Slideshow transcript
Slide 1: Lessons from the Frontier of Customer Experience Innovation DARRELL SNOW SVP of Technology & ATG Practice Leader - Blast Radius
Slide 2: Blast Radius at a Glance… SAN FRANSISCO VANCOUVER TORONTO NEW YORK LONDON AMSTERDAM Founded in 1996 350+ Employees WPP Family
Slide 3: What Does Blast Radius Do? We create and deliver innovative and interactive experiences that: Engage customers Inform customers Make brands relevant Drive quantifiable business results
Slide 4: Why is this important? Traditional marketing strategies are losing their effectiveness: Disruptive technologies Empowered customers The “connected” customer Advertising as we know it is dead
Slide 5: The founding rules of our business The customer comes first A communication must elicit a response you can measure Innovation is the key to solving client problems Lester Wunderman 1967
Slide 6: Market Reality 700 new brands introduced every business day…on top of the 2M+ that exist today
Slide 7: Market Reality Products are increasingly undifferentiated
Slide 8: Market Reality New product breakthroughs are becoming increasingly rare
Slide 9: The Corporate Response Shout louder...
Slide 10: or shout through a new channel
Slide 11: …but customers are not interested More than 2/3 of customers are bored (passives) or angry (detractors) Source: Bain &Company, The Ultimate Question
Slide 12: We are still not converting… Free trial 5.7% Paid Search Registration data request SEO 5.2% Specific action 4.3% taken 3.9% Join a loyalty program Delayed e-commerce or 4.2% service purchase 6.3% 3.8% E-commerce product or service purchase 4.1% 4% average Store visit 3.6% conversion! Offline conversion 2.8% 3.6% Request more Average information 4.2% Source: Marketing Sherpa, 2006
Slide 13: How broken is it?
Slide 14: Well…
Slide 15: Is this success? We fail 96% of the time we have a customers attention
Slide 16: We need to apply the same sort of science we do before the click…
Slide 17: After the click as well...
Slide 18: How do we engage customers?
Slide 19: What Is… Branded Customer Experience Innovation
Slide 20: Customer Experience Innovation A real world example Standard Mail-Order Reversible Top CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE INNOVATION
Slide 21: Prescriptions: The Customer Experience Confusion !?! 60% of patients have taken the wrong medication* Poor package design can lead to a potentially fatal mistake * Source: poll by Target
Slide 22: Target ClearRx Pharmacy rethought from the bottom up Design Objectives: What the drug is Who it belongs to How to take it Bottom Line: Estimated increase in prescription drug sales: 14% (2006) $1.4 billion to $1.6 billion* * Data Source: According to research group Chain Store Guide Information Services
Slide 23: Small Change: Big Result $200 CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE INNOVATION Million
Slide 24: unmet shared value needs + cause + exchange engagement
Slide 25: Uncover unmet needs within the entire customer experience
Slide 26: Who decides? Random Rotation Boss decides Internal Politics Committee vote Product launch schedule Largest product owner Shouts loudest
Slide 27: And the results of that? Irrelevant to 90%+ of visitors Wasted use of valuable and High home costly real page bounce estate rate Home page Lost brand ignored building opportunity
Slide 28: Test and learn everywhere Display Ads Mobile Devices Email Full range of experiential optimization… including Flash, Ajax, Widgets and RIAs Source: Offermatica. 2007
Slide 29: Qwest A/B testing Test A Test B Test C Visits 10,918 10,764 12,992 PVs Per Visit 2.15 2.17 2.12 Exit Ratio 16.4% 12.5% 17.3% Est. Package Order Authentication Visit 1,513 1,689 1,852 Drop Off % 86.1% 84.3% 85.7% % of QCH Visits 13.9% 15.7% 14.3% Completed Order Visits 381 387 498 % of QCH Visits 3.49% 3.60% 3.83% Drop Off % (from Est. Pack Order Auth.) 74.8% 77.1% 73.1% Confidence Level <80% ~83% ~90% QCH Revenue (By Visit) $0.88 $0.71 $0.88 Cross-selling Revenue (By Visit) $0.47 $0.29 $0.37 Total Revenue (By Visit) $1.35 $1.00 $1.25 ROI: $1,744,075 Estimated Incremental Revenue by Year
Slide 30: Measure dollars not metrics Value of Desired Behaviors Monthly Impact Annual Impact Registration $855,000 $10,260,000 Financing $513,000 $6,156,000 Find a Store $342,000 $4,104,000 Special Promotions $213,750 $2,565,000 Registrations 25% Lift 50% Lift Monthly Site Visits 1,000,000 1,000,000 Registration Conversion Rate 4.8% 5.7% Monthly Registrations 47,500 57,000 Registration to Sale Conversion 5.0% 5.0% Monthly Number of Sales 2,375 2,850 Average Purchase Amount $450 $450 Monthly Sale Volume $1,068,750 $1,282,500 Average Value of Registration $23 $23 Annual Incremental $2,565,000 $5,130,000 A communication must elicit a response you can measure
Slide 31: unmet shared value needs + cause + exchange engagement
Slide 32: Better Parents? Chefs? Gamers? Designers? Socially Aware? Builders? Runners? what are the shared causes of your customers?
Slide 33: unmet shared value needs + cause + exchange engagement
Slide 34: Value exchanges need to be win-win including new ways to “pay” such as community involvement
Slide 35: Including those communities outside of your control
Slide 36: Select Clients
Slide 37: How Electronic Arts engages customers
Slide 38: EA is the world's biggest interactive entertainment software company. With titles including: FIFA, Madden Football, NHL Hockey, Tiger Woods PGA, Need for Speed, and NBA Live…
Slide 39: Case Study: NBA Live 08
Slide 40: NBA Live 08 Challenge Needed to generate more engagement around its latest release that would outlast the dip in post-launch interest.
