clear plan for usage creates noise in the system. Measurement should not be an exercise in vanity. If a metric does not drive a specific action or decision, it loses value. Teams must identify the specific numbers that matter most to their business objectives. This requires pragmatism, not perfection. There is no such thing as perfect data. Instead of striving for comprehensive coverage of every variable, marketers should focus on high-quality indicators that tell a clear story. This approach connects soft metrics, like engagement, to hard revenue goals. It allows teams to explain the value of their work to the broader organization effectively.
- Modern Sponsorships Require Deep Integration
The era of passive corporate sponsorship is over. Simply placing a logo on a field or at an event no longer generates sufficient return on investment. Today, successful sponsorships act as integrated ecosystems. They require “tentacles” that extend far beyond the physical event. This means utilizing social media, influencer partnerships, and content series to create continuity. The activation cannot live and die on the ground. It must have legs that travel across digital channels before, during, and after the event. This 360-degree approach amplifies the initial investment. It turns a single moment in time into a sustained national campaign. By connecting physical activations with digital content, brands engage audiences who never attended the event in person. This sophistication transforms sponsorships from simple branding plays into comprehensive drivers of consumer engagement.
Episode Highlights
Adapting to Fragmented Attention Spans
Timestamp: [00:07:58]
Kalli acknowledges the radical shift in media consumption habits over the last decade. She notes that while linear TV viewership declines outside of live sports, streaming services continue to grow. However, the real challenge for marketers lies in extreme audience fragmentation. Modern consumers live in a high-distraction environment where they juggle multiple screens and household demands simultaneously. Marketers must accept that capturing attention is harder than ever. It requires understanding that viewers often watch content while distracted by phones or family members. This reality forces brands to rethink how they deliver messages. The goal shifts from simple exposure to cutting through the noise of daily life to make a genuine connection.
“Linear, outside of sports, is really going to continue to go down, and streaming is going to continue to go up. But that fragmentation in streaming is still massive, and all these mergers and acquisitions are probably going to change that long term as well. And they’re on their phone—and in my house, you also have three kids yelling your name at the same time you’re on your phone trying to watch the sporting event, answering the email, right? Of course—we live in a very quick-attention, high-distraction place.”
Navigating the Shift to AI Search
Timestamp: [00:17:27]
Tim asks about the rise of AI-driven search engines like Google Gemini and ChatGPT and their impact on SEO. Kalli compares this current shift to previous industry disruptions, such as the rise of mobile or the decline of traditional TV. She advises caution against knee-jerk reactions. While these technologies reshape how consumers access information, the transition is gradual. Brands should experiment and test new strategies, but they must not abandon proven methods prematurely. Abandoning traditional search budgets overnight is a mistake. The data shows that traditional search engines still command the vast majority of traffic. Marketers must balance innovation with the stability of existing channels.
“I liken this to a lot of things we’ve dealt with, right? It’s like, mobile is everything—that was one moment in time. Then it was, TV is dead—that was another one. So I think it’s very similar. I think with some of these things that really sort of radically reshape the industry and how consumers engage, how we get our information and make decisions, you’ve got to lean in and test and experiment and start to understand.”
Leveraging Cultural Moments for Engagement
Timestamp: [00:23:17]
Kalli details the specific strategy behind Prudential’s “Beta Babies” campaign. This initiative launched during the Rose Bowl to celebrate the generation born starting January 1st. By tying a financial product to a massive cultural event, the team created immediate relevance. They used the platform to introduce retirement planning concepts for newborns, a typically dry subject. This unexpected angle allowed Prudential to show up in a fresh way. The campaign utilized thought leadership and influencer partnerships to amplify the message beyond the game itself. It demonstrates how brands can use specific moments in time to drive broader conversations about long-term financial health and brand values.
“So this past year, we had a campaign called Beta Babies, which was celebrating a brand new generation that started—and yes, hard to believe, but we already are in Beta Babies. We’ve left Alpha, and now we’re in Beta. So that new generation includes anyone born starting on January 1st of this year. We really used that culturally significant moment, and this platform of the Rose Bowl across all these channels, to bring to light this notion that it’s never too early or too late to start thinking about retirement and your financial future.”
The Necessity of Strategic Focus
Timestamp: [00:26:28]
When asked for advice on navigating the complex media ecosystem, Kalli emphasizes the power of discipline and focus. She notes that marketers often possess a scrappy nature and want to be everywhere at once. However, trying to deliver across every channel often leads to mediocrity. Brands must identify exactly where they want to win to see results. This requires channeling investment and data collection into specific areas rather than spreading resources too thin. Success comes from making hard choices about where to play. Without this discipline, teams risk accomplishing nothing significant
despite high levels of activity. Focus allows for deeper impact and better resource allocation.
“Find what you really want to win at—where you want to channel your investment, where you want to get the right data to inform your strategy—because you can’t do it everywhere, or you’ll just do nothing. I think we have a tendency—marketers are scrappy—and I think we have a tendency to try to take on and deliver across the board. But we have to force a level of focus to make sure we can win in the right places.”
Top Quotes
[00:00:00] Kalli Chapman: “I think we can try to make some generalizations by category, but at the end of the day, in order to properly measure ROI—and I’m using that in a broader sense as well, not just the literal definition—you need to figure out what matters to your business so you can then identify some of those right metrics.”
[00:05:45] Kalli Chapman: “I think that they are naturally cohesive and we have created this artificial separation that has done nothing but a disservice to the industry at large. What marketer will ever tell you that the work they’re doing is not meant to drive performance or to drive some sort of an outcome?”
[00:15:40] Kalli Chapman: “Tell that in the way of a story that somebody can very simply understand the value you’re having today, tomorrow, and five years from now with the activity you’re doing. I really think the hardest part is just doing the discovery work to figure out what those right metrics are and how you’re then going to use them to tell your story.”
[00:18:23] Kalli Chapman: “When you actually look at the data, the percentage that is being lost in your traditional search to these engines is still relatively small compared to the amount of traffic that you can capture from the traditional search engines.”
[00:06:05] Kalli Chapman: “I believe all marketing, whether that is long-term brand building or short term, has a number to hit. It needs to drive performance and needs to drive outcomes.”
The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed are those of the speaker and do not necessarily represent the views, thoughts, and opinions of Verisk Marketing Solutions or Verisk Analytics. The material and information presented here is for general information purposes only.
This podcast is not intended to replace legal or other professional advice. The Lead Intelligence, Inc. (dba Verisk Marketing Solutions) and Verisk Analytics LLC names and all forms and abbreviations are the property of its owner and its use does not imply endorsement of or opposition to any specific organization, product, or service.
VERISK MARKETING SOLUTIONS DISCLAIMS ALL LIABILITY ARISING OUT OF ANY INDIVIDUAL'S USE OF, REFERENCE TO, RELIANCE ON, OR INABILITY TO USE THIS PODCAST OR THE INFORMATION PRESENTED IN THIS PODCAST.



Your Privacy Choices for Platform Services | Data Services