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A RAZORFISH ANALYSIS 
OF CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT IN TRANSITION 
Change. As marketers, we have always accepted it. Markets change; brands gain momentum 
and then lose energy; and new mediums come along. Consider the advent of television in the 
1950s and how it changed the rules of marketing for decades. 
The change marketers face today is different than what has come before, in both its pace and its potential, which is why we’ve used the 
term “liminal” as the title of this book. The word liminal isn’t just about change, but about being on the cusp of something new. In the 
context of marketing, it reflects the fact that, for the first time, customers have an immediate voice and an ever-expanding array of 
channels in which to use it. If marketers are to survive—and thrive—in this new world, they need to re-examine how to engage with 
customers, across generations and levels of technological savvy. 
Thus, we undertook the research in “Liminal” from the ground up, so we could understand how people engage with companies, what they 
are looking to get out of those engagements, and what channels they prefer. It’s not enough anymore for marketers to have a top-down 
mentality, simply making sure they have a presence on multiple channels, but to understand what makes some customers still use an 800 
number, while others reach out to brands on Facebook. 
Here’s the problem: the above assumes your customers want a relationship with you. They don’t. Yes, they will engage with you, yet only if 
it is on their terms. The findings in “Liminal” demonstrate that, in the future, marketers will need to find ways to sustain those engagements 
over time, regardless of channel, whether they are traditional, emerging or new. 
You have long known it is necessary to take charge and build relationships with your customers. We hope you will find that “Liminal,” 
because it focuses on what customers want out of engagement, combined with the an eye toward the ever-expanding array of channels, 
will help you realize the opportunities that lie with this liminal world—for both you, and your customers. 
Sincerely, 
John Zell 
VP, Global CRM Solutions, Razorfish
I INTRODUCTION 04 
C CONCLUSION: 
The Beginning of Understanding 
Consumers and Engagement 56 
addendum 
01 
PRIVACY AND PERMISSION: 
Four Key Considera.ons 
All Marketers Should Think About 58 
addendum 
02 
METHODOLOGY: 
The Research Process 
Behind Razorfish Links 64 
T THANK YOU 70 
Rf ABOUT RAZORFISH 72 
chapter 
01 
DEFINING ENGAGEMENT: 
What’s Important to Consumers 
When They Reach Out to Your Brand 08 
chapter 
02 
THE POWER OF CUSTOMER VALUE 
PLUS INFLUENCE 20 
chapter 
03 
LINKING ENGAGEMENT 
AND INFLUENCE 
To Build Be/er Engagement Strategies 26 
chapter 
04 
VIRGIN AMERICA: 
Crea.ng an I.nerary That Iden.fies 
and Leverages Customer Influence 36 
chapter 
05 
THE TRANSITIONALS: 
An Encapsula.on of 
How Engagement Is Changing 52
INTRODUCTION 
We chose the name “Liminal” for this report because it describes a state of being in flux—on 
the threshold of something new. To us, the word liminal does a superb job of describing the 
continuing evolution of how consumers choose to engage with a brand. 
To say the least, the number of places where your customers can—or may want to—engage 
with your brand has exploded, even in the last two to three years. What used to be a mere 
handful of options, such as the telephone or postal mail, first began to expand with the dawn 
of the Internet era to include corporate websites and email. However, the roster of ways 
customers can engage with you seems to increase inexorably. Today, consumers can “Like” a 
brand on Facebook, post a video about a product on YouTube, or broadcast a complaint 
about your company to their followers on Twitter. While some customers continue to use older 
channels, others are using channels such as these to publicize the relationship between customer 
and brand beyond the private interactions that used to typify the brand/customer relationship.
I 
So, if some customers are content to be in touch with you via email, while others champion your 
brand through social media; if some customers use channels they find efficient, while others use 
ones that they find relevant; how do you make sense not only of these divergent touchpoints, 
but the disparate reasons why customers gravitate to them? We are no longer in a world where 
the only car available is a black Ford Model T. Today, consumers can choose from dozens of 
brands, each of which produce a wide array of models, with differing features, colors and price 
points. An active family might choose an SUV; a single, environmentally conscious consumer 
might drive a Volkswagen Beetle. 
And so it is with touchpoints. How do you pick the right combinations to satisfy your 
customers’ immediate needs and make them loyal? Better yet, how do you turn these people 
into ambassadors who will openly tout your product or service to friends, family, or maybe, 
the entire Internet universe? 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 7
HERDING THE ENGAGEMENT CATS 
At Razorfish, we needed answers to these questions, because they are not only on our minds, but on the minds of our clients as well. 
While we all know that engagement channels will continue to proliferate, and the number of channels may be in a continually liminal state, 
it was clearly time to build a foundation for understanding what channels consumers use and why, setting the stage for building 
engagement strategies now and in the future. We needed to identify a process that could be used and re-used to help companies renew 
their engagement strategies as touchpoints expand. 
Thus, from the outset, we wanted to discover truths that were not about individual channels but about consumer needs. What do 
consumers want when they engage with brands? To answer that question, we did something that has seldom, if ever, been done before: 
we looked at engagement from the customer viewpoint, rather than that of the marketer—something that is crucial to know whether you 
sell airline seats, juice, or financial services, or if you are wrestling with whether your company should be on Facebook or, five years from 
now, on a platform no one has yet imagined. 
First, we commissioned a study to find out how consumers prioritize engagement, and what channels they use to satisfy their needs in 
partnership with our client Virgin America, and Loyalty Lab, which employs software-as-a-service technology to drive customer value and 
loyalty. The study, which did not ask respondents about specific brands or engagement scenarios, combined more than 5,600 surveys and 15 
one-to-one interviews of Virgin America customers with their existing data on lifetime value (LTV) and engagement. Then we added an overlay 
of publicly available data on social media use from 100,000 Internet users. These sources allowed us to look at self-reported attitudes and 
preferences—and independently tracked behavior—enabling us to build a comprehensive understanding of how people engage with brands. 
We call this process of taking behavioral data on engagement touchpoints, overlaying it with broader social and survey data, and then 
analyzing the outcome, Razorfish Links. It’s a proprietary engagement audit that can help any brand get a better handle on its engagement 
strategy—helping it accurately value its customers, and map each segment’s unique engagement preferences to the channels they use. 
Ultimately, going through the Razorfish Links process allows brands to develop a truly customer-centric relationship marketing program. 
We will go into detail about the results of the Razorfish Links process further on in this report. For now, here are a few things that surprised us: 
• Though social platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and geo-location social services, like Foursquare, are being quickly 
adopted, customers don’t yet view them as an important way to engage with brands. 
• When we asked consumers to prioritize what was important to them when engaging with a brand, they ranked the 
following priorities in exactly this order, no matter how we looked at the data: feeling Valued, Trust, Efficiency, 
Consistency, Relevance and Control. We called these six qualities the Engagement Elements. In other words, in a world 
full of engagement touchpoints, the most important things to everyone are to feel Valued by the companies they do 
business with, to get their needs addressed quickly, and to feel the companies they engage with can be trusted. 
• Even as “the consumer is in control” has become a mantra in the digital age, Control came in dead last. Apparently, the 
consumer does not need to be in as much control as we thought, seeing other things as far more important. 
• Even though we associate certain touchpoints with certain strengths—we assume, for instance, that an e-commerce 
website is efficient—every channel has some ability to deliver on the Engagement Elements. It’s not as though, for 
instance, phone and email always deliver on making a customer feel Valued, while Facebook and Twitter are incapable of it. 
• The channels people use to meet their engagement needs varied. In fact, the engagement data of the group aged 
35-44—which we call The Transitionals (see Chapter Five)—closely matched those of the 45-plus demographic, yet 
the channels they use to connect with companies are similar to the 25-34-year-old group.
These surprising findings taught us to assume nothing when it comes to why and how customers interact with brands. As this part of 
marketing is bound to remain continually liminal, realizing that customer engagement is in a state of constant change is a humbling thing 
to learn—and remember. 
AND FINALLY, A PROCESS FOR NAVIGATING, 
AND LEVERAGING, THE ENGAGEMENT SHIFT 
Studies are interesting, but even the best sound bites of data are not very useful unless they give us the information we need to act. 
Therefore, we set out to determine how a marketer could use the data from Razorfish Links to re-orient their engagement strategies 
around how their customers prioritize engagement and the channels they might use when they reach out to brands. Thus, also in “Liminal,” 
you will find ways to: 
• Map the channels customers use to their engagement priorities. With Virgin America, data from Razorfish Links 
allowed us to develop four different Engagement Types within the company’s customer base, based on lifetime value 
(LTV), potential influence, what they want out of engagement channels, and what channels they use. 
• Optimize channels. Some of which may already be in use. For instance, if a company’s high-value customers are heavy 
users of Facebook, yet the company has not invested much in the channel, it will learn that it should take the channel 
more seriously, and what needs it should meet with that channel. 
• Calculate a Consumer Influence Score. This combines a traditional, bottom-line view of a customer’s LTV with his or 
her ability, using social media tools, to influence others, a concept we call enhanced LTV (eLTV). 
• Develop an engagement strategy. One that focuses on the right engagement touchpoints, delivering on what 
customers need—with an eye to what Engagement Types and channels will have the best return on investment. 
Where the practice of customer relationship marketing (CRM) creates the framework, we see the goal as creating a Sustained Engagement, 
which aligns channels and customer engagement priorities in such a way that consumers want to maintain a relationship with a company, 
potentially across multiple channels, brands and products on an ongoing basis. 
With a Sustained Engagement, you can increase sales, decrease churn, and, most importantly, 
transform consumers into brand advocates through exceptional engagement experiences. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 9
DEFINING ENGAGEMENT: 
What’s Important to Consumers When They Reach Out to Your Brand 
Engagement—just the mention of it can spark a visceral response from marketers, partly 
because no one has pinpointed what it really means. Let’s get it out there: engagement is a 
messy, complicated idea—yet a critical one—because it gets to the heart of the relationship 
between consumers and brands. We know that it is valuable, but the how, what and why of it is 
ambiguous at best. 
However, particularly at a time when potential touchpoints with consumers are proliferating, it 
is one of the most important things for a marketer to define. Why? Because consumers pick the 
channels they use based on how well each satisfies their needs when they engage with a brand. 
If a customer who bought a computer is seeking out relevant troubleshooting information, he or 
she has many ways to get it. Whether that person chooses to look for it on a company website, 
reaches out to that company on Twitter, or goes to an independent community site about that 
brand depends on which of the three is best able to serve up the most relevant information.
chapter 
01 
THE MARKETER DEFINITION OF ENGAGEMENT: 
LOOKING AT IT BACKWARDS? 
While there is no single, clean, concise definition of engagement—though everyone from Forrester Research to Fanscape and eMarketer 
has attempted it—we would argue the myriad definitions do have one unfortunate thing in common: they define engagement from the 
marketers’ perspective, instead of asking consumers what they consider a positive engagement experience. Top-down definitions of 
engagement focus on a very specific set of numerical measures, typically within a single channel—things like time spent, site visits, page 
views, search keywords, and session length. Yet those do nothing to elicit how consumers feel about it, particularly in how their thinking 
affects their channel choices. And certainly, none of the marketer-side definitions connect engagement back to lifetime value (LTV), but 
instead to lighter measures such as awareness and brand lift. 
Our study turned engagement on its head. The most important principles of engagement lie with the perceptions of people—consumers— 
and what engagement means to them. Thus, our study started by asking people what makes an engagement good or bad—in short, what 
makes engagement, well, engaging. 
We know that engagement always begins with a need to connect (a thank you, a complaint, a question, a purchase). What happens then? 
What are people’s expectations of an engagement with a brand, and how can a brand deliver on those expectations? 
THE CONSUMER VIEWPOINT: 
THE SIX Engagement Elements THAT MATTER 
From a series of in-depth interviews, we learned that engagement is more than just a channel. It’s a dialogue; it’s the ability to choose 
how and when to engage; it’s the value each channel represents; it’s whether or not expectations were met. 
However, while marketers’ definitions of engagement are about how consumers interact with them in particular channels, consumers 
see it differently. Our interview subjects, instead of going straight into listing the channels they use to engage with a brand, focused on their 
relationship with a brand and how channels deliver on their interests, needs and expectations in different ways. We learned right away 
that the channel is subservient to the relationship need. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 11
Engagement isn’t just about a channel. It is about the consumer’s relationship with a brand, 
his or her ability to choose how and when to engage, and the value each channel represents. 
This enabled us to determine the six most important needs consumers have when they reach out to a brand: feeling Valued, 
Trust, Efficiency, Consistency, Relevance and Control. 
We call them the Engagement Elements, and they, not individual channels, should be the starting point for any interaction a brand has 
with a consumer. Again, it is a bottom-up, customer-centric way of looking at consumers’ engagement needs and how to optimize them. 
THE SIX ENGAGEMENT ELEMENTS 
Ef 
2 
E F F I C I E N C Y 
Va 
1 
V A L U E D 
Rv 
5 
R E L E V A N C E 
Tr 
Ct 
6 
C O N T R O L 
3 
T R U S T 
4 
Cn 
C O N S I S T E N C Y
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 13 
Valued 
What a customer feels when he knows he can expect a company to 
go out of its way to support his needs, and knows that the company 
values his business. One interviewee explained: “[It’s] something as 
simple as calling a person, having them listen and talking to them. 
Just feeling as though they are out there, working on your behalf, 
that your situation has not been discarded, you are not just another 
passenger. It’s the personal touch that makes the difference.” 
Efficiency 
When a company respects a customer’s time and energy, 
and promptly addresses his or her needs. When airlines offer 
consumers kiosks, which allow them to get their boarding pass with 
limited interaction with the airline, that is an example of Efficiency 
—many of us like to avoid the long lines and laborious process of 
checking in with a company representative. One interviewee praised 
online transactions through a computer or mobile phone, finding 
them easier, faster and more financially trustworthy. However, not 
everyone feels the same way; another subject complained that being 
contacted extensively had the opposite effect, saying, “Initial contact is 
OK but after that I don’t like to be hassled too much.” 
Trust 
When customers feel confident that a company is credible, and will 
handle engagements honestly, sincerely and transparently. One 
interviewee mentioned, “I need to believe that they’ll stand by what 
they are giving me. If something goes wrong, they will correct [it]. I’ll take 
chances with [trusting a company] so long as I’m sure they are there for 
me to correct any problems.” 
Believing in and taking chances with a 
company is contingent upon trust. DMNews hit 
the nail on the head when it stated, “Marketers 
must show their customers respect while earning 
their trust. This means understanding what truly 
interests them and not simply inundating them 
with material that you know is just advertising 
in disguise.” 
1 
1 Martin Reidy, “Loyalty Online Creates Instant Connections,” Direct Marketing News, June 21, 2010. 
CONSISTENCY 
Achieved when customers feel a company is uniform in things such 
as policy, attitude, communication, and messaging. Interviewees 
reported they noticed when a company’s words and actions clashed. 
Participants also defined Consistency in terms of reliability, durability, 
experience and craftsmanship. 
Relevance 
Achieved when a customer feels messaging from a company is 
interesting and applicable to their needs. When a retailer offers 
personalized coupons to its customers with discounts on items they 
frequently buy, that is Relevance (and probably, makes them feel 
Valued). One participant mentioned, “A lot of companies are want-ing 
to reach you through the Internet. Everybody has a Facebook 
page. Blah, blah, blah. I’m not going to a company’s page unless you 
give me a reason to go there. And I don’t want to hear about new 
products there. I want to go there if I want to become part of the [brand’s] 
culture or there is some important information there.” 
CONTROL 
Manifested when the customer can determine if, when and how a 
company will communicate with him or her. Interviewees noted they 
want to give companies permission to be in touch with them up front; 
conversely, they want to opt out when they are done engaging. Control 
can be implicit or explicit, yet the consumer wants to be at the center of it. 
He or she would rather foster a relationship than receive a one-way push 
from the marketer. As was said earlier, however, it is noteworthy that in 
“the consumer is in control” era, Control was the least important of the six 
Engagement Elements we identified. One reason for this, we believe, 
is that if a company delivers on Trust, then Control becomes less 
important.
THE SIX Engagement Elements : 
DRILLING FURTHER DOWN 
Yes, feeling Valued, Efficiency, Trust, Consistency, Relevance and Control are the six consumer-centric needs that form the backbone of 
engagement. Yet the data from our 5,600-participant survey showed that there is more to know. Below are two further points about the 
Engagement Elements that stood out to us: 
1. Feeling Valued, Efficiency and Trust, in that order, were overwhelmingly the three most important Engagement 
Elements. Consistency, Relevance, and Control were important, but much less so. 
2. No matter how we sliced the data—whether by gender, age, or favored channels—the rank order of the 
Engagement Elements remained the same, even if different age groups gave them different statistical weighting. 
Therefore, the consistent ranking of the importance of Engagement Elements is a barometer that allows us to 
understand why different channels are more successful than others. 
Still, it is a complex thing to understand. It turns out each channel delivers, to a different degree, on these elements, at different times, for 
different reasons. Just as a fast food chain might serve up information on its website that it was offering a special meal deal the next day, it 
could also offer that information via Twitter to loyal customers who follow the brand. For some customers, the former touchpoint works, 
for others, the latter. The fact that every channel has some ability to deliver on the Engagement Elements makes the relationship between 
them turbulent. 
So, how do the Engagement Elements relate to channels? To answer this, we first explored the importance of each heavily-used 
Virgin America channel. We walked away with two provocative findings. 
1. Channel importance and frequency of use are not related to the overall adoption of innovative new channels. 
With all the attention paid to such things as social media and mobile applications, consumers do not use these new channels often when 
they need to engage with brands. Our survey showed the most important consumer engagement channels are transactional email, 
company websites, traditional word-of-mouth and face-to-face conversation with a company representative. Obviously, consumers most 
use the channels they find most important. Those most important channels are Google (to find a company website), company websites, 
word-of-mouth and email. Further, channel importance and frequency of use matched up almost one-to-one, with the exception of the 
use of Google to find a company. 
