To do our work, we all have to read a mass of papers. Nearly all of them are far too long. This wastes time, while energy has to be spent in looking for the essential points.Anticipating the style of writing that we have come to expect in short form content online, Churchill offered four specific directions for removing anything extraneous:
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Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Churchill's guide to writing
Monday, March 14, 2022
Colgate needs to brush up on its email communication
Uupload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/16/Toothbrush_toothbrush.JPG/512px-Toothbrush_toothbrush.JPG |
What Colgate got wrong
It forgot that in marketing communication, less can be more more, and more is only welcome if the audience sees value in it.
Some time ago, I granted Colgate permission to email me in order to receive its promotions. What I had in mind by promotions was value for me, meaning special offers and/or coupons. But Colgate seemed to think it was just about constantly reminding me about Colgate products with no financial incentive attached.
Finally, today, I decided I had enough of the Colgate clutter that wasn't bringing any value to my inbox. I put in a request to stop the emails.
What Colgate got right
The opt-out form offers a menu of reasons to select that the folks on the marketing team should note in planning future campaigns. Most opt-outs include the first three, but this one adds a fourth option that fit my motivation exactly:
That was nice to find exactly my reason without having to fill in other or pretend I had not opted in.
What Colgate should do with that data is plan for more effective email communication in future. If you lure customers in with the promise of special savings for subscribers, you have to deliver on that. Otherwise, you're not keeping up your end of the bargain and will lose the customer's attention and trust.Friday, March 11, 2022
From multi to omnichannel marketing
Photo by Pickawood on Unsplash |
Not all marketing strategies deliver the same rates of returns. Omnichannel marketing outperforms single channel at the rate of 2.5x.
To get to that, it’s not enough to build an easy-to-navigate eCommerce site supported by marketing campaigns that reach out to them on various channels. All those components have to be integrated to work together through an omnichannel strategy.
The ROI of Omnichannel Marketing
The returns of omnichannel marketing over single channel are quite impressive, according to the data offered on Clickz:
Engagement rate: 18.96% on omnichannel vs 5.4% on single-channel
Purchase frequency: 250% higher on omnichannel vs single-channel
Average order value: 13% more per order on omnichannel vs single-channel
Customer retention rates: 90% higher for omnichannel vs single-channel
In a survey by HBR (Harvard Business Review), 73% of respondents said they use multiple channels during their shopping journey. That includes email, SMS, MMS, social media, as well as searches on the site.
The challenge for retailers is maintaining coherent and consistent communication that makes the most of the different ways of connecting. A Facebook or Instagram ad may be what first grabs the customer’s attention, though they may need some follow up to convert to the level of putting together a shopping cart with an email or MMS message that offers personalized recommendations.
So why do we call this omni and not just multichannel?
Multichannel marketing is simply messaging that a brand uses across various channels to try to increase its reach. In contrast, omnichannel marketing is not just about sending the messaging out across the different channels but linking up the data on feedback on each one back to the customer to personalize the experience through responsive adaption.
Customer interests are not static but constantly changing as they respond to contextual triggers. Brands that utilize omnichannel use big data analytics to update customer data and adapt each message that goes out accordingly. An omnichannel approach adapts to such shift to make marketing messages as relevant as possible.
Timely texts
Emails remain an important marketing tool for all businesses, especially eCommerce. However, widespread smartphone use makes texts a very effective way to get attention, as they work off a device many people keep at hand for most of their waking hours.
Text messages the perfect medium for sending time-sensitive information. That includes:
Announcement of new product drops, especially if one of the benefits you offer SMS subscribers is early access to what’s new.
Promotions for same-day flash sales, particularly if they are set for certain times like noon to three.
Notification that something they wanted to order is now back in stock or is now on sale.
An urgent notice that their selections in a cart they abandoned are in danger of selling out.
Channeling Success with Targeted Communication
Targeted messaging is much more effective than generic messaging. The basis of that communication is identifying customer segments, and it can get even more relevant with personalization with product offerings and promotions selected specifically for that customer’s interests.
No matter how responsive your customers are to emails or texts, it’s important to remember that a single channel does not fit all customers under all circumstances. You need to adapt to the needs and context of the moment to deliver the right message through the right medium..
For example, you could have a customer who has subscribed to both emails and texts. Even though sending an SMS is fast and easy, it's not an appropriate medium for longer messages. You also can use both channels for reminders say of an upcoming promotion or a price drop on something they have looked at but didn't end up adding to cart or that they added it to the cart but failed to complete the transaction.
On that basis, you can get the right offer to the right person at the right time, and through the right channel.
Related:
Wednesday, March 9, 2022
When automated messages make your brand look stupid
Marketers love using emails and texts to be in contact with customers. It's so cheap and easy to get messages out that some abuse the channels and send out daily messages. Even worse, some send out multiple messages a day, which just crowd a customers' inbox and make them start tuning out those messages.
One of the biggest offenders on this front is the Gap family of brands. As the umbrella organization comprises not just Gap but also Banana Republic, as well as the "Factory" versions of both those brands, on top of Old Navy and Althea, it sends me a minimum of three and sometimes even five emails each and every day. So, yes, I tune most of them out now.
