Showing posts with label CRM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CRM. Show all posts

Friday, August 29, 2014

3 marketing topics to school yourself on this fall.

Labor Day marks the second start of a new year, an opportunity, as with the one in January, for a fresh start and self-improvement. As marketers, it’s a good time to take stock of what we don’t know, in order to stay on top of the latest innovations in accountability, effectiveness, and customer satisfaction.

Social media. It may seem obvious, but the proliferation of platforms, broad use of them for customer interaction, and still-experimental state of the industry can result in huge opportunities for you or colossal blunders. Study up to learn from past mistakes and to prevent your own.

Content marketing. Understanding the changes in creating intelligent dialogue with customers is a larger change in the marketing landscape in the past several years than even social media, which has merely accelerated the process. Marketing as a provider not only of information but also of unbiased value is a sea-change and must understood to be properly executed.

Mobile marketing. There are more mobile internet users online than desktop users. Understanding the needs of the mobile user goes beyond device compatibility. Get ahead of your competition because companies that do not adapt to mobile will suffer the same fate of the latecomers to the internet in the 90s.

There are many others, including marketing automation, search engine optimization (Google makes sure you are out of date almost monthly), and alignment of social and search

What others are you studying up on?



Thursday, April 23, 2009

This is broken.

amazon.com

If I can be so brazen as to add to Seth Godin's excellent 2006 Gel presentation, This Is Broken, I'd add an additional category to his list of broken things called "It made sense to us at the time" (something I discuss here) and suggest that an earlier blog post of my own hints at one of the possible solutions.

What's broken in your experience?

I had a broken experience yesterday on Amazon. I purchased four MP3s files from three different albums by the same artist. I was forced to check out four times, and further, when I pressed the back button, it returned me all the way to the main page, not the sorted list I had created. Took me close to twenty minutes.

Broken.

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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Zeitgeist 2008

Cover of Cover via AmazonI'm currently halfway through the book Click (the one by Bill Tancer, not Nick Hornby); full title Click: What Millions of People Are Doing Online and Why it Matters. Tancer, who runs the research effort at online market research firm Hitwise, analyzes search patterns from search engine data and addresses the often surprising results and challenges us about what we've believed about the psychology of consumers. So when Google printed this "Google Zeitgeist" for 2008 – snack food for stat brats such as myself – I had to look to see for myself what Bill Tancer spends his day analyzing.

Interesting is the country-by-country breakdown of top 10 search terms and the "How to" list. #2? "How to kiss."

Some lonely gamers out there, still.
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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

I'd say I was brilliant if it hadn't been so obvious.


"It’s too late for Vista, and my humble prediction is that it will go away and undergo a retooling - perhaps a later integration of key features into a different OS release. "

- Me, Your Humble Blogger, in a March blog entry, "When Did The Guys From Delta House Start Running Microsoft?"


~Seven months later~



"Microsoft introduced what it said would be a slimmer and more responsive version of its Windows operating system on Tuesday, while unceremoniously dropping the brand name Vista for the new product... Other new features in this very early version included an enhanced and more flexible task-bar, more powerful search features, and an easier-to-use home network and file sharing. There was also a hint that Microsoft plans to revise Windows 7 to take advantage of the coming wave of multicore microprocessors from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices. Mr. Sinofsky said the company would give more details on the ability of the new program to handle up to 256 processors."

Its a damn shame that my brilliant prognostications do not extend to the stock market.

Friday, November 16, 2007

The Trouble With ROMI

ROMI, or Return on Marketing Investment, is the stalwart of the accountability marketing movement, spurred on by the dozens of dashboard software products and services that promise not only to track the success of your marketing efforts, but change the very nature of the way marketing is viewed in the corporate environment.

Poppycock.