Social networking services were the least important, be it LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook or the even newer location-based social networking 
services. Moreover, the least frequent actions taken on individual channels were participating in a company community site, looking up a 
company on YouTube, posting a review, reading or participating in a company community site and sending an email to a company. Twitter 
and Facebook didn’t even make it into the top nine in terms of importance or frequency of use. Gasp.
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 15 
MEAN CHANNEL IMPORTANCE 
WHEN ENGAGING WITH BRANDS TWITTER 
3 
2 
4 
5 
6 
25-34 
35-44 
45+ 
LOCATION-BASED 
SOCIAL NETWORKING 
LINKEDIN 
POSTAL MAIL 
COMPANY COMMUNITY 
WEBSITE 
FACEBOOK 
PRINT AD 
CUSTOMER SERVICE 
INSTANT MESSAGE 
MOBILE APPLICATIONS 
EMAIL NEWSLETTER 
PHONE 
REVIEW WEBSITE 
FACE-TO-FACE 
INTERACTION 
WORD OF MOUTH 
COMPANY WEBSITE 
INDIVIDUAL EMAIL
ENGAGEMENT ELEMENT 
EXPECTATIONS BY CHANNEL meets expectations expectations not met 
EFFICIENCY 
CONSISTENCY 
TRUST 
VALUED 
RELEVANCE 
CONTROL 
POSTAL MAIL 
PRINT AD 
MOBILE APPLICATIONS 
CUSTOMER SERVICE 
INSTANT MESSAGE 
LINKEDIN 
REVIEW WEBSITE 
FACEBOOK 
COMPANY 
COMMUNITY WEBSITE 
TWITTER 
EMAIL NEWSLET TER 
PHONE 
LOCATION-BASED 
SOCIAL NETWORKING 
WORD OF MOUTH 
FACE-TO-FACE 
INTERACTION 
INDIVIDUAL EMAIL 
COMPANY WEBSITE
So, while a lot of people are using social media channels, their use is not lining up with which channels they perceive to be important or use 
frequently when they want to engage with brands. What’s going on here? 
2. Under used channels aren’t necessarily bad at delivering on Engagement Elements; it’s often that companies are not using 
them correctly, if at all. 
We believe consumers do not use some of the hot, new channels to interact with brands because brands are neither fully nor consistently 
using them to deliver on the Engagement Elements, particularly in social media. Obviously, if a brand has many customers who are active on 
Facebook, yet its own Facebook page is moribund, it’s not going to deliver well on the Engagement Elements in that channel. In fact, there is 
wild variation in how each channel fulfills consumers’ expectations. 
The chart at the left gives a detailed look at how different channels perform against the six Engagement Elements, with dark green being the 
best and dark red being the worst. 
Here are a few snapshots: 
• Postal mail, print ads, mobile applications and real-time chat with customer service representatives are the 
lowest performers. 
• Company websites, individual email, face-to-face interaction and traditional word-of-mouth are the highest performers. 
• Twitter, email newsletters, company community sites, Facebook, and review sites are liminal. They are neither wholly 
good, nor wholly bad, at delivering on the Engagement Elements and are evolving every day in terms of delivering new 
features, and also in how companies and consumers use them. 
Face-to-face interaction excels at delivering Trust and making consumers feel Valued; company websites are best at Efficiency and 
Consistency; transactional emails are best at delivering Relevance and giving Control to the consumer. In fact, face-to-face interaction, 
transactional email, and company sites perform well on most all Engagement Elements. Postal mail and print ads score poorly in all six 
Engagement Elements, even though, as we said earlier, all channels have the potential to deliver them, depending on a variety of factors. 
What about some of the newer channel options—the ones in that middle space? These middle performers are wildcards. They may knock 
one or two of the Engagement Elements out of the park, but they strike out on the others. Twitter, for instance, scores quite well in Control 
and Relevance, but is a laggard in making consumers feel Valued. 
Why do some channels score so well—or so poorly—across most of the Engagement Elements, while others offer a hodgepodge of scores? 
We think it has to do with the ubiquity and longevity of individual channels and the familiarity consumers and marketers have with them. 
To look at the full history of marketing channels, turn the page. It shows not only how long 
modern marketing has been around, but also how heavily-weighted channel innovation is 
toward the last few decades. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 17
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 19
TWEAKING THE Website, WHILE PAYING MOBILE NO MIND 
What we found is that the ubiquity, longevity and familiarity of a channel all play a huge role in whether consumers believe it delivers on 
the Engagement Elements. The high and low ends of the engagement spectrum are filled with the most tried-and-true channels. Company 
websites, transactional email and face-to-face interaction are high performers because they have been around for a long time, are proven, 
and have been refined over time. Also, people with limited technology skills have been able to keep up with changes in email and websites, 
allowing those channels to stay within their reach. 
Print ads and postal mail also stand out, but in a negative way. While these channels have survived over time, they have not kept up with 
the changing nature of engagement. The high and low ends also have another similarity: people’s ratings of them across the Engagement 
Elements barely varied. No matter what they thought of an individual channel, they generally agreed on whether it was good or bad. 
But when you stop to think of it, marketers have similar, fixed attitudes with tried-and-true channels because of the same ubiquity, 
longevity and familiarity. Websites are constantly being tweaked and optimized, whereas email is often categorized as a cheap direct 
response vehicle—and is treated as such. Yet, customers may still derive a lot of value from email—value that is not optimized by some 
marketers because they pigeonhole that channel. 
When you consider the consistency with which people rate older channels, it is not surprising to find their feelings about newer channels 
are all over the place. We believe it is because both the channels themselves, and the way marketers use them, are in a liminal state. 
In fact, many marketers suffer from a form of bias when it comes to delivering on newer channels; they tend to inconsistently deliver on 
them despite the heavy usage of new platforms by many consumers. Much of the time, it is because marketers are misinterpreting the fact 
that their consumers do not reach out to them on new platforms. It may have nothing to do with these channels in and of themselves, but 
marketers’ inability to use them well. 
Nowhere is this more apparent than mobile applications; astonishingly, they ranked in the bottom four of the 16 channels we studied. 
Yet, the more we thought about it, the more it made sense. For one, mobile does not have the ubiquity, longevity and familiarity that older 
channels do—the iPhone app store has only been around since 2008. Not surprisingly, the channel’s newness has led many marketers to 
treat it as the redheaded stepchild of engagement, and consequently it scored poorly in delivering on the Engagement Elements, 
particularly in making consumers feel Valued, and in Efficiency and Trust. Yet, it’s easy to see that mobile—including tablets—has great 
potential as devices, apps and mobile experiences become more ubiquitous and marketers get better at using them to deliver strong brand 
interactions. However, for most companies, right now mobile is where company websites were in the mid-90s: a place to shovel static 
brochure-ware that does not deliver a satisfying experience. 
Facebook is another channel inconsistently meeting consumer needs—or, more likely, the marketers who use it are inconsistent. It delivers 
on Control and Relevance, yet it struggles with making consumers feel Valued, reflecting the oft-voiced problem that marketers know they 
need to be on Facebook, yet are unsure of how to leverage it. Still, some brands are constantly improving the channel. Best Buy has made 
its Facebook page a model of Efficiency by adding a shopping tab; the luxury shopping club Gilt Groupe gives its Facebook fans advance 
notice on sales, making them feel Valued; and Starbucks provides its Facebook fans Control by allowing them to manage their reward 
points within the platform. In all three examples, the consumer experience has improved because the marketers’ Facebook pages do a 
better job of delivering on one or more of the Engagement Elements. 
A successful engagement audit should get around this problem by signaling what consumers want and what channels they are apt to use to 
get what they want from your brand.
CONSTRUCTING THE ENGAGEMENT ECOSYSTEM: 
LEAVING THE LIMBO FOR SOLID GROUND 
The journey of reframing the concept of engagement has been powerful, as we have discovered that top-down marketing notions of 
engagement don’t tell us what matters to consumers. Further, the six Engagement Elements play out in different ways across different 
channels due to factors such as how ubiquitous a channel is and how familiar consumers are with it—and whether or not a channel can 
consistently deliver on consumers’ engagement needs. 
Of course, unleashing the Engagement Elements genie—and the proliferating channels consumers can use to engage with a brand— 
underscores that there are almost infinite engagement scenarios. The challenge for marketers is to take these ingredients and build their 
own proprietary recipe—a unique blend that allows them to figure out what channels, based on their individual strengths and consumers’ 
use of them, best deliver on the Engagement Elements. 
That said, what’s the goal? What are you, as a marketer, looking to do by mixing these ingredients? We will go into more detail about 
Sustained Engagement in Chapter Three, but it’s about more than just driving revenue—we believe it’s to drive LTV. But, not just that, either. 
At a time when some newer channels—such as social media platforms—make brand engagements public, it’s to build enhanced LTV—or 
what we call eLTV. eLTV is built not just on the strict monetary value of one customer to a brand, but also on each customer’s unique power 
to influence others to be interested in it. 
All men and women may be created equal, but all customers are not. The trick is to identify those customers who can deliver eLTV—lifetime 
value that takes into account each customer’s ability to influence. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 21
THE POWER of Customer Value 
Plus Influence 
It’s time to rethink the definition of lifetime value (LTV) to include an additional component: 
influence. Just as it has become ever more difficult for the disparate parts of a marketing 
organization to exist in silos, it is impossible to look at a consumer’s LTV without taking into 
account each consumer’s power to influence other current and potential customers. 
For Kai, a maker of perfume, scented candles and body lotions, it may be wonderful if an 
individual customer spends thousands of dollars on its products over her lifetime. But the Kai 
customer with the highest eLTV is probably Oprah Winfrey, who named its Body Butter and 
Body Buffer among her “Favorite Things” in 2007. True, this is an outsized example, but the 
effect is clear: Oprah may spend no more on Kai products over her lifetime than the anonymous 
Kai customer we just mentioned, but she is more valuable to the brand than any other 
customers because of her enormous influence. In their own ways, people with huge influence 
through social channels are their own Oprahs, because they have the power to recommend 
brands to a large cadre of followers who trust what they have to say.
chapter 
02 
We should point out that the power to influence—via traditional word-of-mouth—has been 
with us for as long as there’s been retail. The reason it is time for this concept to become an 
integral part of any LTV calculation is twofold: 
• For the first time ever, it is possible to measure influence more accurately. Digital platforms 
allow us to identify who the influencers are and how much influence they wield. 
• Digital channels also allow influencers to broadcast their brand advocacy. Influential people 
used to recommend products to friends and family on a one-to-one or one-to-a-handful basis. 
Now, an influential person can broadcast what they think about a brand to dozens, hundreds, 
thousands, and even millions of users, using anything from a simple email list to Twitter. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 23
THE IMPORTANCE OF INFLUENCE 
It is difficult to understate the importance of influence. For all of the billions spent each year on marketing in the U.S. alone, it’s still 
person-to-person recommendations that carry the most weight when someone is deciding whether to purchase a brand. There are dozens 
of statistics we could use to illustrate this. Here are just two: 
1. When asked what sources “influence your decision to use or not use a particular company, brand or product,” 
71 percent say reviews from family members or friends exert a “great deal” or “fair amount” of influence. 2 
2. Ninety percent of consumers online trust recommendations from people they know; 70 percent trust opinions of 
unknown users.3 
There are actually two components to influence. One is direct influence—when a customer directly influences friends, family, or even 
people he or she does not know, becoming a brand ambassador. The other is indirect influence—the incremental reach of friends and 
family—in other words, how influential those influencers are. Both kinds of influence need to be included in the value equation. 
THE CONSUMER INFLUENCE SCORE: 
INTRODUCING A NEW EQUATION TO MEASURE CUSTOMER VALUE 
We know influence is important, but how do we quantify it? As we said above, one of the most powerful things about some of the newer 
channels is that they make influence measurable. Thus, Razorfish developed a way to calculate the propensity to influence. It’s a calculation 
we call the Consumer Influence Score, a measurement of human and brand connections based on the number of times a customer con-nects 
via social media and how many people he or she is connected to across social platforms. The formula is presented below: 
# of social 
networks the 
individual 
belongs to 
# of Twier 
followers # of Twier 
updates 
# of unduplicated 
friends across 
all social 
networks 
Consumer Influence Score : A measurement of human and brand connections based on 
the number of times a customer connects via social media and how many people he or she 
is connected to across social platforms. 
2 Whitney Heckathorne, Marketing Manager, Harris Interactive, The Harris Poll #74, June 3, 2010. 
3 Jake Hird, Senior Research Analyst, Econsultancy, “Online Consumers Trust Real People, Not Companies,” July 8, 2009. 
consumer 
influence 
score
During a time of ongoing technological change, it should be acknowledged that no attempt to measure consumer influence will be perfect. 
Indeed, the equation focuses heavily on Twitter because, at this point, Twitter is the most public and trackable of major social platforms. 
That could change. We also acknowledge that, at times, this equation may over-reward, for instance, the particularly chatty teenager. 
Although, in the case of Twitter, its core user base is older, according to numerous studies. 
Yet, however liminal social channels are, it is time to start quantifying the role they play in influence, and this equation will help. 
Additionally, each individual’s scores will evolve over time. There will be continual evolution of measurement techniques, tracking of social 
behavior, and company engagement strategies. In addition, over time, companies will learn more about the behavior of influencers and 
how much that influence translates into incremental sales. 
We believe by combining traditional LTV scores—which measure things such as an individual’s average purchase, acquisition cost and 
retention cost—with their direct influence, indirect influence and long-term effect, marketers can determine which customers have high eLTV. 
NEW CUSTOMER 
valuation 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 25 
INDIRECT 
INFLUENCE 
$100 
DIRECT 
INFLUENCE 
LONG 
TERM 
EFFECT 
10% 
DISCOUNT 
80% RATE 
CUSTOMER 
RETENTION 
RATE 
1 
AVERAGE 
PURCHASES PER 
YEAR PER 
CUSTOMER $25 
CUSTOMER 
ACQUISITION 
COST 
50% 
AVERAGE 
PROFIT 
MARGIN 
AVERAGE 
PURCHASE 
AMOUNT 
TRADITIONAL INPUTS FUTURE INPUTS
A STRONG ENGAGEMENT DRIVES INFLUENCER VALUE 
What role does engagement play in consumer influence? Engagement drives the value of influencers. Better engagement with customers— 
and providing them with easy ways to spread the word—unlocks their power. 
As a marketer, you can build a campaign, you can advertise to the masses and you can create highly targeted messages. Yet, without giving 
consumers an experience truly worth sharing, and the means with which to share it, the influencers will not connect with your brand, and 
they will not recommend it. The analytics showing who has a strong social graph and the willingness to leverage existing social communities 
or create new ones will not matter if you ignore the basics. These influencers are people, after all, and we cannot make them ambassadors 
of your brand if it is not worth it to them. 
This brings us back to the Engagement Elements. Let’s face it: not every customer wants a relationship with you, but he or she will engage if 
there is a compelling reason. Therefore, if you are doing well on meeting the Engagement Elements you are going to provide more value— 
and that is something a customer will tell others about. While your mind might jump to viral marketing efforts like OfficeMax’s “Elf Yourself” 
and the YouTube-based “Old Spice Man” campaign, that’s not at the heart of what we’re talking about. Those are lightning strikes—lottery 
winners—that are also short term. 
We are talking about the long term, built through satisfying and sustainable everyday engagement that meets consumers’ needs and fulfills 
their expectations. For example, imagine being a woman who has opted in through her mobile device to get promotional offers when she 
walks into her favorite retailer. If your data indicates that this person has both high LTV and high eLTV, you might have a manager greet her 
and invite her to the back room to get a sneak peak at a new line of clothing. That’s a great experience for her, and the kind of unusual expe-rience 
she is likely to share with her friends. 
It is experiences like that which will build true incremental value that goes straight to the bottom line. 
The Importance of Influence 
in Building an Engagement Strategy 
In Chapter One, we discussed the importance of looking at engagement across touchpoints from a consumer-centric perspective, and what, 
when it comes to interacting with brands, consumers clearly want, ranging from feeling Valued to Control. In this chapter, we examined 
the power of influence, a concept which has become so important in the digital age that we believe marketers should look at a new metric, 
eLTV, which is traditional LTV plus the powerful enhancement of influence. The next step is to combine touchpoints and influence into a 
coherent, ongoing engagement strategy, the topic of Chapter Three.
Influence Can Be Good and Bad 
Years ago, brands simply pushed out messages using the limited media available. Today, it’s not just that media channels have 
proliferated and that new technologies have enabled customers to interact with brands on the go, on their terms. Many of those 
same technologies let consumers share their opinions about your brand—and sometimes brand messages they create—not just 
with their friends but also with millions of users online. 
For the purposes of this discussion, we have mostly focused on the ability of these technologies to spread positive influence; we 
make the assumption that customers truly like your brand. But let’s face it—when a customer feels a certain service is not up to 
scratch or doesn’t make them feel appreciated, they can use these technologies to negatively influence perception. One of the 
best examples of the last few years is “United [Airlines] Breaks Guitars,” a music video featuring an original song by the aggrieved 
guitar owner, which became a viral sensation. The first video posted currently has more than nine million views; all told, the 
number is much higher than that. The “United Breaks Guitars” saga also resulted in dozens of news stories. 
In that case—at least according to the song—United failed on the Engagement Elements on at least two touchpoints, face-to-face 
interaction and the phone, as the company turned a deaf ear to the guitar owner’s assertion that he saw his guitar being 
mishandled on the tarmac. Whatever the particulars, the case makes clear there is an urgent need for businesses to treat their 
customers well. 