Slide 41: NBA Live 08 Solution Inject an exciting component into the web experience that will resonate with fans and keep them engaged longer. NBA Jersey Creator
Slide 42: NBA Jersey Creator An invitation to fans to create custom jerseys for their favorite teams Contest gallery showcased customers’ best submissions
Slide 43: NBA Jersey Creator The winning jersey will be available for NBA 09 as downloadable content.
Slide 44: NBA Jersey Creator Results 12 week result was 800% over target 35,000 submissions – 35,000 emails of the highest tier NBA enthusiasts Post-launch traffic continues to be higher than average, with fans returning to the contest gallery Value of each contact equated to $150 over 18 months Cost per contact: $2.85
Slide 45: NBA Jersey Creator Conclusions Leveraged product core to strengthen connection with customers Tapped into the shared cause of people’s passion for their team EA created a longer period of interaction that engaged customers at a deeper level
Slide 46: JORDAN PLAYER LEGEND One of the m os t re cognize d bra nds on the pla ne t
Slide 47: Jordan Challenge Create a premium experience to sell limited edition Jordan footwear and apparel that drive sales while maintaining a level of exclusivity. Service needs and extend the experience beyond the product Recognize loyalty and advocacy with customer empowerment
Slide 48: Solution: Jordan Flight Club Create a members-only commerce site to reward Jordan Brand’s most loyal customers with access to exclusive products.
Slide 49: Jordan Flight Club Solution customer empowerment - customer-driven growth Pre m ium products . Pre m ium cus tom e r. Pre m ium e xpe rie nce . De m a nd for a ne w Bra nd e xpe rie nce tha t is prope lle d by the com m unity
Slide 50: Jordan Flight Club Results The Flight Club became a rapidly growing social network with over 40,000 members in the first 45 days. Strong revenue results support many more upcoming releases through this exclusive channel. Secondary Flight Club passes sold on eBay and Craigslist
Slide 51: Jordan Challenge Establish an authentic position for Jordan in the training marketplace Engage the training customer to build brand advocates and evangelists to carry the message Leverage the ethos of the brand
Slide 52: Solution: Jordan Breakfast Club
Slide 53: Jordan Breakfast Club Approach Identify and service unmet needs of this customer Establish a platform for a continuing dialogue with this customer Leverage advocates to expand the reach of the message
Slide 54: Service Beyond Product Peers rate strengths and weaknesses Set your goals and assess yourself Invite your friends Customize a program to address weaknesses Output your program
Slide 55: Jordan Breakfast Club Results 20,000 engaged young athlete influencers Tens of thousands of additional views of content on Youtube Expansion to a 10-city summer tour reaches thousands more at day long training camps Winner of a 2007 Forrester Groundswell Award in the Supporting Category
Slide 57: ROXY.COM Challenge Roxy is a leading girls’ surf wear manufacturer Wanted a fully re-designed website to accommodate e- commerce Preserve the brand’s equity Support multiple seasonal campaigns Unbelievably tight timeframe
Slide 58: ROXY.COM Solution Multi-tiered engagement strategy: Anchored the site’s visual language to the style of online communities inhabited by their customers Imaginatively utilizing existing rich Roxy content assets Providing a social-shopping component so users could share Save and review products Offer multiple and intuitive ways to browse and buy
Slide 59: ROXY.COM Results Immediate and sustained 120% increase in North American traffic Overwhelmingly enthusiastic customer response Established a powerful, autonomous e-commerce platform that would form the core of their interactive sales and branding efforts
Slide 60: PRODUCT REVIEWS Allow customers to rate products and provide valuable feedback to others
Slide 61: SOCIAL SHOPPING Shop with your friends to get their advice
Slide 62: LOOK BOOK Virtual Dressing Room
Slide 63: Roxy BLOG Content aimed at giving customers an inside perspective on Roxy
Slide 64: nau
Slide 65: nau Challenge Create a premium disruptive experience that reflects the brand and product values Single view of the customer across all platforms Enable marketing through community and philanthropy
Slide 66: The Brand and Technology Landscape
Slide 67: Revolutionizing the Shopping Experience Rich eCommerce Interface In Store Kiosk Seamless Store Integration
Slide 68: * early store design
Slide 69: Design Implementations * nau store design
Slide 70: Rich Experience Interface
Slide 71: In Store Touch Screen Kiosks In-store kiosk
Slide 72: Confidential and Proprietary © 2008 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 73: DirecTV Develop Insight for Customer Experience Design
Slide 74: Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 75: Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 76: Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 77: Virgin Challenge Virgin required a portal to the vast network of products and services Not generating enough traffic through to each of the network sites Virgin brand not truly captured Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 78: Solution An experience which boasted a new ‘lensing’ technology which not only facilitated a uniquely entertaining viewing experience for the user but also reinforced Virgin’s brand values. Lensing allowed the customers to quite literally view Virgin differently through different lenses or “Virgin Views” Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 79: Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 80: Confidential and Proprietary © 2007 Blast Radius Inc.
Slide 81: unmet shared value needs + cause + exchange engagement
Slide 82: Conclusion Customer Experience Innovation Has a huge impact for a modest investment Builds customer engagement and loyalty Requires a shift in thinking to optimization Must leverage data to and customer insight Measure dollars not metrics
Slide 83: Q&A




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