As I told an audience at a recent BMA luncheon at which I was the speaker, ROMI is a Red Herring. It provides a false sense of security to marketers who otherwise have abdicated their responsibility to learn the language and requirements of the finance team, and therefore, the organization generally. Here are the top three reasons that ROMI, while a good tool, is useless in creating real influence in the boardroom, and real impact on the bottomline:
  1. ROMI is a metric, not an objective. Measuring click-thrus, phone calls, leads generated are all useful metrics that measure the effectiveness of tactics, not strategies. All too often marketers and professionals from other fields, for that matter, mistake their metrics as objectives. Objectives are far broader than a lead, and marketing needs to recognize the difference.
  2. ROMI only measures one of the four Ps. We can debate the current relevance of the four Ps, but putting the debate aside for a moment; ROMI is targeted toward measuring Promotion only. What of Price (price cuts versus premium pricing strategies?), Placement (how to leverage distribution channels?), and Product (feeding customer and market research to effect product changes?). ROMI acknowledges none of that, yet if there was a single ‘P’ whose impact on sales was the most expendable, it would be Promotion… yet it retains the lion’s share of our attention as marketers.
  3. ROMI metrics are created in a vacuum. They do not necessarily reflect the concerns of the executive team. The CFO is concerned with EBITDA, not PPC. He/she wants to know about your contribution to EPS, not the circulation of your industry’s leading trade publication. As compelling as some metrics are, finance types are often as guilty as engineers in the ‘not invented here’ mentality. They set the critical metrics, not you.

In the end, finance folks and executives are your customers, and like reaching customers, you need to speak to their needs, not your own.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Of metrics and meaning

A few posts back, I commented on Corporate self-delusion in measuring customer satisfaction. Seth Godin makes the point in his blog regarding the importance not of measurement for measurement's sake, but measurement for knowledge's sake. Common metrics and the 'real thing' they are intended to measure:
  • Good grades in school (the ability to solve problems in life)
  • Lots of raw traffic to your blog (conversations among prospects who become fans or customers)
  • Burning calories (feeling better and looking good)
  • Clickthrough rate on ads (conversion rate to customers)
  • High salary (long-term happiness)
  • Class rank (actually learning something)
  • Number of stock options (future prospects of your employer)
  • This quarter's commission (reputation in the industry)
  • Technorati rank (number of RSS subscribers)

I could add leads, visitors, reach, frequency, and a host of old black magic measurements to the list as well. And in addition to measuring the right thing, it is also important not to be blind to the subjective things as well. One does not trump the other.

http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2007/01/high_resolution.html

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Corporate Self-delusion

According to a Bain & Co. survey, corporate self-delusion is at critical levels, particularly as it concerns perceptions of customer satisfaction. The survey of 362 firms found that 80% believed they delivered a 'superior experience' to consumers. Yet only 8% of customers of those same 362 agreed with that characterization.

So why the chasm? One, companies are defining their own standards of performance. Two, they aren't looking broadly enough at the entire customer experience. It is critical that companies transform quality and service measurements according to customer expectations and experiences, not internal operational standards. Let's look at these two critical issues by picking on, say, randomly, a cable company...

Cableco says it has over a 90% satisfaction rating because they are arriving within a promised four hour window 94% of the time, and addressing the issue on the first visit 97% of the time. Trouble is, customers do not see waiting for half a day as good service, even when that time window is observed. Conscious of the value of their time, they want a narrower service window. Further, after a four hour wait, resolution on the first call is a considered a baseline standard for customers, not an indication of superior service.

Relatedly, if timeliness and first call resolution are the only standards Cableco uses to measure satisfaction, they'll overlook other critical touchpoints that impact customer experiences - from the initial call and ease of use of an IVR (Interactive Voice Response) system, to the physical appearance of technicians, through to the billing system and complaint resolution process.

Then, as competitors recognize the factors that are impacting the customer experience and make adjustments to their own policies to exploit them, Cableco will continue to hemmorage market share as their leadership gazes contentedly at a PowerPoint slide that reveals "90% customer satisfaction".

When it comes to customer satisfaction, measure the right things. Not just the easy things.