So, as you ponder which engagement touchpoints you should be using to fulfill the Engagement Elements, and as you calculate 
which of your customers has a high Consumer Influence Score, keep in mind that customers can put touchpoints to work for you 
or against you, based, in large part, on how well you deliver on the Engagement Elements. 
tip 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 27
LINKING ENGAGEMENT And Influence 
To Build Better Engagement Strategies 
Plain and simple, every business needs to rethink how it engages with consumers. In a world 
full of demanding customers, who use multiple channels to engage with businesses—and who 
can use some of those same channels to influence other potential customers—it’s clearly time to 
build new, cross-departmental engagement strategies that can be implemented across multiple 
touchpoints. 
As we’ve talked with CMOs and other heads of marketing, we’ve discovered that they want 
to be less product-centric and more customer-centric. They want to create multi-channel 
customer-relationship-building environments. And, they know consumers expect those 
environments to deliver on what they promise. We also know today’s CMO is more focused than 
ever on driving top-line sales and bottom-line results. Now that social media is maturing into a 
critical engagement channel, executives also want to understand its value and return on 
investment. In fact, it is becoming increasingly important to prioritize a multitude of 
engagement touchpoints and get a grip on where to allocate resources. 
We believe the approach we define in this book gives marketing executives the steps they need 
to start identifying, prioritizing, testing and optimizing CRM engagement touchpoints in this 
new world.
chapter 
03 
SUSTAINED ENGAGEMENT: 
BUILDING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS THAT LAST 
As you’ll see further on in this chapter, there’s a lot of nitty-gritty involved in building an engagement strategy, from determining which 
touchpoints to focus on, to discovering what your customers value when they connect with your company. But before we get to that, let’s 
take a moment to look at the larger vision: it’s to build Sustained Engagement with your customers. Here’s how we define it: 
A Sustained Engagement is achieved when a level of feeling Valued, Efficiency and Trust is 
established between a consumer and a business. Those three Engagement Elements, coupled 
with Consistency, Relevance and Control, will result in the consumer’s willingness to maintain 
a relationship with the business across multiple channels, brands and products. 
No, this isn’t simply CRM. A vision as ambitious as this is referred to by the Harvard Business Review as a BHAG: A Big Hairy Audacious Goal. 
And it is. Yet with the emergence of a variety of new touchpoints, from mobile to Twitter, which allow consumers to express opinions, 
indicate preferences and derive satisfaction from a brand’s products, there’s an opportunity to deepen the dialogue and lengthen the period 
of time in which brands and consumers can interact. 
We should note that Sustained Engagement does not mean bombarding customers with endless messages. We know customers move from 
periods of high engagement to little or none and then, we hope, back to being engaged. Consumers are not always in the market for a car, 
or a computer, or a new bank. We still believe in right message, right time and right place. The challenge to achieving a Sustained 
Engagement is to marry the consumer and business views of engagement to the benefit of both: 
• The bottom-up consumer view emphasizes knowing how a consumer wants to engage, what he expects during this 
engagement and where he is in the customer journey. 
• The top-down company view creates a seamless, multichannel engagement strategy that has sustainable impact on 
top-line results—without adversely affecting the bottom line. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 29
Creating a Virtuous Circle : 
Building an Ongoing Engagement Strategy 
Social channels give us an opportunity to listen, monitor and communicate in new ways, which gives businesses a better chance of 
understanding what stage a customer is in during his or her purchasing lifecycle. Meanwhile, we can keep using traditional monitoring 
methods such as quantitative surveys and behavioral tracking to assess how best to optimize engagement touchpoints. Yet how do we put 
all those parts together? 
We suggest four steps that will take businesses all the way from determining their objectives in building an engagement strategy, to 
researching their customers’ engagement priorities and behaviors, to—finally—building out the strategy. It’s important to note that this 
process—just like the engagements that will develop with consumers—is ongoing. Engagement strategies will change as businesses obtain 
richer data on their customers, as business objectives change, as customers change, and as channels evolve. To that extent, building a Sus-tained 
Engagement is more of a virtuous circle, in which ever-improving data and strategies impact business objectives, and so on. 
The four steps, explained briefly here and in more detail below, are: 
• Align: A starting point where marketers survey their current engagement strategy, based on their business objectives 
and key engagement scenarios, and how they might build upon it. 
• Audit: A three-pronged engagement audit linking disparate behavioral and attitudinal data. In this step, companies also 
determine the Consumer Influence Score of their customers. 
• Assess: An in-depth analysis of what the data says about the touchpoints customers prefer when they engage with 
a company and what their engagement priorities are. This should yield groups within your target market—or 
Engagement Types—that will help define an engagement strategy. 
• Actions: The development of a strategy that engages customers and draws on their ability to influence, so that a 
valuable customer today becomes more valuable down the road. Using information derived from dividing your 
customers into Engagement Types, this step makes it possible to execute strategy based on its expected return.
1. Align: How Your Engagement Strategies Match Objectives, Now, and in the Future 
Any rethinking of strategy begins with a foundational question: where are we now? In the first step toward building out an engagement 
strategy, marketers need to align what business objectives they are trying to meet in building a better engagement strategy and how they 
think their customer engagements will play out. During this stage, marketers should ask themselves the following questions: 
• What are our company’s business objectives? In short, the answer to this question is about what your new 
engagement strategy is there to do. Are you trying to go into new markets? Are you operating in an increasingly 
competitive marketplace, so customer loyalty is becoming paramount? Are you trying to increase repeat purchases, 
upgrades and renewals? What about bringing in new customers? Wouldn’t it be better to understand who is 
statistically most likely to be a high value, high influence customer so “look alikes” can be targeted for acquisition? 
• What engagement scenarios do we envision? For instance, if you are a manufacturer of toys that require assembly, 
has this meant substantially more customer visits to the FAQs on the company website? And is the information there 
adequate? Maybe it would be worthwhile to test a quicker solution, such as instant chat that delivers both Efficiency 
and Relevance—since, as any parent knows, assembling a toy with an impatient child at your side can be an anxious 
process. And do not forget that if a customer is eventually forced to pick up the phone to get the information they 
need, loyalty can go out the window. 
As Matt Dixon and Lara Ponomareff wrote in a popular Harvard Business Review blog post, 
“Consumers who attempt to self-serve, fail, and are forced to pick up the phone are 10 percent 
more likely to be disloyal than those customers who were able to fully resolve their issues in 
their channel of choice.” 4 
• What do we believe are the appropriate touchpoints for our market? To answer this question, it is important to assess 
not only what engagement touchpoints are currently popular with your customer base, but ones that might be. For 
instance, a retailer may believe it is time to start experimenting with location-based services, such as Foursquare and 
Gowalla. (For a detailed look at what we call “The Shiny Object Fund” for testing emerging channels see the box later in 
this chapter.) 
• How do we believe our customers prioritize engagement? This question tracks back to the Engagement Elements, as it 
is about determining how your customers prioritize their engagement needs, from feeling Valued to Control. 
While these questions will all help marketers link how they engage with customers to their overall business objectives, by no means are 
these the only questions one should ask when going through this initial step in the process. The goal is to figure out how you believe 
customers are currently engaging with you, and make assumptions about areas where your engagement strategy might go in the future. 
4 Matt Dixon and Lara Ponomareff, “Why Your Customers Don’t Want to Talk to You,” Weblog: Harvard Business Review, July 28, 2010. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 31
2. Audit: Using Razorfish Links, Discover Your Customers’ Engagement Behavior and Attitudes 
Next, it’s time to get a clearer picture of what is actually going on out there. While this step partially applies to studying your existing 
customer base, it also should encompass a much broader analysis of online behavior. This will not only put the data about your customer 
base in context, but also give you a picture of broader engagement trends you might consider tapping into. 
As we mentioned earlier, for our Virgin America study, we used Razorfish Links, a three-pronged engagement audit to gather and analyze 
data. It combines critical data sets which lead to a much wider and deeper perspective on the people you are trying to engage. They are: 
• Consumer Data: A broad survey of customers’ engagement priorities and what channels they prefer to use when they 
engage with you—combined with a series of in-depth interviews with customers to drill deeper into the data beyond 
what a survey can gather. In our initial effort, we completed interviews upfront. Going forward, we plan to use 
interviews to both help us design the survey and help us validate customer Engagement Types. 
• Social Data: Broad data on the social graph, expanded beyond your customer base, to get as big a picture as possible 
of online social behavior. This social overlay of publicly available data is important to do first because it may surface 
things that counter basic assumptions. For instance, you may find the demographics you target use MySpace more 
than you thought. This information is also needed to calculate your customers’ Consumer Influence Scores. 
• Behavioral Data: Existing data from your customers on lifetime value (LTV) and how they currently engage with your 
brand. This helps set a baseline from which you can move forward. 
Combining and analyzing this data allows you to test the relationships between them. When we did this for Virgin America, we used several 
types of statistical analysis, which led to a powerful picture of Virgin America customers, and how they fit into the broader social whole.
3. Assess: Determining How Data from Razorfish Links Aligns 
to Customers and Their Potential Engagement Touchpoints 
No two customers are exactly alike, yet, by applying analysis to the data from your Razorfish Links engagement audit, Engagement Types 
specific to your consumer and brand will emerge. We will discuss how to act on these shortly, yet put simply, the data from the Razorfish 
Links process will help you bucket your customers based on their traditional LTV, their engagement priorities, and the channels they are 
likely to use, giving you a better idea of how to build your engagement strategy. Because influence is included in the Razorfish Links 
process, you will also be able to figure out where eLTV plays a role. As we saw with our example about Oprah’s Favorite Things, this can 
have a surprising influence on where to target your engagement efforts. 
While it is relatively easy to know what to do with customers that have high LTV and/or high eLTV, here are other kinds of Engagement 
Types your data assessment might uncover, and the questions these groups might lead to: 
• High LTV Customers from an older demographic who have low eLTV because they have little interest in social channels. 
As these customers already have a long-time track record of buying your product, but are not likely to influence others, 
should they be the focus of your engagement strategy? 
• Mid-LTV Customers who do not have nearly the LTV of the previous group, but who are early adopters of 
location-based services and use them frequently to check in at retailers. If you have many retail outlets, does 
this mean you should look more closely at engaging with this group? 
• Low-LTV Customers who nonetheless seem the most likely to discuss your brand on social platforms. What potential 
do these customers have over the long term, and if their individual potential is low, does their habit of “spreading the 
word” and the number of people they influence make them worth concentrating on? Or are they only influencing 
other customers with low LTV? 
We created these three Engagement Types to emphasize the possibility that once influence is factored in, your view of which to focus on 
may change drastically—but the truth will lie in your own Razorfish Links engagement audit. The Engagement Types for many clients might 
not demonstrate a huge difference between LTV and eLTV, yet going through the process will give you assurance that you have in-depth 
knowledge of the potential—both as individual consumers and as influencers—of your customers as you develop your engagement strategy. 
Once you have been able to divide your customers into Engagement Types, it is time to assess what engagement touchpoints you should 
use to reach them. We recommend these be separated into three buckets, which will at least help you pick types of channels at this point if 
not the precise channels themselves. They are: 
• Tried-and-True: These baseline channels are typically older channels that rank high across all customers and can be 
used by the vast majority of them—touchpoints such as print, phone, email (transactional and promotional), and 
postal mail. These in turn can be broken down into two sub-groups: channels where the status quo is working and only 
needs to be continued, and those that need an innovation injection. For instance, you may notice that customers, 
at first, are not only willing to subscribe to your emails but to open them—but that interest drops off after the 
“honeymoon” period. This is a sign the channel has its merits, but that your email strategy has to become more 
relevant to keep subscribers interested. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 33
• Optimization Opportunities: These channels may be ones that are more valuable to one or more of your 
Engagement Types. This might include somewhat newer channels, like Facebook, where the comfort level for 
marketers lags behind consumers. 
• Shiny Objects: These channels are more on the leading edge—like Foursquare, ShopKick or StickyBits—that might fall 
out of most marketers’ customary list of engagement touchpoints (and may not show a large impact on the bottom 
line) yet show potential given a marketer’s individual Engagement Types. Because these channels are more 
experimental, they should be subject to scrutiny and a pre-defined budget, as different in-house constituencies—such 
as promotions and customer service—evaluate whether they are useful touchpoints over the long term. (See “Shiny 
Object Fund” tip on next page.) 
4. Actions: Moving Customers Along the Value Continuum and Building an Engagement Ecosystem 
When you develop your Engagement Types, you are doing so based on a moment in time, while the real goals of a successful Sustained 
Engagement are to build engagement strategies that will increase incremental sales, make customers more loyal, and increase advocacy over time. 
Because increasing advocacy is a key goal of this step, another part of the assessment is to see how you can move all of your customers up a value 
continuum composed not just of a customer’s monetary value but also of his or her ability to influence. Over time, well-managed engagements may 
increase both. If you look back at our hypothetical Engagement Types, you can see how it’s possible that the low LTV customers might tout your brand 
even more if you engage with them in ways that meet their priorities and match up with the channels they use—and a year or two from now both 
their LTV and their eLTV may have increased. 
Now that you have created your Engagement Types, the next step is to understand how they actually engage with your brand, how they 
wish to engage, and what they expect in those engagements. As Dixon and Ponomareff so succinctly put it, “Running your company as if 
customers want to talk to you isn’t just expensive; it’s potentially undermining your efforts to build longer-term loyalty.”5 A properly mapped 
out engagement ecosystem will help you understand how you should invest in engagements based on expected return. To start, you need 
to get answers to the following questions: 
• Why are my customers engaging? Are they getting in touch to complain about a product? To locate the nearest 
insurance agent? To fulfill a coupon? 
• Which touchpoints are they using? Are they using the phone only after having an unsuccessful engagement on the 
website? Does our Facebook page give them the information they need or do they prefer to use email? 
• What do they expect from their engagements? Do they expect a quick, efficient transaction when they get in touch, 
or are they looking for deeper information? 
• How can our organization improve the engagement experience? If customers are dissatisfied with our customer 
service IM, is it because our agents are insufficiently trained to answer their questions? When customers email us, are 
we answering their questions promptly? 
• What sort of investment will be required to improve our overall engagement strategy? Is it worth the money 
to rebuild our Facebook page to give low eLTV customers a better experience? 
• What is the expected return on investment? If our brand launches a campaign built around check-ins on Foursquare, is it going 
to pay off in terms of increased foot traffic and sales? 
5 “Why Your Customers Don’t Want to Talk to You” July 28, 2010
Armed with the answers, you should be able to identify where efficient and low-cost and/or self-service solutions make sense and where 
you can have more direct engagements in areas where a lot of high-value customers are congregating. In addition, it will give you the ability, 
in real time, to identify when a high-value customer—both monetarily and influentially—is near, whether in-store or on site, so you can 
send a notification to the right department. 
For the purposes of this report, we chose to speak about engagement in general terms. We found you need to understand the top reasons 
why your consumers engage with you: Was it to buy something? To ask a question? To perform tasks? We should note the reasons will 
vary depending on your vertical, such as whether you are in the travel business or retail, or sell through other channels (as is the case with 
consumer packaged goods or pharmaceuticals). 
Putting Money Aside for Your Shiny Object Fund 
In this chapter, we have referred more than once to “shiny objects.” In the digital world, these are defined as the platforms and 
services that are the hot new thing, yet not ubiquitous enough to drive the bottom line. Right now, all of the talk is about location-based 
services like Foursquare. Yet, just because shiny new objects are hot, does that mean you should be experimenting with 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 35 
them? 
If you think you should be, we advise you to look at maintaining a Shiny Object Fund to experiment with platforms that may hold 
promise. How do you identify them? One clue may come from how your own customers rank platforms by Engagement Element. 
Indeed, when we surveyed Virgin America customers, location-based services stood out across all of six Engagement Elements. 
Clearly, even though few consumers are currently using them, those who are see the business implications, and you might look at 
them too. 
Once you have identified and prioritized which platforms are ripe for experimentation, it is important to have a process to validate 
whether or not they can deliver on their promise. The Shiny Object Fund isn’t merely “funny money” that exists so you can tell 
your companies and rivals that you have invested in the cutting edge. Having a process to validate shiny objects should tell you 
that some platforms warrant eventually becoming part of your mainstream engagement efforts, and others do not. 
tip
An Engagement Strategy Is Never Over : 
Channels, and the Way Consumers Engage with Them, Will Evolve 
Experienced marketers know that email didn’t kill postal, social hasn’t killed email, YouTube hasn’t killed TV, and the Web hasn’t killed 
traditional news sources such as the print version of The Wall Street Journal or CNN. Yet, touchpoints do not stay the same forever. They 
are all evolving based on different pressures in the marketplace. The phone used to be the killer app when it came to engaging a high-value 
customer; now it might be an exclusive website where he or she gets early access to new products. Most people’s primary technology for 
interacting in the digital universe used to be the PC, but with the continuing advancement of smart phones that, too, is shifting. 
Thus, you must maintain constant vigilance and continuously evaluate how every engagement point contributes. Today’s businesses can 
no longer afford to be siloed. You need to look across all channels: store, Web, mobile, call center, and so on. You will need to have a 
customer-centric organization in place with a data structure that takes in data from different touchpoints. 
It’s one thing to say your organization is customer-centric and to cite instances when customers drove product design or you were able to 
surprise and delight them on Twitter, or your campaign was integrated across channels. It is another to make a capital investment to create 
a fully engaged enterprise where a customer-centric mentality permeates all departments. 
