PARTNER, CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER
As Chief Technology Officer at SilverTech, Derek defines and drives the agency’s technology vision—helping clients harness data, digital platforms, and emerging technologies to solve complex business challenges and build meaningful, lasting customer relationships.
Known for finding solutions to the toughest and most complicated technology challenges, Derek combines innovation with deep expertise across enterprise architecture, cloud infrastructure, custom development, and big data. He brings a security-first mindset and a sharp focus on privacy and compliance, enabling organizations to build secure, scalable, and future-ready digital ecosystems.
Derek serves as a strategic adviser to both SilverTech’s technology partners and clients. He works closely with platform providers—often consulting on product roadmaps—to ensure solutions align with real-world business needs and deliver maximum value. He also helps client organizations develop and execute digital roadmaps that make the most of their existing systems and data, integrating legacy technologies with modern platforms where and when it makes sense to drive growth, stay competitive, and support long-term success.
Throughout his career, Derek has played a key role in shaping the tools and platforms that power modern digital marketing. He is a recognized authority and thought leader in the martech space—recently named a Kentico MVP and Progress Sitefinity Champion. Derek holds numerous certifications, including Kentico Developer, Kentico Marketer, Sitefinity Developer, and Sitecore Developer.

By: Erin Presseau | 5/4/26
This guide outlines the essential steps organizations need before launching personalization in a headless or composable CMS—from defining business impact and customer segments to assessing data readiness, mapping key journeys, validating governance, preparing content, and ensuring tracking. It provides a practical framework to start small, activate data effectively, and scale personalization with measurable results.
For organizations using a headless or composable CMS, personalization is not a feature—it’s a coordinated system across business goals, data, content, and delivery. Before launching anything, these steps ensure you’re aligned, prepared, and set up to execute with clarity and measurable impact.
1. Define the business impact and how you will measure it
Start by clearly identifying the business outcome personalization should influence and how success will be quantified. This anchors the effort in measurable value and prevents disconnected experimentation.
• What specific business outcome are we trying to influence?
• What is our primary KPI and supporting metrics?
• What is our current baseline performance?
• How will we determine if personalization is successful?
2. Identify the customer segments tied to that impact (start with 1–2)
Determine which audiences are most relevant to achieving the defined outcome, and keep it focused to start. Limiting to one or two segments ensures clarity and increases the likelihood of early success.
• Which audiences directly influence the business goal?
• Do we have enough data to reliably identify them?
• Are these segments meaningful from a revenue or engagement perspective?
• Can we realistically support them with content and data today
3. Evaluate your data readiness, alignment, and ownership model
Assess what data is available, how reliable it is, and whether your organization is aligned on how it can be used. This step determines whether you can actually support personalization before investing in execution.
• What data do we have, and where does it live?
• Is the data accurate, current, and consistently defined?
• Can it be accessed and used across systems?
• Are there ownership or access barriers that could slow us down
4. Map the key journeys where those segments engage
Identify the critical moments across the customer journey where those segments interact and decisions are made. Focus on high-impact touchpoints rather than trying to personalize the entire experience.
• Where do these segments first engage with us?
• What pages or steps influence their decisions most?
• Where are we losing engagement or conversions today?
• Which moments would benefit most from a more relevant experience
5. Confirm compliance, privacy, and governance requirements
Ensure that your personalization approach aligns with regulatory and internal data governance standards. This is especially important in regulated industries where data usage must be controlled and auditable.
• What data can we legally and ethically use?
• What requires consent or anonymization?
• How is data governed across systems and teams?
• Are there restrictions that impact how we personalize experiences?
6. Validate that your data can actually be activated across your composable stack
Confirm that your data can flow into the experience layer and influence content in real time. In a composable environment, orchestration across systems is what enables personalization.
• Can we pass customer attributes into the experience layer?
• Can we resolve identity between known and anonymous users?
• Can data influence the experience in real time or near real time?
• Do our APIs and systems support dynamic content delivery?
7. Assess content readiness against your key journeys
Evaluate whether your content supports the journeys and segments you’ve defined, and whether it can be adapted dynamically. In a headless environment, flexibility at the component level is critical.
• Do we have content for each stage of the journey?
• Is our content modular and reusable?
• Where are the gaps for specific segments?
• Can we easily adapt content without rebuilding pages?
8. Define the content variations needed
Identify what content needs to change to make experiences more relevant for each segment at key moments. Focus on meaningful variation rather than volume.
• What messaging should change for each segment?
• Which components (headline, CTA, proof) will vary?
• How many variations do we realistically need to start?
• Are these variations aligned to clear audience hypotheses?
9. Ensure tracking is in place before launch
Make sure you can measure which experiences were shown and how users responded. Without this, optimization and proof of value are not possible.
• Can we track which audience saw which experience?
• Are engagement and conversion metrics captured accurately?
• Can we tie behavior back to specific variations?
• Do we have visibility into performance across journeys?
10. Align on a phased (crawl–walk–run) approach
Set expectations that personalization will be introduced in stages, starting small and expanding over time. This ensures controlled execution and builds momentum through early wins.
• Are we aligned on starting small and scaling over time?
• What does success look like in the first phase?
• How will we expand once initial results are proven?
• Do we have the discipline to avoid overcomplicating early efforts?
These steps ensure your organization is aligned on business impact, data readiness, journey mapping, content strategy, and measurement before personalization begins. Although these steps may seem overwhelming, they don't have to be. We've helped guide many organizations through personalization readiness and execution. We even have a personalization accelerator program that can get these efforts off the ground so that your first personalization segments are running in weeks, not months.
If you aren't sure where to start with personalization, download our Crawl, Walk, Run Guide to Personalization to see how to get your web personalization strategy off the ground, collecting data and achieving results, quickly.
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