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DITCHING COMMUNICATIONS FOR ENGAGEMENT: A STRATEGIC APPROACH. Eric Weaver | Tribal DDB Social Media Breakfast 12/1/09. Topics. WHY engagement? The traditional marketing model Why the wheels have fallen off New approaches to revenue WHAT is an engagement strategy?
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DITCHING COMMUNICATIONS FOR ENGAGEMENT: A STRATEGIC APPROACH • Eric Weaver | Tribal DDB • Social Media Breakfast • 12/1/09
Topics • WHY engagement? • The traditional marketing model • Why the wheels have fallen off • New approaches to revenue • WHAT is an engagement strategy? • What does it consist of? • HOW marketing can rethink its approach for engagement • Some thought starters
The ground rules • Built in a known environment of limited product choice • Limited media channels • Longer brand interactions • Higher barriers to entry
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Cultural shifts and Marketing Source: Agent Wildfire
Trust ESPECIALLY WHEN THERE’S RISK People turn to peers when time is short, risk is greater WE TRUST PEERS THE MOST (57%); 13% trust advertisers/marketers (least trusted group) drives transactions PEOPLE BUY TRUST Trust drives preference: 91% buy from trusted companies; 77% refuse to buy from distrusted TRUST IS WIDELY SPREAD 56% age 35-64, 63% 25-34 share trust/distrust on the web 2008-2009 EDELMAN TRUST BAROMETER
Hmmm: if peers are the most trusted and we are the least, what if we put our brands into the hands of the market? • 66% of touchpoints are now consumer-generated • Banner ads have an average .19% clickthrough, while Facebook fan page announcements have a 6.5% clickthrough • WHY? The mental gauntlet is down • APPROACH: Craft brand content nuggets and trust builders • Testimonials • Interviews • Leadership/product management commentary • CRUCIAL: Set your brand and value messaging guardrails
BOOMERS = propriety. Trained in formalities, don’t offend, guarded means safe, not so great with “random.” Suit & tie = trust. GEN Y = affinity. Formalities ignored, sharing means finding, tech is easy, random is life. Consider your lens. Suit & tie = distrust.
First of all, what’s a strategy? • Simply put, a strategic vision — an end point — and a plan to get there • It’s not about the channels • Honestly assess your starting point • Audit your customers and prospects • Review competitive SWOT • Determine approach and action steps • Short-term, mid-term, long-term • Here’s where your tools come in • Staffing and support • Determine success metrics, KPIs
Envision an end goal FLICKR: @SLUDGEGULPER
How can customers engage with you today? • Who are your brand zealots? Ambassadors? Naysayers? • What topics are tied to your brand? Your firm? • How is the competition engaging with your customer/prospect base? Threats? Opportunities? Honestly assess your starting point FLICKR: @BEN+SAM
Where’s your offering today? • Social marketing • Never started, yes but not yet, stuck/unsure, baby steps, active • Feedback channels • Retail, mail, web, email, phone, blog, external monitoring, branded social channels, customer advisory panels • Value proposition • Information, promos, media, tools • Relevance • Impulse, low need, high need, essential
AFFINITY/SHARING: Forwarding/Bookmarking/WallPosting • Content that triggers feelings of identity, tribe, bragging rights • Content that provides reference information • FEEDBACK: Commenting/Reviewing • Editorial content • Ask for feedback • ADVOCACY: Faving. Fanning. Blogging. • Cause and value messaging/content • FANDOM: Mashups/Media/FanSites. • Provide malleable content • Empower ambassadors Action steps
Two different approaches • MANAGE INDIVIDUAL RELATIONSHIPS BY CHANNEL • CRAFT MESSAGE, CONTENT BY VENUE • Call center • Email • Twitter • Facebook • Direct • Events • Flickr • YouTube • FOSTER CUSTOMER DRIVES TO ENGAGE • LET CUSTOMERS DETERMINE MOST EFFECTIVE CHANNEL • Start with affinity, trust, transparency • Create feedback channels • Assign listeners, conversationalists, and content creators
BRANDED SITE EXTERNAL MKTG-MANAGED PRESENCE EXTERNAL THIRD-PARTY SITE TRADITIONAL MEDIA/PR Integrated Traditional/Social Marketing Mix TOPICAL COMMUNITIES: IP, HELPFUL TIPS AWARENESS NEED DETERMINATION EVALUATION/COMPARISON PURCHASE LOYALTY PRODUCT LAUNCH MICROSITE CONSUMER STYLE SHARING AMAZON S T O R Y T E L L I N G DOT-COM SITE HELPFUL RESOURCES SEO COMMENTS EVENTS COMPANY BLOG (IP) ONLINE SAMPLING FACEBOOK FAN PAGE E-COMMERCE PARTNER ONLINE YOUTUBE CHANNEL: STORYTELLING, IP PRINT EXTERNAL BLOGS: IP, FASHION TIPS OUTDOOR PR PRODUCT SEEDING PGMS RETAIL
Consider including a trust strategy If trust is the primary lever of revenue • Where are you trusted? • Create amplifier opportunities for brand zealots • Video testimonials • Where are you distrusted? • Provide open, transparent proof points that can be found • Testimonials and interviews • Inside looks • Open dialogue with the market • Lead with trust weak spots • Takes the wind out of naysayers
PROOF OF INTENTION: leveraging social causes to focus conversation (and brand) on giving back.
Follow the social marketing mantras • Peer marketing extends your sales force along trust channels that you cannot buy • Social marketing is a commitment, not a campaign • Plan staffing appropriately • Outsource temporarily if need be • Be transparent about everything except that which cannot be • Polar opposite to Boomer privacy issues • May take sell-in with management, legal • Be fearless • This is the most exciting area of marketing! • You’re at the cusp of a transformation! • Engage openly, but with response guardrails and internal governance • “Cool people” don’t suffer fools – neither should your organization • Let the market decide how you’re doing (they’d do it anyway)
As you write your strategy • Any tactic should clearly ladder up to the overarching strategy • Consider how you will phase your engagement approach • What kind of kickoff? • What can staffing accomplish? • Which tactics to try first? • What learnings can inform future engagement efforts? • As you examine your audiences, consider creating personas that will help create organizational empathy and understanding • Clearly state your mandatory requirements for success • X conversationalists, Y monitors, Z content creators • Agency or in-house? Automated or qualitative? • Clearly state your success metrics • Increase in time-on-site? Sentiment? Twitter fans? Retweets?
And don’t let that commitment—or that strategy—fizzle • Get buy-in • Management must understand the cultural shifts and buy into plan • Stay focused! • Don’t let day-to-day duties stall your efforts • Hold people accountable • Who’s responsible for each action step? • Follow up, adjust and readjust • Plans change, adjust accordingly • Set a timetable for reexamination • Tie what you’re doing to organizational goals • Management can’t argue with approaches that support mission, goals FLICKR: @JACOB DAVIES
THANK YOU • ericw@tribalddb.ca • slideshare.net/weave • 206-905-9328