Forward-thinking companies are there already. Urban Outfitters responds directly to product inquiries and discussions found in Twitter, 
Facebook or blogs. Zappos and Boingo address customer service issues head on, regardless of the channel and without a script. Best Buy, 
Starbucks and Gilt Groupe are actively extending beyond the walls of their stores and their websites to create valuable apps and shopping 
experiences on platforms such as Facebook. Our own research reinforces the importance of adding value to these popular channels. It also 
talks about the importance consumers place on feeling Valued. Yet, where are the returns and—from a business perspective—can they 
truly be sustained? Always remember, a Sustained Engagement is only achieved when the expectations of the Engagement Elements are 
fulfilled and consumers feel they will receive what they want in return for allowing you to engage with them—over and over again. 
Ah, consumers. It’s important to note that one reason channels change is because consumers discover new ways to use them. Thus, between 
ongoing changes in channels, and consumers changing behavior toward them, engagement strategies are never completely, well, complete. 
Thus, as we said earlier, when we recommend that companies Align, Audit, Assess and take Actions, we are not talking about a linear process, 
but a virtuous circle. Once a company has taken actions based on the earlier steps, it’s time to start all over again: realigning business objectives 
based on what was learned from those actions; performing an updated engagement audit; assessing what the audit says about touchpoints; 
and revising their actions. As this process continues, companies may find they have realized the vision of Sustained Engagement, increased the 
influence of their most important customers, and ultimately, positively affected their company’s bottom line. To see how this process works in 
practice, turn to Chapter Four, where we present a case study of Virgin America’s engagement strategy.
Building a Single View of the Customer 
As you implement an ongoing test-and-learn strategy to define and refine your engagement planning across the different 
segments, it is important to develop an integrated, single customer view across all engagements. This is a two-fold effort: first, you 
need to actively collect the data to connect the dots to your customers; and second, you need to build a view of your customer 
that sits across your company’s broad marketing apparatus instead of being siloed into different departments or touchpoints. 
When it comes to building customer databases we feel like we are back in 1990, when everyone opened their eyes to email and 
said, “Why don’t we have an email database? We can make customer experiences more efficient than they are with postal and we 
need to capitalize on it!” Today we are entering a similar era with mobile, when brands will wake up in 2011‐2012 (if not sooner) 
and say, “Why do we have 16 million consumers in our database and less than 100,000 mobile numbers?” 
For your database to enable a true 360-degree view of the customer, it has to contain more than contact addresses—it must also 
have actionable information about what channels your customers use to engage and what their purposes are when they engage 
with you. 
Brands are doing the right thing by reaching consumers on social networks such as Twitter and Facebook—as long as that is where 
their customers are. Yet, they tend to forget they do not own this data and that, at any rate, the hot social platform of the day will 
likely change. Facebook replaced MySpace—so what will replace Facebook? And when that happens, will you know where your 
customers went? Building that connective tissue between your traditional CRM database, mobile devices and social media is critical. 
Surely, building a company-wide view is another BHAG, but necessary for Sustained Engagement. Fortunately, it does not mean 
you have to take everything into consideration. Today’s technology and business intelligence tools give you a leg up, 
allowing you to get wider and deeper data and then look for relationships between engagement variables and LTV. The results 
will reveal segments of low-, medium- and high-LTV with influence value—and key understandings about channel and 
Engagement Element importance.6 
6 For further reading on this topic, see: “One-to-One Marketing to the Masses” and “Fragmented Consumer” in the Razorfish Outlook Report. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 37 
tip
Virgin America: 
Creating an Itinerary That Identifies and Leverages Customer Influence 
Doing the first Razorfish Links engagement audit with Virgin America proved a great test of 
our vision for gathering sharper insight into the engagement and influence of customers across 
touchpoints. This was for several reasons. 
First, Virgin America is a brand built around customer loyalty; thus, many of those who fly the 
airline are deeply engaged with the brand, some through its innovative frequent flyer program, 
Elevate, which certainly delivers on making its members feel Valued. It is, simply, a more re-warding 
program than what many other airlines offer, giving customers five points for every 
dollar they spend on travel and having no blackout dates or restrictions on travel rewards. 
Second, Virgin America is unusual among many major brands in that it does not use any mass 
media in its marketing, instead relying heavily on word-of-mouth. (Admittedly, there may be 
some halo effect from the Virgin brand’s many other businesses.) This reduced the number of 
touchpoints we would have to account for in our research; it also meant that its marketing, 
and its customers’ influence, are inextricably linked. However, we should note that some newer 
brands—from Starbucks to Google to Zappos—have also built their brands using minimal 
mass marketing.
chapter 
04 
Third, though our research did enable us to split Virgin America customers into distinct 
Engagement Types, the overall customer profile looked as though it would surface rich 
engagement and influence data. Its loyal customers fly it despite the fact it is often more 
expensive than other carriers—even if a less expensive option is offered—and the customer 
base also engages with the brand across a dynamic set of touchpoints, from the telephone to 
mobile. This would allow us to get a good grasp of how consumers use all sorts of channels. 
With that, let us present a Virgin America case study that brings you through the Align, Audit, 
Assess, Actions process. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 39
Align: 
On the Ground , Looking at Virgin America ’s Current Customer Landscape 
As we outlined above, Virgin America is heavily reliant on word-of-mouth. Therefore, it’s no surprise it jumped early into social media and 
has a reputation for being a cutting-edge social brand. Its Twitter account, @VirginAmerica, though not a strict customer service channel, 
has more than 125,000 followers. It also has a Facebook page with more than 68,000 fans—not bad for a relatively small airline brand. 
However, it had gone into social largely on instinct. “We felt early on our customers were likely to use social channels, and the following 
we have gotten confirmed this,” said Porter Gale, the airline’s Vice President of Marketing. “However, we realized we didn’t know nearly 
as much as we wanted about what our customers wanted to get from us in these places. And, we didn’t know what the value of our more 
social customers was.” Like Virgin America, Razorfish and Loyalty Lab (which also works with Virgin America) wanted to get a firmer grasp on 
what it was getting out of its social platforms. Additionally—and these are things not specific to Virgin America—we at Razorfish were find-ing 
that the proliferation of potential engagement channels was yielding more questions than answers. We wanted to find out things like 
what value we could put on different kinds of engagement, and when a touchpoint was reaching diminishing returns; we wanted to be able 
to use data on customer engagement attitudes and behavior to better select the right touchpoints. To do all of this, we need a much clearer 
understanding of Virgin America customers.
Audit: 
Using Razorfish Links to Determine How Channels Get 
the Virgin America Customer Airborne 
We entered the Razorfish Links process knowing that, because it uses three different types of data, it would help Virgin America get a 
more accurate assessment of the engagement behavior of its customer base both now and in the future. Even if channels and engagement 
priorities change, the methodology could be re-used a year or two from now to take the pulse of the company’s customers once again. 
Though this is covered elsewhere in the book, the data sets we examined with Loyalty Lab drew from were a survey of 5,600 Virgin America 
customers along with 15 one-to-one interviews of the company’s customers. Added to that was publicly available, anonymous social 
connection data from 100,000 Internet users, and existing information from Virgin America on its customers’ engagement and lifetime 
value (LTV) , allowing us to look at both self-reported attitudes and preferences, and independently tracked behavior. “Especially when one 
takes into account the ever-expanding roster of channels, we needed to look beyond our customers’ self-reported insights, and beyond our 
customer base, to get a full picture of how we might better engage with our customers,” Ms. Gale said. 
So what did the Razorfish Links process uncover about Virgin America customers? The answer follows. 
Assess: 
Gaining Altitude with the Virgin America Engagement Types 
We used cluster analysis to look at the relationship between engagement preferences and LTV as well as the relationship between a 
customer’s power to influence and LTV; in Virgin America’s case, four clear Engagement Types emerged. On the following pages are sketches 
of each and the implications that each group has for the company’s engagement strategy: 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 41
Engagement Type 1 
SOCIALLY SAVVY 
Their Value: The Socially Savvy are frequent flyers on Virgin America and thereby have high LTV. They are likely to 
be Elevate members, and have, by far, the highest Consumer Influence Score. They also use the Internet more than 
other Engagement Type and rank second in mobile users. This group is very well educated and earns a high income, 
giving them the means to travel on Virgin America and an ability to appreciate the company’s unique offering. 
The Implications: The Socially Savvy need an optimized digital experience if Virgin America is to keep a long-term 
lock on them. As they demonstrate a strong propensity to influence, Virgin America will also need to tap into their 
social media behavior, by making it easy for them to share their experience with their extended network. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 43 
Blane: 
“I look forward to a long flight.”
Engagement Type 2 
TRADITIONALLY ENGAGED 
Their Value: The Traditionally Engaged have high LTV but relatively low eLTV; they are not that interested in social 
media, and the limited amount of time they have may be why. This group contains the highest number of Elevate 
members, and also uses the most mobile apps. It is most likely to open emails from Virgin America. 
The Implications: The Traditionally Engaged may not be social, but they are certainly worth retaining. There are two 
ways to do this: by optimizing some older touchpoints, like email, and focusing more on mobile. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 45 
Kate: 
“I only have so many hours in 
the day. ”
Engagement Type 3 
UP-AND-COMERS 
Their Value: The Up-and-Comers are a group in transition. They are moving from more traditional methods of 
engagement into social media and mobile phone usage. They text frequently, and use the Internet for recreation 
and networking. Their presence on Facebook is significant. 
The Implications: While their income does not allow them to be frequent flyers on Virgin America, The 
Up-and-Comers can be very vocal about their experiences. This potential emerging customer has the ability to 
influence others in his or her network and should not be neglected. By ensuring positive experiences, future 
relationships with them will be secured. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 47 
Fontaine: 
“I’m loyal if I have a good, 
personalized experience.”
Engagement Type 4 
CONVENTIONALISTS 
Their Value: From a technological standpoint, The Conventionalists are clearly in the background. They desire 
personal interactions with the companies they do business with, either face-to-face or on the phone, and are low 
income, and therefore low LTV. Since they do not use much technology, they also have low social influence—and 
no interest in being a brand advocate or in receiving brand messages. 
The Implications. Since The Conventionalists are not technologically sophisticated, and desire a personal connection, 
Virgin America will have to focus on efficiency to drive the bottom line if it’s to cater to this audience. The question 
becomes whether this investment will be worth it, as some of this Engagement Type will have the potential to get 
closer to center stage by becoming Traditional Engagers as their travel profile changes. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 49 
Brad: 
“I’m not just another customer.”
The differences in loyalty to the airline, channel usage, and interest in social media—or lack thereof—among the four Engagement Types 
underscore the seemingly infinite list of engagement scenarios Virgin America could employ to satisfy its customers. But which Engagement 
Types and channels deserve the most attention? Should the company focus efforts on The Traditional Engagers who are low on social usage, 
but have high LTV? Or pay more attention to The Up-and-Comers and The Socially Savvy because they are more likely to spread the word? 
And what about The Conventionalists? Given that they prefer usually high-cost person-to-person interaction, is there a way to satisfy their 
needs without busting the budget?
Actions: 
Reaching Cruising Altitude on an Engagement Strategy 
The beauty of being able to break down Virgin America customers into four Engagement Types is that potential engagement strategies 
begin to flow almost immediately from them. By being able to determine not only LTV, but eLTV, for the Engagement Types—and combining 
those metrics with the channels each Engagement Type prefers to use when engaging with the airline—some channels, and engagement 
needs, begin to look more important. Others, frankly, don’t. 
So what sort of recommendations can we give to Virgin America based on this information? The four Engagement Types are separated 
along two primary dimensions—their ability and willingness to fly with Virgin America and their willingness to engage in social media. Thus, 
the trick is to exploit both, in ways that maximize return. Here are potential actions for each group: 
• Socially Savvy: These are Virgin America’s most valuable customers because they are both willing to buy and because 
they reach out to others. The engagement strategy will need to satisfy both needs. Channels that meet their 
engagement priorities—accompanied with ways to share that experience—will help their LTV and influence 
feed off one another. For this group, Virgin America could stress both email and major social platforms such as 
Facebook and Twitter; it can optimize email by making sure the content meets this group’s needs, and also make that 
content easily shareable, therefore taking advantage of the The Socially Savvys’ LTV and eLTV. 
• Traditionally Engaged: These customers, while not as high value as The Socially Savvy, deserve a more focused 
engagement strategy of their own—particularly because of their heavy mobile usage. Since Virgin America isn’t 
currently very active in the channel, it should consider building mobile touchpoints that fit the group’s engagement 
priorities. Especially in mobile, airlines have a major opportunity to bring consumers utility; in Virgin America’s case, 
this is a channel it can no longer overlook. 
• Up-and-Comers: The customers that are part of this Engagement Type are neither as social as The Socially Savvy nor 
as heavy on mobile use as The Traditionally Engaged, and their income doesn’t allow them to travel as much as either 
of those two groups. However, what makes them stand out is their potential—they could be The Socially Savvy and 
Traditionally Engaged of the future. Because they are transitioning into heavier social and mobile use, some of the 
same touchpoint refinement that Virgin America could undertake for the preceding two groups might also work for 
them. Building out the current Virgin America Facebook page—which is primarily a fan site—would also be a smart 
move, given The Up-and-Comers’ heavy presence on that social platform. And, Facebook would be a low-cost channel 
making it an easy place for Virgin America to experiment. One thing to remember about The Up-and-Comers: despite 
their relatively low value, they should be treated with special consideration because they have few experiences with 
the brand, and each experience will play a big part in their perception, positive or negative. 
• Conventionalists: This group presents a challenge, because of their low social influence and interest in personal 
interaction instead of more cost-effective digital platforms. While they may adapt to some of the newer touchpoints, 
the best fit for them might lie in the future, when technology is more able to emulate the personal touch they desire. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 51
While these broad actions emerge for the Engagement Types, we also discovered other nuances through studying Virgin America customers. 
Over the years, our research has consistently demonstrated that the more channels through which you engage your consumer, the 
better. However, we also know that more does not necessarily mean better, if those channels, either together or individually, fail to deliver 
on the Engagement Elements. In fact, during the course of our evaluation, we noticed Virgin America’s high-value customers opened fewer 
of the company’s emails and had fewer clickthroughs within the emails than one would have assumed. This led us to recommend that the 
company take a look at whether it was sending out emails more frequently than even its high-value customers wanted. While higher value 
and loyal customers are more interested in getting communications from the company compared to others, there is a tipping point at which 
they start tuning out. Couple the emails with all the messages coming at them wherever they go and we are reminded over and over that 
we are battling for the consumer’s attention while trying not to overwhelm her. The obvious fix is to work on not only message frequency, 
but also on relevance, using tools such as micro-targeting by interest to pique interest. 
Hitting the Ground Running With New 
Engagement Opportunities 
Virgin America, while a brand very active in digital—and social channels—still had much to gain from going through the Razorfish Links 
process and getting to know the engagement attitudes and channel usage of its customers better. By amplifying some underused 
touchpoints, focusing on others for the first time, tweaking strategy on a few others, and delivering on customers’ engagement priorities, 
it has an opportunity not only to continue to please current customers, but influence new ones as well. For a word-of-mouth brand like 
Virgin America, this could be engagement gold.
The New Customer Loyalty: 
Finding the Right Way to Engage 
By David Rosen, Senior VP, Strategy and Channel Development, Loyalty Lab 
As marketers like Virgin America try to build Sustained Engagements, they need to leverage one program that is most likely 
already part of their marketing arsenal: the loyalty program. Our in-depth research of Virgin America’s guest base using Razorfish 
Links exposed a rich picture of loyalty that included how often and where customers traveled, their usage of Virgin America’s 
co-branded credit card and their willingness to pay more for — and recommend — Virgin America. 
You will note that Elevate members did not fit neatly into the Engagement Types discovered by Razorfish. As with Virgin America, 
you may find those in your loyalty program have a mix of attributes—they may favor different platforms or have different priorities 
about what they want from you when they get in touch. Some may have high LTV but relatively low influence, while others will be 
as important to your brand as influencers as they are as customers. 
True, loyalty program members are not all alike; fortunately, loyalty programs do not have to be one-size-fits-all either. As 
with touchpoints, the options for exciting customers in a loyalty program are exploding — including discounts and rebates, elite 
benefits, digital rewards, exclusive access, friend-to-friend offers and “once-in-a-lifetime” experiences. At Loyalty Lab, we have 
found a successful loyalty program is about more than a variety of incentives; it’s also about delivering the right message to the 
right person at the right time with the right motivator. The most successful loyalty marketers optimize their marketing 
investment by determining through testing the best combinations of segment, next action and motivator—driving faster, more 
efficient migration up the loyalty curve. 
As you implement a loyalty program, it is also important to keep in mind that because customers join in exchange for something 
more—such programs provide companies with numerous levers for strengthening both direct and extended value that cannot 
necessarily be used in other marketing initiatives. Among other things, loyalty programs are a platform for advocacy. Marketers get 
a much richer and more accurate depiction of their customers’ value and influence. By crossing high value and high connectivity, 
brand ambassadors can be given the exclusive treatment that makes them want to spread positive word-of-mouth about a brand. 
Also, tools such as the “My Account” function can become the hub for capturing things like Facebook engagement, as well 
as being a go-to location for discovering new ways to interact with the brand, such as mobile applications and communities. 
Loyalty programs can also be the launching pad for Sustained Engagement. They are a pathway for permission for closer and 
more frequent contact with your best customers. Long-term value always begins with a first connection—a purchase, a 
sign-up, a “follow” or a “like.” Strong loyalty marketers use enrollment to learn more about their new members, determine 
their potential, and identify what motivation will move customers to become further involved in the program. After that, the 
journey really gets rolling, as a loyalty program is the single best tool for focusing the dialog and continuously driving, 
recognizing and rewarding members. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 53
The Transitionals: 
An Encapsulation of How Engagement is Changing 
As we analyzed the research from the Razorfish Links study with Virgin America and 
Loyalty Lab, one age group stood out to us—not because they tended to have high lifetime 
value (LTV) , or were big adopters of new technologies—rather, they best encapsulated the 
state of transition consumers and marketers are experiencing. It is a place where touchpoints— 
and the ways consumers interact with them—are continually dynamic, and often surprising. 
