5 Mistakes You're Making That Are Killing Your Marketing Campaigns

In a past article from Juntae DeLane, he brings up very good succinct points about pitfalls of marketing campaigns.

1. Lack of Audience Understanding

Having a greater understanding of your audience should be the first step when developing a campaign strategy. Some entrepreneurs will produce evergreen campaigns with no specific targets hoping that new targets will emerge. Some may see a practical benefit in doing so; however, why run two campaigns to accomplish one task? Your marketing campaign will be optimized by doing research beforehand so you can make an impactful and relevant introduction to your brand.

The key to digital marketing is knowing your audience.  The more information you have about your customer the better and when using marketing automation tools, it is important to utilize this knowledge.  It is easy to lump as many individuals together and call them segments, however the more individualized your campaigns can become, the better experience the customer will have interacting with your brand or product.  

2. No Strategy

Many marketers get confused when talking about strategies and tactics.  A tactic is how you are going to do something, the strategy is what you are going to do.  They must work in tandem.  Many times marketers start with the tactics, "we are going to send an email to all of our customers who abandon a cart".  Why are you doing this?  You have to start with the strategy of "increase our sales from all parts of the funnel" to reach the tactic.  Otherwise, how do you know the goal?  The goal may be simplified in this case, but so many times a marketing plan is not strategic, it is a list of tactics the company is going to employ.  

Having an overarching strategy will help guide decision making.  Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should.  Focus is the key and understanding the strategy assists in that focus.  

3. Too Much Sales Pitch

I think another way to think about this is understand your customers are not stupid.  They know when they are seeing content from your company they are being sold something.  They want to understand why they need something, how will this make my life better, will I feel satisfaction with this purchase.  By trying to convince them to buy leads to buyers remorse.  The ultimate goal is to create loyal customers that will return again and again to purchase. 

4. No Tracking or Data

With all the tracking services out there, you should be able to easily track your campaign efficacy. From Google Analytics to KISS Metrics you can establish a tracking dashboard at virtually no cost.

However, what will kill your marketing campaign is if you identify the incorrect metrics.

I don't see this too much, most everyone is tracking some kind of performance.  I believe in the comment from above, what are the key metrics that drive the business.  If number of sales is your key metric, this can come at a loss because the amount of money invested to drive those increased sales is more than the revenue being generated.  Be careful to choose your metrics wisely.

5. Too Much Branding

I think everyone believes in increasing brand loyalty is key to a successful business, but this goes so much deeper than pushing the brand.  Brand loyalty comes from consistency, delivering the promise of the brand and always putting the customer first.  These don't come from a catchy slogan or advertising, this comes from hard work to deliver the best customer experiences.  The brand is all aspects of the transaction, from the customer service agent answering the phone to the ways in which a mobile app enhances the buying experience.  

Source: http://juntaedelane.com/5-mistakes-making-...

Are You Ready for an Omnichannel World?

One of my favorite title for an article.  I think it's a funny title to be honest, because it doesn't matter if you are ready, this is the current state of the customer experience.  Customers for a few years have been living in this world and we as digital marketers are finding it hard to catch up.  What's even more scary is the rate at which technology is moving.  If digital marketers don't become more agile, they will always be playing catch up.  The issue may be is that the distance they will have to catch up will widen.

Today’s customers engage with companies in multichannel and multitouchpoint journeys, which they pause and resume over time. For example, according to the Corporate Executive Board (CEB):
  • 58% of callers have visited the web before calling, and
  • 34% of callers are on the web while talking to a rep
For a customer to complete a single task – buy a product, answer a question, understand a bill – they often require multiple, disconnected interactions with an organization. When a customer needs assisted service to supplement self-service, they typically must start over when they engage with the organization.  In the case of voice, it’s calling a contact center, using an IVR, and explaining their issue. In the case of chat, it’s starting a dialog with an agent without any context to their journey. These time-consuming and disconnected ‘channel shift’ experiences are one of the leading causes of missed sales opportunities and high operating expense for organizations – as well as a major source of frustration for costumers.

I remember back in 2001 having this journey with AT&T landlines.  At that time AT&T was broken into local and long distance.  Well the bills came and they looked exactly the same and this was when online banking was just getting started.  Well I was paying all the bills to long distance, because I believed they were one in the same.  The bill looked exactly the same.  I was quite surprised when they turned off my phone because I hadn't been paying.  I mean, here I was I felt like I was always paying.  When I set up my phone service I didn't call 2 numbers.  

This is something that needs to be front and center.  This is nothing more than creating great customer experiences, just using customer service as an example.  The customer doesn't want to think about telling their story over and over, they want the context of their issue to move with them as they reach each touch point.  This is expected in the digital age.  The only thing really holding organizations back is their structure.  Organizations have to structure themselves to handle the guest through this omni-channel journey.  No amount of software will help if they don't start there.   