But the one pictured above caught my eye. Can you guess why?
Are you motivated to make a purchase because a brand lets you know that you have free money to spend that amounts to just $0 in rewards? In other words, your purchasing power is unchanged from what you thought it was before.
It's all too obvious that Old Navy is attempting to personalize the offer not just by using my name but by trying to tempt me to make a purchase that will be discounted by my rewards. As the algorithm is not programmed to discard that message for customers without a reward balance, we get a message that shows not all personalization necessarily fits your marketing message.
A bit later I got this email that made a similar mistake in a PR pitch. Notice how the personalization is worked in without regard for understanding how we address people in real life:
"Setting up your business remotely during Great Resignation
| ||||
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Hi Brown, Ariella Team,
I have a story I think Brown, Ariella would want to cover about a firm that can help businesses
affected by “The Great Resignation,” which is continuing with 4.3 million resignations in
December 2021 alone (1).
One other nitpick I have is that it refers to the Great Resignation continuing by citing the numbers from December 2021. As we are in March now, that is a non sequitur. Instead of presenting the sentence in this order the text should have started with the December stat and then say that the trend continues in 2022, possibly with its own sentence set up this way: In December 2021 alone 4.3 million resigned from their jobs, and "The Great Resignation" trend is continuing in 2022, raising concerns for businesses that want to retain their employees.
Related:
MAJOR MARKETING MISSTEPS FROM ADIDAS, M&M'S AND COKE
Monday, February 28, 2022
7 Habits of Highly Effective Content Marketers
1. Offer value
What you present has to always center around your customer concerns rather than your own latest offering or uniqueness, so no shameless self-promotion and no clickbait.
2. Offer relevance
While you can and should jump on seasonal and news trends, the core of your content should always be relevant to your target audience beyond the current news. That will help your SEO.
3. Compose concise titles
Write headlines that are on target, to the point, and short enough to be read on a phone (no more than 65 characters).
4. Offer curb appeal
Even if you’re using words as your primary medium rather than video or photos, remember to pay attention to visual appeal with an attractive layout and images that not only catch the eye but fit the story you tell.
One caveat on this: be sure that your graphics load quickly. If they take several seconds to load, people will just leave the page without waiting for them to populate, and your SEO will suffer, too.
5. Engage with your audience
Use your social media channels as another avenue of content marketing, not just to link to your blogs and videos but to engage directly with your audience there with discussions and shares that are not just broadcasts of what your brand is doing.
6. Use analytics
Check your stats every month or so to see what’s performing well and what isn’t to inform and optimize future content
7. Be reliably consistent
Plan to put out content continuously and consistently to build your authority and keep your audience coming back rather than treating your video or blog as a one-and-done.
Quality, consistency, relevance, and engagement go a long way in connecting with people. Over time that translates into improved brand recognition and goodwill that also increases customer loyalty.
Related:
Sunday, February 13, 2022
Beyond February 14: B2B marketing takeaways from Valentine's Day
Pink hearts photo from Freestock on Unsplash |
When we think of Valentine’s Day, B2B is not exactly what we think of when we picture candlelit dinners, bouquets of roses, chocolates, gifts of jewelry. and stuffed animals and cards festooned with red and pink hearts. However, if you think out of the heart-shaped box, you can begin to understand that there are quite a number of parallels.
First of all there is the recognition of important relationships. Sure Valentine’s Day is associated with romantic one specifically, though data tells us that for many people it is also a day to celebrate their love for parents, children, friends, coworkers, classmates, teachers, and even pets.
This doesn’t mean that you should be shoehorning your own B2B messaging into a heart shape when it doesn’t fit. Instead, think about how you can advance that relationship in authentic ways that relate to your client’s concerns. That means you demonstrate your commitment to meeting their expectations for your products and services.
It’s the thought that counts for a gift, right? So is it enough to show you realize you are expected to buy something by picking up a gift conveniently set out on display at the drugstore on your way home? No, the thought that counts is the one that shows you know what the person is about and what they’d like to get. The question is: what expectations are in place and are they met?
One interesting revelation from the National Retail Foundation (NRF) data on holiday spending is the discrepancy that often occurs between the type of gift that people say they want and the percentage that say that is the type they intend to give. To apply this to a B2B context, you don’t want to disappoint your customers by failing to meet their expectations.
So the first step, obviously, is getting to know them well enough to be able to grasp what they need, what their business goals and pain points are so that you can anticipate them in delivering the solutions. In other words, if you want to show you really care, you have to do better than just the token nod of a one-size-fits-all bouquet of red roses.
What does it take to deliver on your B2B customer expectations? You have to listen to what they’re saying about their current needs and wants. That’s not limited to what they tell you directly if you ask them for information in surveys; a lot of it is already out there. It’s possible to tap into the wealth of data, including the record of their purchases, how they place those purchases, what promotions they respond to, where they’re businesses are and where they wish to get to.
All those data points feed into a complete view of the business that allows you to show you understand them. On that basis, you can build customized communication that is delivered the way they prefer it, whether that is via text, email, snail mail, a video chat, or an in-person visit. While one client may love the in-person attention, another may consider it a drain on precious time at the office.