We call this group, aged 25 to 34, The Transitionals, because their behavior didn’t neatly fit in 
between the two other age groups we studied—the 24 to 30 group and those 45-plus. Rather, 
they exemplify one characteristic from each demographic: acting like the younger group, yet 
thinking like the older group. Like their younger counterparts, they may sometimes grab for 
their iPhone to Tweet about their dissatisfaction about a product or service. On the other hand, 
when asked to quantify the importance of the six Engagement Elements, their answers 
resembled those of their elders.
chapter 
05 
Before we discuss them further, we should point out one very important thing: while right 
now, this group falls into the demo often referred to as Generation X, we expect that, as this 
generation ages, a new group of Transitionals will take their place. In other words, we 
believe that as technology continues to evolve, there will always be a group caught between 
the feelings of their elders and the behavior of those who are younger than they are. So, if 
right now this group is Generation X, a few years from now, it will be the next group that 
takes on these caught-in-between characteristics. 
It is worth taking a closer look at The Transitionals’ behavior because they are fascinating 
predictors of the engagement future we are already seeing, when channel importance and the 
way consumers want to interact with brands will not necessarily go hand-in-hand. 
Here is how this mapped out for The Transitionals in terms of engagement philosophy and 
engagement channels: 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 55
• Engagement Philosophy: While the Engagement Elements ranked in the same order across all age groups, the 
Transitionals statistically were not as interested in feeling Valued, or in Efficiency or Trust as the younger demo. In 
fact, the 45+ group and the 25-34 year-old group agreed on the statistical importance of only one Engagement 
Element—Relevance. 
• Engagement Channels: The disconnect between engagement philosophy and channel use holds true across all age 
groups, yet The Transitionals are still particularly worth looking at because for them it is more pronounced. 
Additionally, they show a bigger disconnect between the new channels they adopt and the ones they use when they 
are trying to engage with a brand. While those in the 45+ group steer clear of services like Yelp, Facebook and mobile 
applications, The Transitionals are much more likely to use these channels. The Transitionals are also less likely to use 
channels that are still popular with the 45+ group, like the phone, email and postal mail.
For marketers, The Transitionals are critical for understanding the next engagement wave—and the ones that may follow after that. As 
technologies and channels continue to proliferate, we will likely continue to see similar waves of adoption and transition roll across age 
groups. This means to speak across multiple generations and meet their engagement needs, it is critical to have multiple touchpoints. A 
25-year-old may want a transaction conducted via a mobile app to be efficient; a 35-year-old may use that same app but be looking for it 
to deliver on a different Engagement Element. 
It is hard to predict at this point, but, as we said above, we expect there may always be a middle group of consumers in transition as new 
channels emerge; if this is so, it will require a calculated approach to CRM. After all, age groups have never existed in isolation. The younger 
generation may continue to influence the behavior of older ones, but they may never have the same priorities when it comes to their 
engagement needs. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 57
Conclusion: 
The Beginning of Understanding Consumers and Engagement 
This may be the conclusion of our first “Liminal” report, but to us, it feels like the beginning— 
the beginning of discovering the connections between the ever-expanding roster of engagement 
touchpoints and what customers really want when they use them to engage with you. 
Of course, this book has also been deeply immersed in data. We hope, as you’ve read it, you’ve 
learned many specifics about the contemporary state of how consumers use channels; how they 
perceive engagement and the role social influence will increasingly play in many marketers’ 
strategies. We also hope you’ve learned some approaches to help you identify how your 
engagement strategy should map out going forward. It’s no longer enough to optimize current 
platforms but to constantly experiment—as consumers do—with newer ones that could have 
major impacts on your business.
C 
However, the specifics in “Liminal” shouldn’t distract from its real point—and that’s to put a 
stake in the ground recognizing that the nature of engagement is changing as channels 
proliferate and consumer behavior changes. Thus, the Razorfish Links approach we took 
towards research in this report should be considered foundational—the building blocks for 
what we hope are annual studies by Razorfish of the liminality of consumer engagement. 
Several years from now, we may find it strange that people ever questioned whether mobile 
would become a dominant platform, or that Facebook, to some companies, was once thought 
of as a marketing curiosity. 
Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 59 
We don’t know. 
What we do know is that whatever we discovered about consumer engagement this year will 
change, and we would like to have you with us as the journey continues in years to come.
Privacy and Permission: 
Four Key Considerations All Marketers Should Think About 
Every time you browse the Internet in search of a new house, text a $10 donation to a charity, 
respond to an offer to receive more information about the iPad or check the balance of your 
401(k) from your smartphone, you demonstrate trust that the information you choose to share 
will be protected. But, you also know these activities can be tracked and used by marketers to 
target you based on those behaviors. As the focus of this book is how to use online behavior 
to build richer engagement experiences, it is important that we address the front-burner issue 
of privacy. 
The online advertising, marketing and publishing industries are engaged in an ever-progressing 
and broadening debate about the proper handling of Personally Identifiable Information (PII) 
and the proper use of behaviorally targeted advertising. Here are four key considerations we 
think all marketers should ponder:
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Liminal_final_PRINT

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. A RAZORFISH ANALYSIS OF CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT IN TRANSITION Change. As marketers, we have always accepted it. Markets change; brands gain momentum and then lose energy; and new mediums come along. Consider the advent of television in the 1950s and how it changed the rules of marketing for decades. The change marketers face today is different than what has come before, in both its pace and its potential, which is why we’ve used the term “liminal” as the title of this book. The word liminal isn’t just about change, but about being on the cusp of something new. In the context of marketing, it reflects the fact that, for the first time, customers have an immediate voice and an ever-expanding array of channels in which to use it. If marketers are to survive—and thrive—in this new world, they need to re-examine how to engage with customers, across generations and levels of technological savvy. Thus, we undertook the research in “Liminal” from the ground up, so we could understand how people engage with companies, what they are looking to get out of those engagements, and what channels they prefer. It’s not enough anymore for marketers to have a top-down mentality, simply making sure they have a presence on multiple channels, but to understand what makes some customers still use an 800 number, while others reach out to brands on Facebook. Here’s the problem: the above assumes your customers want a relationship with you. They don’t. Yes, they will engage with you, yet only if it is on their terms. The findings in “Liminal” demonstrate that, in the future, marketers will need to find ways to sustain those engagements over time, regardless of channel, whether they are traditional, emerging or new. You have long known it is necessary to take charge and build relationships with your customers. We hope you will find that “Liminal,” because it focuses on what customers want out of engagement, combined with the an eye toward the ever-expanding array of channels, will help you realize the opportunities that lie with this liminal world—for both you, and your customers. Sincerely, John Zell VP, Global CRM Solutions, Razorfish
  • 4.
  • 5. I INTRODUCTION 04 C CONCLUSION: The Beginning of Understanding Consumers and Engagement 56 addendum 01 PRIVACY AND PERMISSION: Four Key Considera.ons All Marketers Should Think About 58 addendum 02 METHODOLOGY: The Research Process Behind Razorfish Links 64 T THANK YOU 70 Rf ABOUT RAZORFISH 72 chapter 01 DEFINING ENGAGEMENT: What’s Important to Consumers When They Reach Out to Your Brand 08 chapter 02 THE POWER OF CUSTOMER VALUE PLUS INFLUENCE 20 chapter 03 LINKING ENGAGEMENT AND INFLUENCE To Build Be/er Engagement Strategies 26 chapter 04 VIRGIN AMERICA: Crea.ng an I.nerary That Iden.fies and Leverages Customer Influence 36 chapter 05 THE TRANSITIONALS: An Encapsula.on of How Engagement Is Changing 52
  • 6. INTRODUCTION We chose the name “Liminal” for this report because it describes a state of being in flux—on the threshold of something new. To us, the word liminal does a superb job of describing the continuing evolution of how consumers choose to engage with a brand. To say the least, the number of places where your customers can—or may want to—engage with your brand has exploded, even in the last two to three years. What used to be a mere handful of options, such as the telephone or postal mail, first began to expand with the dawn of the Internet era to include corporate websites and email. However, the roster of ways customers can engage with you seems to increase inexorably. Today, consumers can “Like” a brand on Facebook, post a video about a product on YouTube, or broadcast a complaint about your company to their followers on Twitter. While some customers continue to use older channels, others are using channels such as these to publicize the relationship between customer and brand beyond the private interactions that used to typify the brand/customer relationship.
  • 7. I So, if some customers are content to be in touch with you via email, while others champion your brand through social media; if some customers use channels they find efficient, while others use ones that they find relevant; how do you make sense not only of these divergent touchpoints, but the disparate reasons why customers gravitate to them? We are no longer in a world where the only car available is a black Ford Model T. Today, consumers can choose from dozens of brands, each of which produce a wide array of models, with differing features, colors and price points. An active family might choose an SUV; a single, environmentally conscious consumer might drive a Volkswagen Beetle. And so it is with touchpoints. How do you pick the right combinations to satisfy your customers’ immediate needs and make them loyal? Better yet, how do you turn these people into ambassadors who will openly tout your product or service to friends, family, or maybe, the entire Internet universe? Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 7
  • 8. HERDING THE ENGAGEMENT CATS At Razorfish, we needed answers to these questions, because they are not only on our minds, but on the minds of our clients as well. While we all know that engagement channels will continue to proliferate, and the number of channels may be in a continually liminal state, it was clearly time to build a foundation for understanding what channels consumers use and why, setting the stage for building engagement strategies now and in the future. We needed to identify a process that could be used and re-used to help companies renew their engagement strategies as touchpoints expand. Thus, from the outset, we wanted to discover truths that were not about individual channels but about consumer needs. What do consumers want when they engage with brands? To answer that question, we did something that has seldom, if ever, been done before: we looked at engagement from the customer viewpoint, rather than that of the marketer—something that is crucial to know whether you sell airline seats, juice, or financial services, or if you are wrestling with whether your company should be on Facebook or, five years from now, on a platform no one has yet imagined. First, we commissioned a study to find out how consumers prioritize engagement, and what channels they use to satisfy their needs in partnership with our client Virgin America, and Loyalty Lab, which employs software-as-a-service technology to drive customer value and loyalty. The study, which did not ask respondents about specific brands or engagement scenarios, combined more than 5,600 surveys and 15 one-to-one interviews of Virgin America customers with their existing data on lifetime value (LTV) and engagement. Then we added an overlay of publicly available data on social media use from 100,000 Internet users. These sources allowed us to look at self-reported attitudes and preferences—and independently tracked behavior—enabling us to build a comprehensive understanding of how people engage with brands. We call this process of taking behavioral data on engagement touchpoints, overlaying it with broader social and survey data, and then analyzing the outcome, Razorfish Links. It’s a proprietary engagement audit that can help any brand get a better handle on its engagement strategy—helping it accurately value its customers, and map each segment’s unique engagement preferences to the channels they use. Ultimately, going through the Razorfish Links process allows brands to develop a truly customer-centric relationship marketing program. We will go into detail about the results of the Razorfish Links process further on in this report. For now, here are a few things that surprised us: • Though social platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and geo-location social services, like Foursquare, are being quickly adopted, customers don’t yet view them as an important way to engage with brands. • When we asked consumers to prioritize what was important to them when engaging with a brand, they ranked the following priorities in exactly this order, no matter how we looked at the data: feeling Valued, Trust, Efficiency, Consistency, Relevance and Control. We called these six qualities the Engagement Elements. In other words, in a world full of engagement touchpoints, the most important things to everyone are to feel Valued by the companies they do business with, to get their needs addressed quickly, and to feel the companies they engage with can be trusted. • Even as “the consumer is in control” has become a mantra in the digital age, Control came in dead last. Apparently, the consumer does not need to be in as much control as we thought, seeing other things as far more important. • Even though we associate certain touchpoints with certain strengths—we assume, for instance, that an e-commerce website is efficient—every channel has some ability to deliver on the Engagement Elements. It’s not as though, for instance, phone and email always deliver on making a customer feel Valued, while Facebook and Twitter are incapable of it. • The channels people use to meet their engagement needs varied. In fact, the engagement data of the group aged 35-44—which we call The Transitionals (see Chapter Five)—closely matched those of the 45-plus demographic, yet the channels they use to connect with companies are similar to the 25-34-year-old group.
  • 9. These surprising findings taught us to assume nothing when it comes to why and how customers interact with brands. As this part of marketing is bound to remain continually liminal, realizing that customer engagement is in a state of constant change is a humbling thing to learn—and remember. AND FINALLY, A PROCESS FOR NAVIGATING, AND LEVERAGING, THE ENGAGEMENT SHIFT Studies are interesting, but even the best sound bites of data are not very useful unless they give us the information we need to act. Therefore, we set out to determine how a marketer could use the data from Razorfish Links to re-orient their engagement strategies around how their customers prioritize engagement and the channels they might use when they reach out to brands. Thus, also in “Liminal,” you will find ways to: • Map the channels customers use to their engagement priorities. With Virgin America, data from Razorfish Links allowed us to develop four different Engagement Types within the company’s customer base, based on lifetime value (LTV), potential influence, what they want out of engagement channels, and what channels they use. • Optimize channels. Some of which may already be in use. For instance, if a company’s high-value customers are heavy users of Facebook, yet the company has not invested much in the channel, it will learn that it should take the channel more seriously, and what needs it should meet with that channel. • Calculate a Consumer Influence Score. This combines a traditional, bottom-line view of a customer’s LTV with his or her ability, using social media tools, to influence others, a concept we call enhanced LTV (eLTV). • Develop an engagement strategy. One that focuses on the right engagement touchpoints, delivering on what customers need—with an eye to what Engagement Types and channels will have the best return on investment. Where the practice of customer relationship marketing (CRM) creates the framework, we see the goal as creating a Sustained Engagement, which aligns channels and customer engagement priorities in such a way that consumers want to maintain a relationship with a company, potentially across multiple channels, brands and products on an ongoing basis. With a Sustained Engagement, you can increase sales, decrease churn, and, most importantly, transform consumers into brand advocates through exceptional engagement experiences. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 9
  • 10. DEFINING ENGAGEMENT: What’s Important to Consumers When They Reach Out to Your Brand Engagement—just the mention of it can spark a visceral response from marketers, partly because no one has pinpointed what it really means. Let’s get it out there: engagement is a messy, complicated idea—yet a critical one—because it gets to the heart of the relationship between consumers and brands. We know that it is valuable, but the how, what and why of it is ambiguous at best. However, particularly at a time when potential touchpoints with consumers are proliferating, it is one of the most important things for a marketer to define. Why? Because consumers pick the channels they use based on how well each satisfies their needs when they engage with a brand. If a customer who bought a computer is seeking out relevant troubleshooting information, he or she has many ways to get it. Whether that person chooses to look for it on a company website, reaches out to that company on Twitter, or goes to an independent community site about that brand depends on which of the three is best able to serve up the most relevant information.
  • 11. chapter 01 THE MARKETER DEFINITION OF ENGAGEMENT: LOOKING AT IT BACKWARDS? While there is no single, clean, concise definition of engagement—though everyone from Forrester Research to Fanscape and eMarketer has attempted it—we would argue the myriad definitions do have one unfortunate thing in common: they define engagement from the marketers’ perspective, instead of asking consumers what they consider a positive engagement experience. Top-down definitions of engagement focus on a very specific set of numerical measures, typically within a single channel—things like time spent, site visits, page views, search keywords, and session length. Yet those do nothing to elicit how consumers feel about it, particularly in how their thinking affects their channel choices. And certainly, none of the marketer-side definitions connect engagement back to lifetime value (LTV), but instead to lighter measures such as awareness and brand lift. Our study turned engagement on its head. The most important principles of engagement lie with the perceptions of people—consumers— and what engagement means to them. Thus, our study started by asking people what makes an engagement good or bad—in short, what makes engagement, well, engaging. We know that engagement always begins with a need to connect (a thank you, a complaint, a question, a purchase). What happens then? What are people’s expectations of an engagement with a brand, and how can a brand deliver on those expectations? THE CONSUMER VIEWPOINT: THE SIX Engagement Elements THAT MATTER From a series of in-depth interviews, we learned that engagement is more than just a channel. It’s a dialogue; it’s the ability to choose how and when to engage; it’s the value each channel represents; it’s whether or not expectations were met. However, while marketers’ definitions of engagement are about how consumers interact with them in particular channels, consumers see it differently. Our interview subjects, instead of going straight into listing the channels they use to engage with a brand, focused on their relationship with a brand and how channels deliver on their interests, needs and expectations in different ways. We learned right away that the channel is subservient to the relationship need. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 11
  • 12. Engagement isn’t just about a channel. It is about the consumer’s relationship with a brand, his or her ability to choose how and when to engage, and the value each channel represents. This enabled us to determine the six most important needs consumers have when they reach out to a brand: feeling Valued, Trust, Efficiency, Consistency, Relevance and Control. We call them the Engagement Elements, and they, not individual channels, should be the starting point for any interaction a brand has with a consumer. Again, it is a bottom-up, customer-centric way of looking at consumers’ engagement needs and how to optimize them. THE SIX ENGAGEMENT ELEMENTS Ef 2 E F F I C I E N C Y Va 1 V A L U E D Rv 5 R E L E V A N C E Tr Ct 6 C O N T R O L 3 T R U S T 4 Cn C O N S I S T E N C Y
  • 13. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 13 Valued What a customer feels when he knows he can expect a company to go out of its way to support his needs, and knows that the company values his business. One interviewee explained: “[It’s] something as simple as calling a person, having them listen and talking to them. Just feeling as though they are out there, working on your behalf, that your situation has not been discarded, you are not just another passenger. It’s the personal touch that makes the difference.” Efficiency When a company respects a customer’s time and energy, and promptly addresses his or her needs. When airlines offer consumers kiosks, which allow them to get their boarding pass with limited interaction with the airline, that is an example of Efficiency —many of us like to avoid the long lines and laborious process of checking in with a company representative. One interviewee praised online transactions through a computer or mobile phone, finding them easier, faster and more financially trustworthy. However, not everyone feels the same way; another subject complained that being contacted extensively had the opposite effect, saying, “Initial contact is OK but after that I don’t like to be hassled too much.” Trust When customers feel confident that a company is credible, and will handle engagements honestly, sincerely and transparently. One interviewee mentioned, “I need to believe that they’ll stand by what they are giving me. If something goes wrong, they will correct [it]. I’ll take chances with [trusting a company] so long as I’m sure they are there for me to correct any problems.” Believing in and taking chances with a company is contingent upon trust. DMNews hit the nail on the head when it stated, “Marketers must show their customers respect while earning their trust. This means understanding what truly interests them and not simply inundating them with material that you know is just advertising in disguise.” 1 1 Martin Reidy, “Loyalty Online Creates Instant Connections,” Direct Marketing News, June 21, 2010. CONSISTENCY Achieved when customers feel a company is uniform in things such as policy, attitude, communication, and messaging. Interviewees reported they noticed when a company’s words and actions clashed. Participants also defined Consistency in terms of reliability, durability, experience and craftsmanship. Relevance Achieved when a customer feels messaging from a company is interesting and applicable to their needs. When a retailer offers personalized coupons to its customers with discounts on items they frequently buy, that is Relevance (and probably, makes them feel Valued). One participant mentioned, “A lot of companies are want-ing to reach you through the Internet. Everybody has a Facebook page. Blah, blah, blah. I’m not going to a company’s page unless you give me a reason to go there. And I don’t want to hear about new products there. I want to go there if I want to become part of the [brand’s] culture or there is some important information there.” CONTROL Manifested when the customer can determine if, when and how a company will communicate with him or her. Interviewees noted they want to give companies permission to be in touch with them up front; conversely, they want to opt out when they are done engaging. Control can be implicit or explicit, yet the consumer wants to be at the center of it. He or she would rather foster a relationship than receive a one-way push from the marketer. As was said earlier, however, it is noteworthy that in “the consumer is in control” era, Control was the least important of the six Engagement Elements we identified. One reason for this, we believe, is that if a company delivers on Trust, then Control becomes less important.
