Three Priorities CMOs Should Be Focusing on Now
Today's consumers assume you know them
and understand them—and that you can personalize their interactions online,
offline, across devices, and so on. More and more of their experiences are
being tailored to their interests; as a result, they expect every brand, big or
small, to follow suit.
Consumers are also less patient with those who still mass-market
and send irrelevant communications, and they've become more loyal to the ones
who get it right: 72%
now say they engage only with brands that
personalize messaging.
But is it possible to actually please every single customer? And
where do you even start?
Every CMO needs to consider the following three key priorities
to offer the best customer experiences in the most effective ways possible.
1. Improvement
Although no brand can ensure an absolutely perfect experience
for every customer, many brands have areas that obviously need improvement.
Figure out where those top improvements need to be made within the business
(strategies, results, team, tools, vendors). Those are a great place to start;
then, from there, go on to improve other areas.
Take a long, honest look at your customers' experiences. You can
and should know all of those experiences intimately. The content and messages
you have across your site, the emails you send to customers and the timing of
those emails, the way your customers interact in-store... you have a mental
list of areas you know aren't great and could be improved, but they just don't
seem to make your daily and weekly priority list. Change that.
Even the basics of welcome series emails, cart and browse
abandonment campaigns, and sales and promotional strategies can be drastically
improved. I've worked with brands that thought they were doing just fine
because revenue was in line with expectations, but they altered a few tactics
(timing of sends, types of messaging and content, and even subject lines), and
they achieve significant improvement.
Also, don't just think
about topline revenue—think about unsubscribe rates, lifetime value after you
acquire a new customer, and clickthrough and visit frequency. Those metrics are
leading indicators of long-term revenue and will help you diagnose and analyze
the top improvements to tackle.
And if you're going to
do any of those things correctly, you have to know who your customers are
across all of the available touchpoints with your brand. Customer identity
resolution is a critical to getting this right. Having data in silos that can't
be connected doesn't do you any good, so harness the organizational structure
and technology that enables you to unify your data and create the full picture of
your customers' behavior.
2. Personalization
Bad personalization is
actually worse than no personalization at all, and we've seen the data to
support it: 63% of
consumers say they would stop purchasing products and services from
companies that implement poor personalization tactics. Accordingly, if you
don't have a strategic marketing plan and a solid understanding of your
customers, your marketing efforts may come off as haphazard and inauthentic,
and they may signal that you just don't care about your customer.
You don't have to go
all out with personalization across all fronts; at first, just be sure the
incremental improvements you are making are focused and executed well. Start
with the communication channels your customers engage with most and go from
there. For many, that channel is email, then your website, and then possibly
app/mobile site.
Batch-and-blast emails
are still a strategy many marketers use, but consider tailoring mass sends to
the intended recipient so they don't feel quite as generic. Incorporating
product recommendations based on a customers' previous activity or recently
browsed or carted items within the send is a good place to begin; it's a quick
win.
Furthermore, consider
pulling together your in-store and online data for better personalization. Use
the point of sale information to understand your best customers accurately and to market to
each individual how they want to be marketed to. If they love shopping
in-store, stop wasting promotional dollars online for those customers, and vice
versa—or activate that data to deliver messages that will get them back in
store quicker.
Drive traffic toward the goals you have as an organization by
tailoring these techniques to exactly what you (and your customers) need.
3. Loyalty
Finally, satisfy your
top customers as much as you possibly can. The old 80/20 rule applies here: A
small segment of your customers accounts for a big percentage of your revenue.
Identify those high-value customers and take the best care of them; they will
be your best-performing segment.
That sounds obvious,
but you'd be shocked at how many brands simply do not cater to those customers.
First, you'll want to drive more and more customers into this segment by
predicting lifetime value early and encouraging them to become repeat
customers. Second, you'll want to pay close attention to current high LTV
customers that are at risk of disengaging with your brand.
The way you message to
this segment should be very different from how you reach out to your general
consumer base. Consider using your loyalty program (or adding one), exclusive
offers, and early-purchase opportunities, and market to the attrition risk
group in a way that encourages them to re-engage (using compelling one-time use
codes or free shipping, product recommendations, etc.).
As marketing leaders,
you have a lot to think about every day, and the urgent can often overtake the important.
But exceeding goals and growing your business is always goal No. 1. Start by
focusing on the three priorities outlined in this article, and make the
important become your most urgent task.
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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 440-519-1500 or email me at john@x2media.us.
X2Media can help you target your content and get your message to the audience in a way that it not only seen and heard, but remembered.
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!
From X2Media I would like to thank you for your time.
John E. Hornyak
X2Media, LLC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 440-519-1500 or email me at john@x2media.us.
X2Media can help you target your content and get your message to the audience in a way that it not only seen and heard, but remembered.
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!
From X2Media I would like to thank you for your time.
John E. Hornyak
X2Media, LLC
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