Source: http://loyalty360.org/loyalty-today/articl...

Brands Don’t Know Their Customers As Well As They Think They Do

Chris Crum writes for webpronews.com:

IBM and Econsultancy have some new research out suggesting a “massive perception gap” between how well brands think they are marketing to their customers and how well customers actually think brands know them. Businesses think they’re doing a pretty good job. Consumers, not so much.
The study, which surveyed businesses and customers specifically in the United States, found that about 90% of marketers do agree that personalization of marketing campaigns is critical to their success. Even still, 80% of consumers polled don’t think the average brand understands them as individuals. This is despite consumers sharing more personal details with businesses than ever before. Some how, brands are still failing to make the most of it.

In my experience, marketers can be their own worst PR agents.  For the most part, they understand what their customers want, but they can't deliver.  However, they are constantly spinning what they are doing as to seem as though they are meeting the customers demands.  So this survey doesn't surprise me.  I'm surprised that 80% of customers don't feel like they are individuals.  It's hard to create great customer experiences with this stat.

The IBM/Econsultancy research found that 80% of marketers “strongly” believe they have a holistic view of individual customers and segments across interactions and channels. They also strongly believe in their ability to deliver “superior experiences” offline (75%), online (69%), and on mobile devices (57%). Yet just 47% of marketers say they’re able to deliver relevant communications.
Worse yet, customers don’t think they’re getting personalized experiences. Only 37% said their preferred retailer understands them as an individual. And that’s the preferred one. Only 22% said the average retailer understands them. 21% said communications from their average retailer are “usually relevant”. 35% said communications from their preferred retailers are “usually relevant”.

The biggest disconnect with marketers is in implementation.  In the survey they state they believe they can deliver "superior experiences", yet just 47% say they are "able".  So marketers believe they have the strategy to be great in the area of customer experience, the technology or knowhow to deliver these great strategies is lacking.  A lot of that comes down to the relationship with the CIO.  As I wrote in Across The Board, CMOs Struggling To Deliver An Integrated Customer Experience, until the CIO and CMO speak the same language and the CMO embraces technology, this will continue to be an issue for marketers in the future.  When only 37% of customers believe their preferred retailer knows them at all, there is an issue.

“One explanation for relevancy void may be a lack of innovation for the multi-channel lives we all lead,” IBM said. “According to the study, only 34 percent of marketers said they do a good job of linking their online and offline customer experiences. With the vast majority of dollars spent offline and the majority of product research happening on the Internet, the two are already linked for consumers but this gulf must close for marketers if they are to advance. One issue is the technology of integration, with only 37 percent of marketers saying they have the tools to deliver exceptional customer experiences.”

The technology exists today, marketers just have to embrace it.  The technology is nascent, so it is harder to implement, but this can be done today with hard work.  The results will be well worth the effort.

“The customer is in control but this is not the threat many marketers perceive it to be. It’s an opportunity to engage and serve the customer’s needs like never before,” said Deepak Advani, GM at IBM Commerce. “By increasing investments in marketing innovations, teams can examine consumers at unimaginable depths including specific behavior patterns from one channel to the next. With this level of insight brands can become of customer’s trusted partner rather than an unwanted intrusion.”  

Advani is correct in labeling this an opportunity.  For the marketers who dare to embrace the new realities of digital marketing, they will reap the benefits that come from delivering targeted content creating exceptional customer experiences.  For the marketers that don't embrace this sea-change, their companies will become less relevant in the digital age.  

Source: http://www.webpronews.com/brands-dont-know...

Your Digital Strategy Shouldn’t Be About Attention

I really like this article.  Digital has the potential to be one-to-one in real-time, but so many marketers use it as a commercial.  I have been working with Adobe and their marketing cloud for a couple of years now and their vision is very compelling.  Right now it is just that, a vision, but it is getting closer to reality.  

To make such a vision a reality, marketers have to push companies with great visions.  The tools can't push the vision, they have to enable the vision.  If marketers continue to use these tools to push brands and not relationships, the vision will be wasted.  

It’s easy to win “clicks” by titillating people with Kim Kardashian’s naked behind or a list of the world’s cutest human-cat baby unicorn fairies. And it might lend a dreary day a moment of relieved escapism. But it won’t help anyone. To do that, you must educate. Not in the awful, misused corporate sense of the term: dully lecturing them about “product benefits.” But helping them develop the capabilities and skills they’re going to need to live better lives. What will your “digital strategy” help them become better at? Does it have a point? Skiing, dating, cooking, coding, creating, building? If the answer is no, you don’t have a strategy. You have a vaudeville show.
Source: https://hbr.org/2015/01/your-digital-strat...