  • 14. THE SIX Engagement Elements : DRILLING FURTHER DOWN Yes, feeling Valued, Efficiency, Trust, Consistency, Relevance and Control are the six consumer-centric needs that form the backbone of engagement. Yet the data from our 5,600-participant survey showed that there is more to know. Below are two further points about the Engagement Elements that stood out to us: 1. Feeling Valued, Efficiency and Trust, in that order, were overwhelmingly the three most important Engagement Elements. Consistency, Relevance, and Control were important, but much less so. 2. No matter how we sliced the data—whether by gender, age, or favored channels—the rank order of the Engagement Elements remained the same, even if different age groups gave them different statistical weighting. Therefore, the consistent ranking of the importance of Engagement Elements is a barometer that allows us to understand why different channels are more successful than others. Still, it is a complex thing to understand. It turns out each channel delivers, to a different degree, on these elements, at different times, for different reasons. Just as a fast food chain might serve up information on its website that it was offering a special meal deal the next day, it could also offer that information via Twitter to loyal customers who follow the brand. For some customers, the former touchpoint works, for others, the latter. The fact that every channel has some ability to deliver on the Engagement Elements makes the relationship between them turbulent. So, how do the Engagement Elements relate to channels? To answer this, we first explored the importance of each heavily-used Virgin America channel. We walked away with two provocative findings. 1. Channel importance and frequency of use are not related to the overall adoption of innovative new channels. With all the attention paid to such things as social media and mobile applications, consumers do not use these new channels often when they need to engage with brands. Our survey showed the most important consumer engagement channels are transactional email, company websites, traditional word-of-mouth and face-to-face conversation with a company representative. Obviously, consumers most use the channels they find most important. Those most important channels are Google (to find a company website), company websites, word-of-mouth and email. Further, channel importance and frequency of use matched up almost one-to-one, with the exception of the use of Google to find a company. Social networking services were the least important, be it LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook or the even newer location-based social networking services. Moreover, the least frequent actions taken on individual channels were participating in a company community site, looking up a company on YouTube, posting a review, reading or participating in a company community site and sending an email to a company. Twitter and Facebook didn’t even make it into the top nine in terms of importance or frequency of use. Gasp.
  • 15. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 15 MEAN CHANNEL IMPORTANCE WHEN ENGAGING WITH BRANDS TWITTER 3 2 4 5 6 25-34 35-44 45+ LOCATION-BASED SOCIAL NETWORKING LINKEDIN POSTAL MAIL COMPANY COMMUNITY WEBSITE FACEBOOK PRINT AD CUSTOMER SERVICE INSTANT MESSAGE MOBILE APPLICATIONS EMAIL NEWSLETTER PHONE REVIEW WEBSITE FACE-TO-FACE INTERACTION WORD OF MOUTH COMPANY WEBSITE INDIVIDUAL EMAIL
  • 16. ENGAGEMENT ELEMENT EXPECTATIONS BY CHANNEL meets expectations expectations not met EFFICIENCY CONSISTENCY TRUST VALUED RELEVANCE CONTROL POSTAL MAIL PRINT AD MOBILE APPLICATIONS CUSTOMER SERVICE INSTANT MESSAGE LINKEDIN REVIEW WEBSITE FACEBOOK COMPANY COMMUNITY WEBSITE TWITTER EMAIL NEWSLET TER PHONE LOCATION-BASED SOCIAL NETWORKING WORD OF MOUTH FACE-TO-FACE INTERACTION INDIVIDUAL EMAIL COMPANY WEBSITE
  • 17. So, while a lot of people are using social media channels, their use is not lining up with which channels they perceive to be important or use frequently when they want to engage with brands. What’s going on here? 2. Under used channels aren’t necessarily bad at delivering on Engagement Elements; it’s often that companies are not using them correctly, if at all. We believe consumers do not use some of the hot, new channels to interact with brands because brands are neither fully nor consistently using them to deliver on the Engagement Elements, particularly in social media. Obviously, if a brand has many customers who are active on Facebook, yet its own Facebook page is moribund, it’s not going to deliver well on the Engagement Elements in that channel. In fact, there is wild variation in how each channel fulfills consumers’ expectations. The chart at the left gives a detailed look at how different channels perform against the six Engagement Elements, with dark green being the best and dark red being the worst. Here are a few snapshots: • Postal mail, print ads, mobile applications and real-time chat with customer service representatives are the lowest performers. • Company websites, individual email, face-to-face interaction and traditional word-of-mouth are the highest performers. • Twitter, email newsletters, company community sites, Facebook, and review sites are liminal. They are neither wholly good, nor wholly bad, at delivering on the Engagement Elements and are evolving every day in terms of delivering new features, and also in how companies and consumers use them. Face-to-face interaction excels at delivering Trust and making consumers feel Valued; company websites are best at Efficiency and Consistency; transactional emails are best at delivering Relevance and giving Control to the consumer. In fact, face-to-face interaction, transactional email, and company sites perform well on most all Engagement Elements. Postal mail and print ads score poorly in all six Engagement Elements, even though, as we said earlier, all channels have the potential to deliver them, depending on a variety of factors. What about some of the newer channel options—the ones in that middle space? These middle performers are wildcards. They may knock one or two of the Engagement Elements out of the park, but they strike out on the others. Twitter, for instance, scores quite well in Control and Relevance, but is a laggard in making consumers feel Valued. Why do some channels score so well—or so poorly—across most of the Engagement Elements, while others offer a hodgepodge of scores? We think it has to do with the ubiquity and longevity of individual channels and the familiarity consumers and marketers have with them. To look at the full history of marketing channels, turn the page. It shows not only how long modern marketing has been around, but also how heavily-weighted channel innovation is toward the last few decades. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 17
  • 18.
  • 19. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 19
  • 20. TWEAKING THE Website, WHILE PAYING MOBILE NO MIND What we found is that the ubiquity, longevity and familiarity of a channel all play a huge role in whether consumers believe it delivers on the Engagement Elements. The high and low ends of the engagement spectrum are filled with the most tried-and-true channels. Company websites, transactional email and face-to-face interaction are high performers because they have been around for a long time, are proven, and have been refined over time. Also, people with limited technology skills have been able to keep up with changes in email and websites, allowing those channels to stay within their reach. Print ads and postal mail also stand out, but in a negative way. While these channels have survived over time, they have not kept up with the changing nature of engagement. The high and low ends also have another similarity: people’s ratings of them across the Engagement Elements barely varied. No matter what they thought of an individual channel, they generally agreed on whether it was good or bad. But when you stop to think of it, marketers have similar, fixed attitudes with tried-and-true channels because of the same ubiquity, longevity and familiarity. Websites are constantly being tweaked and optimized, whereas email is often categorized as a cheap direct response vehicle—and is treated as such. Yet, customers may still derive a lot of value from email—value that is not optimized by some marketers because they pigeonhole that channel. When you consider the consistency with which people rate older channels, it is not surprising to find their feelings about newer channels are all over the place. We believe it is because both the channels themselves, and the way marketers use them, are in a liminal state. In fact, many marketers suffer from a form of bias when it comes to delivering on newer channels; they tend to inconsistently deliver on them despite the heavy usage of new platforms by many consumers. Much of the time, it is because marketers are misinterpreting the fact that their consumers do not reach out to them on new platforms. It may have nothing to do with these channels in and of themselves, but marketers’ inability to use them well. Nowhere is this more apparent than mobile applications; astonishingly, they ranked in the bottom four of the 16 channels we studied. Yet, the more we thought about it, the more it made sense. For one, mobile does not have the ubiquity, longevity and familiarity that older channels do—the iPhone app store has only been around since 2008. Not surprisingly, the channel’s newness has led many marketers to treat it as the redheaded stepchild of engagement, and consequently it scored poorly in delivering on the Engagement Elements, particularly in making consumers feel Valued, and in Efficiency and Trust. Yet, it’s easy to see that mobile—including tablets—has great potential as devices, apps and mobile experiences become more ubiquitous and marketers get better at using them to deliver strong brand interactions. However, for most companies, right now mobile is where company websites were in the mid-90s: a place to shovel static brochure-ware that does not deliver a satisfying experience. Facebook is another channel inconsistently meeting consumer needs—or, more likely, the marketers who use it are inconsistent. It delivers on Control and Relevance, yet it struggles with making consumers feel Valued, reflecting the oft-voiced problem that marketers know they need to be on Facebook, yet are unsure of how to leverage it. Still, some brands are constantly improving the channel. Best Buy has made its Facebook page a model of Efficiency by adding a shopping tab; the luxury shopping club Gilt Groupe gives its Facebook fans advance notice on sales, making them feel Valued; and Starbucks provides its Facebook fans Control by allowing them to manage their reward points within the platform. In all three examples, the consumer experience has improved because the marketers’ Facebook pages do a better job of delivering on one or more of the Engagement Elements. A successful engagement audit should get around this problem by signaling what consumers want and what channels they are apt to use to get what they want from your brand.
  • 21. CONSTRUCTING THE ENGAGEMENT ECOSYSTEM: LEAVING THE LIMBO FOR SOLID GROUND The journey of reframing the concept of engagement has been powerful, as we have discovered that top-down marketing notions of engagement don’t tell us what matters to consumers. Further, the six Engagement Elements play out in different ways across different channels due to factors such as how ubiquitous a channel is and how familiar consumers are with it—and whether or not a channel can consistently deliver on consumers’ engagement needs. Of course, unleashing the Engagement Elements genie—and the proliferating channels consumers can use to engage with a brand— underscores that there are almost infinite engagement scenarios. The challenge for marketers is to take these ingredients and build their own proprietary recipe—a unique blend that allows them to figure out what channels, based on their individual strengths and consumers’ use of them, best deliver on the Engagement Elements. That said, what’s the goal? What are you, as a marketer, looking to do by mixing these ingredients? We will go into more detail about Sustained Engagement in Chapter Three, but it’s about more than just driving revenue—we believe it’s to drive LTV. But, not just that, either. At a time when some newer channels—such as social media platforms—make brand engagements public, it’s to build enhanced LTV—or what we call eLTV. eLTV is built not just on the strict monetary value of one customer to a brand, but also on each customer’s unique power to influence others to be interested in it. All men and women may be created equal, but all customers are not. The trick is to identify those customers who can deliver eLTV—lifetime value that takes into account each customer’s ability to influence. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 21
  • 22. THE POWER of Customer Value Plus Influence It’s time to rethink the definition of lifetime value (LTV) to include an additional component: influence. Just as it has become ever more difficult for the disparate parts of a marketing organization to exist in silos, it is impossible to look at a consumer’s LTV without taking into account each consumer’s power to influence other current and potential customers. For Kai, a maker of perfume, scented candles and body lotions, it may be wonderful if an individual customer spends thousands of dollars on its products over her lifetime. But the Kai customer with the highest eLTV is probably Oprah Winfrey, who named its Body Butter and Body Buffer among her “Favorite Things” in 2007. True, this is an outsized example, but the effect is clear: Oprah may spend no more on Kai products over her lifetime than the anonymous Kai customer we just mentioned, but she is more valuable to the brand than any other customers because of her enormous influence. In their own ways, people with huge influence through social channels are their own Oprahs, because they have the power to recommend brands to a large cadre of followers who trust what they have to say.
  • 23. chapter 02 We should point out that the power to influence—via traditional word-of-mouth—has been with us for as long as there’s been retail. The reason it is time for this concept to become an integral part of any LTV calculation is twofold: • For the first time ever, it is possible to measure influence more accurately. Digital platforms allow us to identify who the influencers are and how much influence they wield. • Digital channels also allow influencers to broadcast their brand advocacy. Influential people used to recommend products to friends and family on a one-to-one or one-to-a-handful basis. Now, an influential person can broadcast what they think about a brand to dozens, hundreds, thousands, and even millions of users, using anything from a simple email list to Twitter. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 23
  • 24. THE IMPORTANCE OF INFLUENCE It is difficult to understate the importance of influence. For all of the billions spent each year on marketing in the U.S. alone, it’s still person-to-person recommendations that carry the most weight when someone is deciding whether to purchase a brand. There are dozens of statistics we could use to illustrate this. Here are just two: 1. When asked what sources “influence your decision to use or not use a particular company, brand or product,” 71 percent say reviews from family members or friends exert a “great deal” or “fair amount” of influence. 2 2. Ninety percent of consumers online trust recommendations from people they know; 70 percent trust opinions of unknown users.3 There are actually two components to influence. One is direct influence—when a customer directly influences friends, family, or even people he or she does not know, becoming a brand ambassador. The other is indirect influence—the incremental reach of friends and family—in other words, how influential those influencers are. Both kinds of influence need to be included in the value equation. THE CONSUMER INFLUENCE SCORE: INTRODUCING A NEW EQUATION TO MEASURE CUSTOMER VALUE We know influence is important, but how do we quantify it? As we said above, one of the most powerful things about some of the newer channels is that they make influence measurable. Thus, Razorfish developed a way to calculate the propensity to influence. It’s a calculation we call the Consumer Influence Score, a measurement of human and brand connections based on the number of times a customer con-nects via social media and how many people he or she is connected to across social platforms. The formula is presented below: # of social networks the individual belongs to # of Twier followers # of Twier updates # of unduplicated friends across all social networks Consumer Influence Score : A measurement of human and brand connections based on the number of times a customer connects via social media and how many people he or she is connected to across social platforms. 2 Whitney Heckathorne, Marketing Manager, Harris Interactive, The Harris Poll #74, June 3, 2010. 3 Jake Hird, Senior Research Analyst, Econsultancy, “Online Consumers Trust Real People, Not Companies,” July 8, 2009. consumer influence score
  • 25. During a time of ongoing technological change, it should be acknowledged that no attempt to measure consumer influence will be perfect. Indeed, the equation focuses heavily on Twitter because, at this point, Twitter is the most public and trackable of major social platforms. That could change. We also acknowledge that, at times, this equation may over-reward, for instance, the particularly chatty teenager. Although, in the case of Twitter, its core user base is older, according to numerous studies. Yet, however liminal social channels are, it is time to start quantifying the role they play in influence, and this equation will help. Additionally, each individual’s scores will evolve over time. There will be continual evolution of measurement techniques, tracking of social behavior, and company engagement strategies. In addition, over time, companies will learn more about the behavior of influencers and how much that influence translates into incremental sales. We believe by combining traditional LTV scores—which measure things such as an individual’s average purchase, acquisition cost and retention cost—with their direct influence, indirect influence and long-term effect, marketers can determine which customers have high eLTV. NEW CUSTOMER valuation Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 25 INDIRECT INFLUENCE $100 DIRECT INFLUENCE LONG TERM EFFECT 10% DISCOUNT 80% RATE CUSTOMER RETENTION RATE 1 AVERAGE PURCHASES PER YEAR PER CUSTOMER $25 CUSTOMER ACQUISITION COST 50% AVERAGE PROFIT MARGIN AVERAGE PURCHASE AMOUNT TRADITIONAL INPUTS FUTURE INPUTS
  • 26. A STRONG ENGAGEMENT DRIVES INFLUENCER VALUE What role does engagement play in consumer influence? Engagement drives the value of influencers. Better engagement with customers— and providing them with easy ways to spread the word—unlocks their power. As a marketer, you can build a campaign, you can advertise to the masses and you can create highly targeted messages. Yet, without giving consumers an experience truly worth sharing, and the means with which to share it, the influencers will not connect with your brand, and they will not recommend it. The analytics showing who has a strong social graph and the willingness to leverage existing social communities or create new ones will not matter if you ignore the basics. These influencers are people, after all, and we cannot make them ambassadors of your brand if it is not worth it to them. This brings us back to the Engagement Elements. Let’s face it: not every customer wants a relationship with you, but he or she will engage if there is a compelling reason. Therefore, if you are doing well on meeting the Engagement Elements you are going to provide more value— and that is something a customer will tell others about. While your mind might jump to viral marketing efforts like OfficeMax’s “Elf Yourself” and the YouTube-based “Old Spice Man” campaign, that’s not at the heart of what we’re talking about. Those are lightning strikes—lottery winners—that are also short term. We are talking about the long term, built through satisfying and sustainable everyday engagement that meets consumers’ needs and fulfills their expectations. For example, imagine being a woman who has opted in through her mobile device to get promotional offers when she walks into her favorite retailer. If your data indicates that this person has both high LTV and high eLTV, you might have a manager greet her and invite her to the back room to get a sneak peak at a new line of clothing. That’s a great experience for her, and the kind of unusual expe-rience she is likely to share with her friends. It is experiences like that which will build true incremental value that goes straight to the bottom line. The Importance of Influence in Building an Engagement Strategy In Chapter One, we discussed the importance of looking at engagement across touchpoints from a consumer-centric perspective, and what, when it comes to interacting with brands, consumers clearly want, ranging from feeling Valued to Control. In this chapter, we examined the power of influence, a concept which has become so important in the digital age that we believe marketers should look at a new metric, eLTV, which is traditional LTV plus the powerful enhancement of influence. The next step is to combine touchpoints and influence into a coherent, ongoing engagement strategy, the topic of Chapter Three.
