The Rise of Experiential Marketing: Beyond a Buzzword
Anyone who's been watching marketing
industry trends over the past few years will have noticed a shift away from
traditional advertising toward what some believe to be a "new" sector
of marketing: experiential.
A widely mentioned buzzword, "experiential marketing"
is now recognized as the powerful tool it actually is—though the true
definition, the reasons for its growth, and the secrets to its lasting power
are not quite as familiar.
Defining Experiential
Experiential marketing has been around for more than a century;
but, in recent years, because of various business and societal shifts, its
share of global brand marketing budgets has grown significantly.
Experiential takes many forms, from pop-up activations to
permanent installations, from B2B conferences to B2C experiences. The
techniques used can address the senses in a tactile way or dazzle with digital
engagement, but all experiential marketing programs share common elements.
The focus of experiential marketing is to facilitate personal
interaction with a brand. The goal is to enable memorable and emotional
connections with the brand by immersing the customer within the product or
service to forge lasting brand loyalty.
Where traditional marketing techniques are almost exclusively
interruptive and one-way, experiential marketing is voluntary and
participatory. It's a form of "advertising" wherein consumers
consciously choose to
interact with your brand, often identifying themselves as your
most valuable targets. It's the consumer's decision to be informed about your
product or service, and they're actively involved in the process. That's in
stark contrast to traditional marketing communications, whereby consumers are
interrupted and subjected to a brand's message at a time of the brand's
choosing.
Demographics are at play, too: It's no secret that younger demos
prefer experiences over possessions. And they love to share their experiences
with others, on social media and elsewhere.
Add in the growing distrust of corporate messaging and, frankly,
too much brand noise in the marketplace, and you have a perfect storm of
elements that point to experiential marketing as an especially effective
marketing tool.
The Experiential Boom
So how did we get
here? Budgets for experiential marketing continue to rise, and some surveys of
CMOs suggest that only event marketing is seeing an increase in investment at
all.
That shift is due in
part to increased consumer awareness. With unprecedented access to information
from the Web, consumers no longer have to trust what a brand claims. And
younger generations are even less likely to suspend disbelief regarding brand
messaging. Experiential marketing is perfectly tailored to address those
trends, too.
Personalization is
built into the DNA of experiential marketing. Each person can chart his or her
own course through a brand activation. The interaction that consumers have with
a brand is full of valuable data, as well. Furthermore, that new data
powerfully complements a customer's existing digital footprint, enabling brand
marketers to get a more holistic view of each consumer's specific wants and
needs.
And ROI is becoming
more measurable as the sophistication and prescriptive capabilities of data
capture techniques increase, and marketers develop a deeper understanding of
these implications.
And it goes beyond a
better understanding of customers:
- 85%
of consumers said
they were likely to purchase after participating in events or experiences.
- 91%
of consumers said
they had more positive feelings about brands after attending events or
experiences.
Experiential forges a
personal connection with a brand. The next time that customer goes into a
store, which brand will they reach for? As younger generations increasingly
value experience over tangible items, they'll go for the products that come
from brands that have taken the time to get to know them and offer that crucial
experiential element.
Setting Up for
Long-Term Success
Experiential marketing
unlocks an elusive emotional connection to a brand in an age when consumers are
increasingly skeptical.
Fewer and fewer people
are buying into brand "promises," and consumers will continue to shy
away from brands that lack authenticity. Instead, people are turning to trusted
names that offer first-hand accounts and a peek behind the brand's
curtain—building a relationship around transparency and experience.
Those connections form
awareness, understanding, loyalty, and—most important—trust.
Trust has become the
secret to ensuring long-term value, and experiential is uniquely able to
deliver it. For example, brand trust is crucially important when buying a
vehicle. What instills more trust in a consumer—a print advertisement of two
people in a Jeep driving up a hill, or getting in a Jeep and driving up a hill
as one can through that brand's experiential "ride and drive"
program, Camp Jeep?
When a consumer has
had the chance to experience a value proposition for themselves, they become
invested.
Experiential marketing
is the only way to tangibly offer such trust-building interactions that embed a
brand into the mind of a consumer. Lifelong brand loyalty then becomes a
turnkey next step post-activation, though it should not be taken for granted.
Earning loyalty is one part of the mission; keeping it is the other.
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