Five Ways to Authentically Engage Your Customers
For decades, one-off marketing campaigns were the biggest
game in town. Since the rise of the internet, however—and,
in particular, the rise of social media— customer behavior has changed
dramatically. Not only has social media become an essential tool for any
marketing strategy (almost half of Facebook users have “recommended” a brand),
customers today also expect their relationship with brands to go beyond the use
value of their products.
For Mohan Sawhney, clinical professor of
marketing and McCormick Foundation Chair of Technology at the Kellogg School,
that means it is time for marketing leaders to embrace a different approach.
Instead of the traditional “push” model of
marketing campaigns, engagement marketing pulls people in by telling stories,
driving conversations, and addressing customer needs and interests. The goal is
to involve customers in a deeper, more sustained relationship with a given
product or brand. “If you only talk to customers about what you sell them, they
have the option of tuning out,” Sawhney says. “The motto for engagement
marketing is, ‘Ask not how you can sell, but how you can help.’”
Here are five key tips for companies looking
to succeed with engagement marketing:
1. Offer customers
real value.
“Engagement marketing means leading with
content, not products,” Sawhney says. And that content must be genuinely useful
to your customers.
“It’s advertising as a service, as opposed
to advertising as interruption,” Sawhney says. “Essentially, you’re offering
customers value in exchange for their attention.”
Marketo, a provider of marketing automation
solutions, offers a comprehensive set of “Definitive Guide” to help marketers
master topics like digital marketing, email marketing, social marketing, and
marketing metrics. Instead of selling its platforms, Marketo seeks to advise
and inform its customers and thereby earn the right to talk about its products.
ConnectLIVE, an app created by Valspar Paint, offers virtual one-on-one paint
consultations with a professional color consultant who creates a customized
color scheme tailored to each participant’s space.
2. Build a
community.
“A key part of engagement marketing is
giving customers an opportunity for a dialogue—not only with your brand, but
with each other,” Sawhney says. You can get the conversation started by asking
for opinions and insights, weighing in on interesting trends, and bringing
customers together in online social-sharing communities.
Nike traditionally
relied on media advertising to promote its concept of “bringing out the athlete
in you.” Recently it shifted towards personalized customer service. Rather than
putting all of its resources into a single ad campaign for sneakers, Nike now
advertises by giving customers workout advice and helping them build online
communities around the theme of fitness. Nike +, a website meant to make it
easy to track one’s fitness progress, is part of this new effort.
American Express has taken a similar approach
to community building. The company created “OPEN Forum” in 2007, an online
community to help business owners grow their business by offering insights,
resources, and networking opportunities. By organizing this platform for a
growing community of entrepreneurs, the company put itself at the forefront of
social-media marketing—thousands of businesses participate, and many follow the
forum on Twitter—and gave its brand a significant boost. OPEN Forum is now the
top source of leads for new business card members for American Express.
“When customers engage with you on social
media, you can leverage their loyalty to your brand,” Sawhney says. “Many of
them will be the evangelists that will help spread the word.”
3. Inspire people.
“People value useful information and
convenience,” Sawhney says, “but they also want to be inspired!”
One way to inspire customers is to share
your brand’s vision. Corning, a glass company, put out a video called “A Day
Made of Glass,” which showcases the inspiring possibilities of a day in the
near future when the high-tech glass it produces is in the homes and offices of
everyday customers. “You’re trying to paint a picture of the future that is
inspiring and show that you play an important role in that future,” Sawhney
says. This is especially relevant for companies who are trying to build
next-generation technology.
Another way to inspire is to make your brand
an agent of social impact. In 2013, Chipotle released “The Scarecrow,” an
animated film that was highly critical of factory farming and sparked debate
over food integrity. Starbucks has released similar videos promoting fair-trade
coffee. And few marketing initiatives have been more successful than that of
Toms, the e-commerce company that promises if you buy a pair of its shoes, it
will give a pair to a poor child somewhere in the world.
4. Provide
entertainment value.
In addition to being inspired, customers
like to be entertained—a huge opportunity for engagement marketing.
Take the example of “Where’s My Wallet,” an
interactive online game Commonwealth Bank used as a way to promote its new
Cardless Cash Technology in Australia. The game, which was open to anyone,
featured a panoramic map of Sydney ;
the objective was to find one of 100 “lost wallets” hidden in the city, each
containing a $200 reward. Winners had to go to a Commonwealth ATM to claim
their prize using the Cardless Cash product. During the first ten days of
gameplay, “Where’s My Wallet” received 43,000 unique visitors who spent on
average 12 minutes on the site.
Marriot International has also tapped into
the passion for social-media gaming by launching “My Marriot Hotel,” a Facebook
game that invites players to manage their own virtual hotel. For Marriot, this
is both a marketing tool and human-resources strategy: in addition to
generating interest in the Marriot brand, the game is meant to make hotel-staff
positions more attractive, especially in countries where such jobs are
considered menial.
5. Keep the
conversation going.
Part of what it means to have an “always on”
approach to marketing is that you are in constant dialogue with customers.
To do this well requires frequent
innovation. It also means staying relevant and responsive to customer issues as
they arise. Highly responsive companies are quick to nip service problems in
the bud through tactful communications—heading off public relations blunders
that can quickly go viral from well-connected customers.
If marketing works best when customers feel
like they have a genuine relationship with a brand—one that is interesting,
mutually beneficial, and steady—that relationship needs to be sustained.
“The
ultimate goal of engagement is to build an emotional connection with the
brand,” Sawhney says. “It’s a process that leads to intimacy and advocacy. It’s
not a single transaction, but an ongoing conversation. You can’t expect
customers to tune in only when you have a product to launch. You need to have a
constant presence.”
Kellogg Insight
Five Ways to Authentically Engage Your Customers
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Wednesday, April 06, 2016
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