  • 27. Influence Can Be Good and Bad Years ago, brands simply pushed out messages using the limited media available. Today, it’s not just that media channels have proliferated and that new technologies have enabled customers to interact with brands on the go, on their terms. Many of those same technologies let consumers share their opinions about your brand—and sometimes brand messages they create—not just with their friends but also with millions of users online. For the purposes of this discussion, we have mostly focused on the ability of these technologies to spread positive influence; we make the assumption that customers truly like your brand. But let’s face it—when a customer feels a certain service is not up to scratch or doesn’t make them feel appreciated, they can use these technologies to negatively influence perception. One of the best examples of the last few years is “United [Airlines] Breaks Guitars,” a music video featuring an original song by the aggrieved guitar owner, which became a viral sensation. The first video posted currently has more than nine million views; all told, the number is much higher than that. The “United Breaks Guitars” saga also resulted in dozens of news stories. In that case—at least according to the song—United failed on the Engagement Elements on at least two touchpoints, face-to-face interaction and the phone, as the company turned a deaf ear to the guitar owner’s assertion that he saw his guitar being mishandled on the tarmac. Whatever the particulars, the case makes clear there is an urgent need for businesses to treat their customers well. So, as you ponder which engagement touchpoints you should be using to fulfill the Engagement Elements, and as you calculate which of your customers has a high Consumer Influence Score, keep in mind that customers can put touchpoints to work for you or against you, based, in large part, on how well you deliver on the Engagement Elements. tip Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 27
  • 28. LINKING ENGAGEMENT And Influence To Build Better Engagement Strategies Plain and simple, every business needs to rethink how it engages with consumers. In a world full of demanding customers, who use multiple channels to engage with businesses—and who can use some of those same channels to influence other potential customers—it’s clearly time to build new, cross-departmental engagement strategies that can be implemented across multiple touchpoints. As we’ve talked with CMOs and other heads of marketing, we’ve discovered that they want to be less product-centric and more customer-centric. They want to create multi-channel customer-relationship-building environments. And, they know consumers expect those environments to deliver on what they promise. We also know today’s CMO is more focused than ever on driving top-line sales and bottom-line results. Now that social media is maturing into a critical engagement channel, executives also want to understand its value and return on investment. In fact, it is becoming increasingly important to prioritize a multitude of engagement touchpoints and get a grip on where to allocate resources. We believe the approach we define in this book gives marketing executives the steps they need to start identifying, prioritizing, testing and optimizing CRM engagement touchpoints in this new world.
  • 29. chapter 03 SUSTAINED ENGAGEMENT: BUILDING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS THAT LAST As you’ll see further on in this chapter, there’s a lot of nitty-gritty involved in building an engagement strategy, from determining which touchpoints to focus on, to discovering what your customers value when they connect with your company. But before we get to that, let’s take a moment to look at the larger vision: it’s to build Sustained Engagement with your customers. Here’s how we define it: A Sustained Engagement is achieved when a level of feeling Valued, Efficiency and Trust is established between a consumer and a business. Those three Engagement Elements, coupled with Consistency, Relevance and Control, will result in the consumer’s willingness to maintain a relationship with the business across multiple channels, brands and products. No, this isn’t simply CRM. A vision as ambitious as this is referred to by the Harvard Business Review as a BHAG: A Big Hairy Audacious Goal. And it is. Yet with the emergence of a variety of new touchpoints, from mobile to Twitter, which allow consumers to express opinions, indicate preferences and derive satisfaction from a brand’s products, there’s an opportunity to deepen the dialogue and lengthen the period of time in which brands and consumers can interact. We should note that Sustained Engagement does not mean bombarding customers with endless messages. We know customers move from periods of high engagement to little or none and then, we hope, back to being engaged. Consumers are not always in the market for a car, or a computer, or a new bank. We still believe in right message, right time and right place. The challenge to achieving a Sustained Engagement is to marry the consumer and business views of engagement to the benefit of both: • The bottom-up consumer view emphasizes knowing how a consumer wants to engage, what he expects during this engagement and where he is in the customer journey. • The top-down company view creates a seamless, multichannel engagement strategy that has sustainable impact on top-line results—without adversely affecting the bottom line. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 29
  • 30. Creating a Virtuous Circle : Building an Ongoing Engagement Strategy Social channels give us an opportunity to listen, monitor and communicate in new ways, which gives businesses a better chance of understanding what stage a customer is in during his or her purchasing lifecycle. Meanwhile, we can keep using traditional monitoring methods such as quantitative surveys and behavioral tracking to assess how best to optimize engagement touchpoints. Yet how do we put all those parts together? We suggest four steps that will take businesses all the way from determining their objectives in building an engagement strategy, to researching their customers’ engagement priorities and behaviors, to—finally—building out the strategy. It’s important to note that this process—just like the engagements that will develop with consumers—is ongoing. Engagement strategies will change as businesses obtain richer data on their customers, as business objectives change, as customers change, and as channels evolve. To that extent, building a Sus-tained Engagement is more of a virtuous circle, in which ever-improving data and strategies impact business objectives, and so on. The four steps, explained briefly here and in more detail below, are: • Align: A starting point where marketers survey their current engagement strategy, based on their business objectives and key engagement scenarios, and how they might build upon it. • Audit: A three-pronged engagement audit linking disparate behavioral and attitudinal data. In this step, companies also determine the Consumer Influence Score of their customers. • Assess: An in-depth analysis of what the data says about the touchpoints customers prefer when they engage with a company and what their engagement priorities are. This should yield groups within your target market—or Engagement Types—that will help define an engagement strategy. • Actions: The development of a strategy that engages customers and draws on their ability to influence, so that a valuable customer today becomes more valuable down the road. Using information derived from dividing your customers into Engagement Types, this step makes it possible to execute strategy based on its expected return.
  • 31. 1. Align: How Your Engagement Strategies Match Objectives, Now, and in the Future Any rethinking of strategy begins with a foundational question: where are we now? In the first step toward building out an engagement strategy, marketers need to align what business objectives they are trying to meet in building a better engagement strategy and how they think their customer engagements will play out. During this stage, marketers should ask themselves the following questions: • What are our company’s business objectives? In short, the answer to this question is about what your new engagement strategy is there to do. Are you trying to go into new markets? Are you operating in an increasingly competitive marketplace, so customer loyalty is becoming paramount? Are you trying to increase repeat purchases, upgrades and renewals? What about bringing in new customers? Wouldn’t it be better to understand who is statistically most likely to be a high value, high influence customer so “look alikes” can be targeted for acquisition? • What engagement scenarios do we envision? For instance, if you are a manufacturer of toys that require assembly, has this meant substantially more customer visits to the FAQs on the company website? And is the information there adequate? Maybe it would be worthwhile to test a quicker solution, such as instant chat that delivers both Efficiency and Relevance—since, as any parent knows, assembling a toy with an impatient child at your side can be an anxious process. And do not forget that if a customer is eventually forced to pick up the phone to get the information they need, loyalty can go out the window. As Matt Dixon and Lara Ponomareff wrote in a popular Harvard Business Review blog post, “Consumers who attempt to self-serve, fail, and are forced to pick up the phone are 10 percent more likely to be disloyal than those customers who were able to fully resolve their issues in their channel of choice.” 4 • What do we believe are the appropriate touchpoints for our market? To answer this question, it is important to assess not only what engagement touchpoints are currently popular with your customer base, but ones that might be. For instance, a retailer may believe it is time to start experimenting with location-based services, such as Foursquare and Gowalla. (For a detailed look at what we call “The Shiny Object Fund” for testing emerging channels see the box later in this chapter.) • How do we believe our customers prioritize engagement? This question tracks back to the Engagement Elements, as it is about determining how your customers prioritize their engagement needs, from feeling Valued to Control. While these questions will all help marketers link how they engage with customers to their overall business objectives, by no means are these the only questions one should ask when going through this initial step in the process. The goal is to figure out how you believe customers are currently engaging with you, and make assumptions about areas where your engagement strategy might go in the future. 4 Matt Dixon and Lara Ponomareff, “Why Your Customers Don’t Want to Talk to You,” Weblog: Harvard Business Review, July 28, 2010. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 31
  • 32. 2. Audit: Using Razorfish Links, Discover Your Customers’ Engagement Behavior and Attitudes Next, it’s time to get a clearer picture of what is actually going on out there. While this step partially applies to studying your existing customer base, it also should encompass a much broader analysis of online behavior. This will not only put the data about your customer base in context, but also give you a picture of broader engagement trends you might consider tapping into. As we mentioned earlier, for our Virgin America study, we used Razorfish Links, a three-pronged engagement audit to gather and analyze data. It combines critical data sets which lead to a much wider and deeper perspective on the people you are trying to engage. They are: • Consumer Data: A broad survey of customers’ engagement priorities and what channels they prefer to use when they engage with you—combined with a series of in-depth interviews with customers to drill deeper into the data beyond what a survey can gather. In our initial effort, we completed interviews upfront. Going forward, we plan to use interviews to both help us design the survey and help us validate customer Engagement Types. • Social Data: Broad data on the social graph, expanded beyond your customer base, to get as big a picture as possible of online social behavior. This social overlay of publicly available data is important to do first because it may surface things that counter basic assumptions. For instance, you may find the demographics you target use MySpace more than you thought. This information is also needed to calculate your customers’ Consumer Influence Scores. • Behavioral Data: Existing data from your customers on lifetime value (LTV) and how they currently engage with your brand. This helps set a baseline from which you can move forward. Combining and analyzing this data allows you to test the relationships between them. When we did this for Virgin America, we used several types of statistical analysis, which led to a powerful picture of Virgin America customers, and how they fit into the broader social whole.
  • 33. 3. Assess: Determining How Data from Razorfish Links Aligns to Customers and Their Potential Engagement Touchpoints No two customers are exactly alike, yet, by applying analysis to the data from your Razorfish Links engagement audit, Engagement Types specific to your consumer and brand will emerge. We will discuss how to act on these shortly, yet put simply, the data from the Razorfish Links process will help you bucket your customers based on their traditional LTV, their engagement priorities, and the channels they are likely to use, giving you a better idea of how to build your engagement strategy. Because influence is included in the Razorfish Links process, you will also be able to figure out where eLTV plays a role. As we saw with our example about Oprah’s Favorite Things, this can have a surprising influence on where to target your engagement efforts. While it is relatively easy to know what to do with customers that have high LTV and/or high eLTV, here are other kinds of Engagement Types your data assessment might uncover, and the questions these groups might lead to: • High LTV Customers from an older demographic who have low eLTV because they have little interest in social channels. As these customers already have a long-time track record of buying your product, but are not likely to influence others, should they be the focus of your engagement strategy? • Mid-LTV Customers who do not have nearly the LTV of the previous group, but who are early adopters of location-based services and use them frequently to check in at retailers. If you have many retail outlets, does this mean you should look more closely at engaging with this group? • Low-LTV Customers who nonetheless seem the most likely to discuss your brand on social platforms. What potential do these customers have over the long term, and if their individual potential is low, does their habit of “spreading the word” and the number of people they influence make them worth concentrating on? Or are they only influencing other customers with low LTV? We created these three Engagement Types to emphasize the possibility that once influence is factored in, your view of which to focus on may change drastically—but the truth will lie in your own Razorfish Links engagement audit. The Engagement Types for many clients might not demonstrate a huge difference between LTV and eLTV, yet going through the process will give you assurance that you have in-depth knowledge of the potential—both as individual consumers and as influencers—of your customers as you develop your engagement strategy. Once you have been able to divide your customers into Engagement Types, it is time to assess what engagement touchpoints you should use to reach them. We recommend these be separated into three buckets, which will at least help you pick types of channels at this point if not the precise channels themselves. They are: • Tried-and-True: These baseline channels are typically older channels that rank high across all customers and can be used by the vast majority of them—touchpoints such as print, phone, email (transactional and promotional), and postal mail. These in turn can be broken down into two sub-groups: channels where the status quo is working and only needs to be continued, and those that need an innovation injection. For instance, you may notice that customers, at first, are not only willing to subscribe to your emails but to open them—but that interest drops off after the “honeymoon” period. This is a sign the channel has its merits, but that your email strategy has to become more relevant to keep subscribers interested. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 33
  • 34. • Optimization Opportunities: These channels may be ones that are more valuable to one or more of your Engagement Types. This might include somewhat newer channels, like Facebook, where the comfort level for marketers lags behind consumers. • Shiny Objects: These channels are more on the leading edge—like Foursquare, ShopKick or StickyBits—that might fall out of most marketers’ customary list of engagement touchpoints (and may not show a large impact on the bottom line) yet show potential given a marketer’s individual Engagement Types. Because these channels are more experimental, they should be subject to scrutiny and a pre-defined budget, as different in-house constituencies—such as promotions and customer service—evaluate whether they are useful touchpoints over the long term. (See “Shiny Object Fund” tip on next page.) 4. Actions: Moving Customers Along the Value Continuum and Building an Engagement Ecosystem When you develop your Engagement Types, you are doing so based on a moment in time, while the real goals of a successful Sustained Engagement are to build engagement strategies that will increase incremental sales, make customers more loyal, and increase advocacy over time. Because increasing advocacy is a key goal of this step, another part of the assessment is to see how you can move all of your customers up a value continuum composed not just of a customer’s monetary value but also of his or her ability to influence. Over time, well-managed engagements may increase both. If you look back at our hypothetical Engagement Types, you can see how it’s possible that the low LTV customers might tout your brand even more if you engage with them in ways that meet their priorities and match up with the channels they use—and a year or two from now both their LTV and their eLTV may have increased. Now that you have created your Engagement Types, the next step is to understand how they actually engage with your brand, how they wish to engage, and what they expect in those engagements. As Dixon and Ponomareff so succinctly put it, “Running your company as if customers want to talk to you isn’t just expensive; it’s potentially undermining your efforts to build longer-term loyalty.”5 A properly mapped out engagement ecosystem will help you understand how you should invest in engagements based on expected return. To start, you need to get answers to the following questions: • Why are my customers engaging? Are they getting in touch to complain about a product? To locate the nearest insurance agent? To fulfill a coupon? • Which touchpoints are they using? Are they using the phone only after having an unsuccessful engagement on the website? Does our Facebook page give them the information they need or do they prefer to use email? • What do they expect from their engagements? Do they expect a quick, efficient transaction when they get in touch, or are they looking for deeper information? • How can our organization improve the engagement experience? If customers are dissatisfied with our customer service IM, is it because our agents are insufficiently trained to answer their questions? When customers email us, are we answering their questions promptly? • What sort of investment will be required to improve our overall engagement strategy? Is it worth the money to rebuild our Facebook page to give low eLTV customers a better experience? • What is the expected return on investment? If our brand launches a campaign built around check-ins on Foursquare, is it going to pay off in terms of increased foot traffic and sales? 5 “Why Your Customers Don’t Want to Talk to You” July 28, 2010
  • 35. Armed with the answers, you should be able to identify where efficient and low-cost and/or self-service solutions make sense and where you can have more direct engagements in areas where a lot of high-value customers are congregating. In addition, it will give you the ability, in real time, to identify when a high-value customer—both monetarily and influentially—is near, whether in-store or on site, so you can send a notification to the right department. For the purposes of this report, we chose to speak about engagement in general terms. We found you need to understand the top reasons why your consumers engage with you: Was it to buy something? To ask a question? To perform tasks? We should note the reasons will vary depending on your vertical, such as whether you are in the travel business or retail, or sell through other channels (as is the case with consumer packaged goods or pharmaceuticals). Putting Money Aside for Your Shiny Object Fund In this chapter, we have referred more than once to “shiny objects.” In the digital world, these are defined as the platforms and services that are the hot new thing, yet not ubiquitous enough to drive the bottom line. Right now, all of the talk is about location-based services like Foursquare. Yet, just because shiny new objects are hot, does that mean you should be experimenting with Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 35 them? If you think you should be, we advise you to look at maintaining a Shiny Object Fund to experiment with platforms that may hold promise. How do you identify them? One clue may come from how your own customers rank platforms by Engagement Element. Indeed, when we surveyed Virgin America customers, location-based services stood out across all of six Engagement Elements. Clearly, even though few consumers are currently using them, those who are see the business implications, and you might look at them too. Once you have identified and prioritized which platforms are ripe for experimentation, it is important to have a process to validate whether or not they can deliver on their promise. The Shiny Object Fund isn’t merely “funny money” that exists so you can tell your companies and rivals that you have invested in the cutting edge. Having a process to validate shiny objects should tell you that some platforms warrant eventually becoming part of your mainstream engagement efforts, and others do not. tip
  • 36. An Engagement Strategy Is Never Over : Channels, and the Way Consumers Engage with Them, Will Evolve Experienced marketers know that email didn’t kill postal, social hasn’t killed email, YouTube hasn’t killed TV, and the Web hasn’t killed traditional news sources such as the print version of The Wall Street Journal or CNN. Yet, touchpoints do not stay the same forever. They are all evolving based on different pressures in the marketplace. The phone used to be the killer app when it came to engaging a high-value customer; now it might be an exclusive website where he or she gets early access to new products. Most people’s primary technology for interacting in the digital universe used to be the PC, but with the continuing advancement of smart phones that, too, is shifting. Thus, you must maintain constant vigilance and continuously evaluate how every engagement point contributes. Today’s businesses can no longer afford to be siloed. You need to look across all channels: store, Web, mobile, call center, and so on. You will need to have a customer-centric organization in place with a data structure that takes in data from different touchpoints. It’s one thing to say your organization is customer-centric and to cite instances when customers drove product design or you were able to surprise and delight them on Twitter, or your campaign was integrated across channels. It is another to make a capital investment to create a fully engaged enterprise where a customer-centric mentality permeates all departments. Forward-thinking companies are there already. Urban Outfitters responds directly to product inquiries and discussions found in Twitter, Facebook or blogs. Zappos and Boingo address customer service issues head on, regardless of the channel and without a script. Best Buy, Starbucks and Gilt Groupe are actively extending beyond the walls of their stores and their websites to create valuable apps and shopping experiences on platforms such as Facebook. Our own research reinforces the importance of adding value to these popular channels. It also talks about the importance consumers place on feeling Valued. Yet, where are the returns and—from a business perspective—can they truly be sustained? Always remember, a Sustained Engagement is only achieved when the expectations of the Engagement Elements are fulfilled and consumers feel they will receive what they want in return for allowing you to engage with them—over and over again. Ah, consumers. It’s important to note that one reason channels change is because consumers discover new ways to use them. Thus, between ongoing changes in channels, and consumers changing behavior toward them, engagement strategies are never completely, well, complete. Thus, as we said earlier, when we recommend that companies Align, Audit, Assess and take Actions, we are not talking about a linear process, but a virtuous circle. Once a company has taken actions based on the earlier steps, it’s time to start all over again: realigning business objectives based on what was learned from those actions; performing an updated engagement audit; assessing what the audit says about touchpoints; and revising their actions. As this process continues, companies may find they have realized the vision of Sustained Engagement, increased the influence of their most important customers, and ultimately, positively affected their company’s bottom line. To see how this process works in practice, turn to Chapter Four, where we present a case study of Virgin America’s engagement strategy.