The takeaway from Valentine’s Day for building up a happily ever after relationship in B2B is the following:
1.Avoid the one-size-fits-all messages that will disappoint a large number of clients.
2. Put in the effort to get to know what they really want from you.
3. Deliver on those expectations and plan for how to anticipate their future needs and wants.
4. Repeat as necessary.
Acting on wrong assumption in pushing a one-size-fits-all attempt at communication when you should be personalizing doesn't show caring but a lack of consideration for what your recipient prefers. That can be as much a disaster as sending flowers to someone who is highly allergic to them or chocolates to a diabetic because you assumed that the popular choices are the way to go with everyone.
Related: True love meets marketing
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
Major Marketing Missteps from Adidas, M&M's and Coke
No more boots for Ms. Green and other changes for M&M's candies |
Adidas' topless pics: branding boon or bust?
The brand posted the same photo to its Instagram, though there the breasts have a bit of airbrushing to achieve the digital equivalent of pasties. The overall reaction on the Meta-owned platform was more positive than it was on Twitter, judging from the sentiments expressed in the nearly 3k quote tweets.
It's true that some considered the move liberating. For example, Jezebel applauded the tweet in Adidas Frees the Nipple.
The Barstoolsports blog response corroborates what I thought was the real game here: baring what is usually covered still gets a certain amount of shock value, and that is what the brand is exploiting in presenting the 25 pictures. While the post celebrated achieving marketing goals, the comments in response were not at all the positive if you're after celebrating diversity in women's bodies. It is the inevitability of such reactions that makes some people feel this is not a positive step for women
On its own site, Adidas doesn't show any topless women. In fact, the embedded video (also on YouTube) that explains the problem women have in finding the right fit only shows braless women from the back, where the marks left from bras attest to poor fit.
The braless pictures, on the other hand, are meant to make the very reasonable notion of making sports bras do more than serve as short tank tops into something almost transgressive. It's really not, and Adidas is certainly not the first brand to offer more bra fit choices than the standard 32A to 40D range of sizes.
My guess is the social media manager was told, "Do something to get people's attention," and the person decided this was pushing the envelope. For the "no such thing as bad publicity" school of thought, it's a success. But I believe that the brand did alienate some potential customers here, making it into a branding bust (pun intended) for a consumer brand with a very wide market base.
M&M's misses the mark when aiming for inclusivity
M&M's candies got a makeover in the name of inclusivity. But the public is not impressed. M&M’s announcement about the changes included this video:
The comments are probably not quite what they were expecting, or they would have disabled them to begin with, as I wrote here.
Mars says it’s not just about candy but a larger commitment “to create a world where society is inclusive.” The emphasis on women’s representation is what trickles down to showing the candies that have female identities wearing more sensible shows now than they have in the past.
For example, Ms. Brown’s high heels have been replaced by sensible pumps. Ms. Green’s heeled boots are replaced by comfortable sneakers.
I’m all for comfortable footwear myself and gave up on high heels long ago, though I have to say, I don’t really believe that cartoon renderings designed to sell candies will have a direct impact on female choices. The representations of different types of people could add to the fun consuming candies but they really don’t direct people’s life decisions.
Indeed, that kind of critique was raised even by those who are very much in favor of changing thing. The fact remains that fictionalized progress is no substitute for real progress. Then there's the other camp that is tired of brands' claims they’re saving the world through their products and marketing.
Despite marketers insisting that people want to see their values reflected in brand messaging, claiming too much for a brand makeover can backfire. It’s clear that audiences are not nearly as impressed with the brand message as the brand is with itself, and that’s now a win.
Coke missteps when hopping on the gaming bandwagon
Massively multiplayer online (MMO) are designed to be extremely engaging with life-like characters and details to make up an immersive environment. As I wrote here, they often center around epic battles between species that may be using highly advanced or medieval style weapons.
Coca-Cola brand decided to hope on this hot trend, using an MMO as the backdrop for the commercial it released on September 30, 2021:
Spoiler alert: drinking Coke doesn’t just revive the player; it gives the ross between an Orc and the Hulk character in the game enlightenment. He literally throws down his weapon and grasps the hand of his enemy is a show of solidarity that brings the whole world to the verge of shocked recognition.
Everyone embraces peace and love to fit wit the tagline of “We are one Coke Away from each other.”
Coke
One of the comments on the video is from Kevin Sugrue who explains what the brand gets wrong::
“Lacks insight and understanding of esport gamers. This tries to approriate [sic!] the gaming trend in Coke's pursuit of regaining relevance among a younger audience. You compete in MMO games to help your team triumph over the competition; not to unite the entire world.”
Here Coke tried to plaster its “I’d like to buy the world a Coke and teach it harmony” jingle on a specific form of gamification culture that may just resent the intrusion. Those who are deeply involved in that culture consider it an epic fail for the brand.
On the flip side, we have examples of brands that seized opportunities to endear themselves to the public, as in the case of Audi's response to a loss on Wheel of Fortune.
Related: Mary Poppins' Guide to Gamified Marketing
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