  • 37. Building a Single View of the Customer As you implement an ongoing test-and-learn strategy to define and refine your engagement planning across the different segments, it is important to develop an integrated, single customer view across all engagements. This is a two-fold effort: first, you need to actively collect the data to connect the dots to your customers; and second, you need to build a view of your customer that sits across your company’s broad marketing apparatus instead of being siloed into different departments or touchpoints. When it comes to building customer databases we feel like we are back in 1990, when everyone opened their eyes to email and said, “Why don’t we have an email database? We can make customer experiences more efficient than they are with postal and we need to capitalize on it!” Today we are entering a similar era with mobile, when brands will wake up in 2011‐2012 (if not sooner) and say, “Why do we have 16 million consumers in our database and less than 100,000 mobile numbers?” For your database to enable a true 360-degree view of the customer, it has to contain more than contact addresses—it must also have actionable information about what channels your customers use to engage and what their purposes are when they engage with you. Brands are doing the right thing by reaching consumers on social networks such as Twitter and Facebook—as long as that is where their customers are. Yet, they tend to forget they do not own this data and that, at any rate, the hot social platform of the day will likely change. Facebook replaced MySpace—so what will replace Facebook? And when that happens, will you know where your customers went? Building that connective tissue between your traditional CRM database, mobile devices and social media is critical. Surely, building a company-wide view is another BHAG, but necessary for Sustained Engagement. Fortunately, it does not mean you have to take everything into consideration. Today’s technology and business intelligence tools give you a leg up, allowing you to get wider and deeper data and then look for relationships between engagement variables and LTV. The results will reveal segments of low-, medium- and high-LTV with influence value—and key understandings about channel and Engagement Element importance.6 6 For further reading on this topic, see: “One-to-One Marketing to the Masses” and “Fragmented Consumer” in the Razorfish Outlook Report. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 37 tip
  • 38. Virgin America: Creating an Itinerary That Identifies and Leverages Customer Influence Doing the first Razorfish Links engagement audit with Virgin America proved a great test of our vision for gathering sharper insight into the engagement and influence of customers across touchpoints. This was for several reasons. First, Virgin America is a brand built around customer loyalty; thus, many of those who fly the airline are deeply engaged with the brand, some through its innovative frequent flyer program, Elevate, which certainly delivers on making its members feel Valued. It is, simply, a more re-warding program than what many other airlines offer, giving customers five points for every dollar they spend on travel and having no blackout dates or restrictions on travel rewards. Second, Virgin America is unusual among many major brands in that it does not use any mass media in its marketing, instead relying heavily on word-of-mouth. (Admittedly, there may be some halo effect from the Virgin brand’s many other businesses.) This reduced the number of touchpoints we would have to account for in our research; it also meant that its marketing, and its customers’ influence, are inextricably linked. However, we should note that some newer brands—from Starbucks to Google to Zappos—have also built their brands using minimal mass marketing.
  • 39. chapter 04 Third, though our research did enable us to split Virgin America customers into distinct Engagement Types, the overall customer profile looked as though it would surface rich engagement and influence data. Its loyal customers fly it despite the fact it is often more expensive than other carriers—even if a less expensive option is offered—and the customer base also engages with the brand across a dynamic set of touchpoints, from the telephone to mobile. This would allow us to get a good grasp of how consumers use all sorts of channels. With that, let us present a Virgin America case study that brings you through the Align, Audit, Assess, Actions process. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 39
  • 40. Align: On the Ground , Looking at Virgin America ’s Current Customer Landscape As we outlined above, Virgin America is heavily reliant on word-of-mouth. Therefore, it’s no surprise it jumped early into social media and has a reputation for being a cutting-edge social brand. Its Twitter account, @VirginAmerica, though not a strict customer service channel, has more than 125,000 followers. It also has a Facebook page with more than 68,000 fans—not bad for a relatively small airline brand. However, it had gone into social largely on instinct. “We felt early on our customers were likely to use social channels, and the following we have gotten confirmed this,” said Porter Gale, the airline’s Vice President of Marketing. “However, we realized we didn’t know nearly as much as we wanted about what our customers wanted to get from us in these places. And, we didn’t know what the value of our more social customers was.” Like Virgin America, Razorfish and Loyalty Lab (which also works with Virgin America) wanted to get a firmer grasp on what it was getting out of its social platforms. Additionally—and these are things not specific to Virgin America—we at Razorfish were find-ing that the proliferation of potential engagement channels was yielding more questions than answers. We wanted to find out things like what value we could put on different kinds of engagement, and when a touchpoint was reaching diminishing returns; we wanted to be able to use data on customer engagement attitudes and behavior to better select the right touchpoints. To do all of this, we need a much clearer understanding of Virgin America customers.
  • 41. Audit: Using Razorfish Links to Determine How Channels Get the Virgin America Customer Airborne We entered the Razorfish Links process knowing that, because it uses three different types of data, it would help Virgin America get a more accurate assessment of the engagement behavior of its customer base both now and in the future. Even if channels and engagement priorities change, the methodology could be re-used a year or two from now to take the pulse of the company’s customers once again. Though this is covered elsewhere in the book, the data sets we examined with Loyalty Lab drew from were a survey of 5,600 Virgin America customers along with 15 one-to-one interviews of the company’s customers. Added to that was publicly available, anonymous social connection data from 100,000 Internet users, and existing information from Virgin America on its customers’ engagement and lifetime value (LTV) , allowing us to look at both self-reported attitudes and preferences, and independently tracked behavior. “Especially when one takes into account the ever-expanding roster of channels, we needed to look beyond our customers’ self-reported insights, and beyond our customer base, to get a full picture of how we might better engage with our customers,” Ms. Gale said. So what did the Razorfish Links process uncover about Virgin America customers? The answer follows. Assess: Gaining Altitude with the Virgin America Engagement Types We used cluster analysis to look at the relationship between engagement preferences and LTV as well as the relationship between a customer’s power to influence and LTV; in Virgin America’s case, four clear Engagement Types emerged. On the following pages are sketches of each and the implications that each group has for the company’s engagement strategy: Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 41
  • 42.
  • 43. Engagement Type 1 SOCIALLY SAVVY Their Value: The Socially Savvy are frequent flyers on Virgin America and thereby have high LTV. They are likely to be Elevate members, and have, by far, the highest Consumer Influence Score. They also use the Internet more than other Engagement Type and rank second in mobile users. This group is very well educated and earns a high income, giving them the means to travel on Virgin America and an ability to appreciate the company’s unique offering. The Implications: The Socially Savvy need an optimized digital experience if Virgin America is to keep a long-term lock on them. As they demonstrate a strong propensity to influence, Virgin America will also need to tap into their social media behavior, by making it easy for them to share their experience with their extended network. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 43 Blane: “I look forward to a long flight.”
  • 44.
  • 45. Engagement Type 2 TRADITIONALLY ENGAGED Their Value: The Traditionally Engaged have high LTV but relatively low eLTV; they are not that interested in social media, and the limited amount of time they have may be why. This group contains the highest number of Elevate members, and also uses the most mobile apps. It is most likely to open emails from Virgin America. The Implications: The Traditionally Engaged may not be social, but they are certainly worth retaining. There are two ways to do this: by optimizing some older touchpoints, like email, and focusing more on mobile. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 45 Kate: “I only have so many hours in the day. ”
  • 46.
  • 47. Engagement Type 3 UP-AND-COMERS Their Value: The Up-and-Comers are a group in transition. They are moving from more traditional methods of engagement into social media and mobile phone usage. They text frequently, and use the Internet for recreation and networking. Their presence on Facebook is significant. The Implications: While their income does not allow them to be frequent flyers on Virgin America, The Up-and-Comers can be very vocal about their experiences. This potential emerging customer has the ability to influence others in his or her network and should not be neglected. By ensuring positive experiences, future relationships with them will be secured. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 47 Fontaine: “I’m loyal if I have a good, personalized experience.”
  • 48.
  • 49. Engagement Type 4 CONVENTIONALISTS Their Value: From a technological standpoint, The Conventionalists are clearly in the background. They desire personal interactions with the companies they do business with, either face-to-face or on the phone, and are low income, and therefore low LTV. Since they do not use much technology, they also have low social influence—and no interest in being a brand advocate or in receiving brand messages. The Implications. Since The Conventionalists are not technologically sophisticated, and desire a personal connection, Virgin America will have to focus on efficiency to drive the bottom line if it’s to cater to this audience. The question becomes whether this investment will be worth it, as some of this Engagement Type will have the potential to get closer to center stage by becoming Traditional Engagers as their travel profile changes. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 49 Brad: “I’m not just another customer.”
  • 50. The differences in loyalty to the airline, channel usage, and interest in social media—or lack thereof—among the four Engagement Types underscore the seemingly infinite list of engagement scenarios Virgin America could employ to satisfy its customers. But which Engagement Types and channels deserve the most attention? Should the company focus efforts on The Traditional Engagers who are low on social usage, but have high LTV? Or pay more attention to The Up-and-Comers and The Socially Savvy because they are more likely to spread the word? And what about The Conventionalists? Given that they prefer usually high-cost person-to-person interaction, is there a way to satisfy their needs without busting the budget?
  • 51. Actions: Reaching Cruising Altitude on an Engagement Strategy The beauty of being able to break down Virgin America customers into four Engagement Types is that potential engagement strategies begin to flow almost immediately from them. By being able to determine not only LTV, but eLTV, for the Engagement Types—and combining those metrics with the channels each Engagement Type prefers to use when engaging with the airline—some channels, and engagement needs, begin to look more important. Others, frankly, don’t. So what sort of recommendations can we give to Virgin America based on this information? The four Engagement Types are separated along two primary dimensions—their ability and willingness to fly with Virgin America and their willingness to engage in social media. Thus, the trick is to exploit both, in ways that maximize return. Here are potential actions for each group: • Socially Savvy: These are Virgin America’s most valuable customers because they are both willing to buy and because they reach out to others. The engagement strategy will need to satisfy both needs. Channels that meet their engagement priorities—accompanied with ways to share that experience—will help their LTV and influence feed off one another. For this group, Virgin America could stress both email and major social platforms such as Facebook and Twitter; it can optimize email by making sure the content meets this group’s needs, and also make that content easily shareable, therefore taking advantage of the The Socially Savvys’ LTV and eLTV. • Traditionally Engaged: These customers, while not as high value as The Socially Savvy, deserve a more focused engagement strategy of their own—particularly because of their heavy mobile usage. Since Virgin America isn’t currently very active in the channel, it should consider building mobile touchpoints that fit the group’s engagement priorities. Especially in mobile, airlines have a major opportunity to bring consumers utility; in Virgin America’s case, this is a channel it can no longer overlook. • Up-and-Comers: The customers that are part of this Engagement Type are neither as social as The Socially Savvy nor as heavy on mobile use as The Traditionally Engaged, and their income doesn’t allow them to travel as much as either of those two groups. However, what makes them stand out is their potential—they could be The Socially Savvy and Traditionally Engaged of the future. Because they are transitioning into heavier social and mobile use, some of the same touchpoint refinement that Virgin America could undertake for the preceding two groups might also work for them. Building out the current Virgin America Facebook page—which is primarily a fan site—would also be a smart move, given The Up-and-Comers’ heavy presence on that social platform. And, Facebook would be a low-cost channel making it an easy place for Virgin America to experiment. One thing to remember about The Up-and-Comers: despite their relatively low value, they should be treated with special consideration because they have few experiences with the brand, and each experience will play a big part in their perception, positive or negative. • Conventionalists: This group presents a challenge, because of their low social influence and interest in personal interaction instead of more cost-effective digital platforms. While they may adapt to some of the newer touchpoints, the best fit for them might lie in the future, when technology is more able to emulate the personal touch they desire. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 51
  • 52. While these broad actions emerge for the Engagement Types, we also discovered other nuances through studying Virgin America customers. Over the years, our research has consistently demonstrated that the more channels through which you engage your consumer, the better. However, we also know that more does not necessarily mean better, if those channels, either together or individually, fail to deliver on the Engagement Elements. In fact, during the course of our evaluation, we noticed Virgin America’s high-value customers opened fewer of the company’s emails and had fewer clickthroughs within the emails than one would have assumed. This led us to recommend that the company take a look at whether it was sending out emails more frequently than even its high-value customers wanted. While higher value and loyal customers are more interested in getting communications from the company compared to others, there is a tipping point at which they start tuning out. Couple the emails with all the messages coming at them wherever they go and we are reminded over and over that we are battling for the consumer’s attention while trying not to overwhelm her. The obvious fix is to work on not only message frequency, but also on relevance, using tools such as micro-targeting by interest to pique interest. Hitting the Ground Running With New Engagement Opportunities Virgin America, while a brand very active in digital—and social channels—still had much to gain from going through the Razorfish Links process and getting to know the engagement attitudes and channel usage of its customers better. By amplifying some underused touchpoints, focusing on others for the first time, tweaking strategy on a few others, and delivering on customers’ engagement priorities, it has an opportunity not only to continue to please current customers, but influence new ones as well. For a word-of-mouth brand like Virgin America, this could be engagement gold.
  • 53. The New Customer Loyalty: Finding the Right Way to Engage By David Rosen, Senior VP, Strategy and Channel Development, Loyalty Lab As marketers like Virgin America try to build Sustained Engagements, they need to leverage one program that is most likely already part of their marketing arsenal: the loyalty program. Our in-depth research of Virgin America’s guest base using Razorfish Links exposed a rich picture of loyalty that included how often and where customers traveled, their usage of Virgin America’s co-branded credit card and their willingness to pay more for — and recommend — Virgin America. You will note that Elevate members did not fit neatly into the Engagement Types discovered by Razorfish. As with Virgin America, you may find those in your loyalty program have a mix of attributes—they may favor different platforms or have different priorities about what they want from you when they get in touch. Some may have high LTV but relatively low influence, while others will be as important to your brand as influencers as they are as customers. True, loyalty program members are not all alike; fortunately, loyalty programs do not have to be one-size-fits-all either. As with touchpoints, the options for exciting customers in a loyalty program are exploding — including discounts and rebates, elite benefits, digital rewards, exclusive access, friend-to-friend offers and “once-in-a-lifetime” experiences. At Loyalty Lab, we have found a successful loyalty program is about more than a variety of incentives; it’s also about delivering the right message to the right person at the right time with the right motivator. The most successful loyalty marketers optimize their marketing investment by determining through testing the best combinations of segment, next action and motivator—driving faster, more efficient migration up the loyalty curve. As you implement a loyalty program, it is also important to keep in mind that because customers join in exchange for something more—such programs provide companies with numerous levers for strengthening both direct and extended value that cannot necessarily be used in other marketing initiatives. Among other things, loyalty programs are a platform for advocacy. Marketers get a much richer and more accurate depiction of their customers’ value and influence. By crossing high value and high connectivity, brand ambassadors can be given the exclusive treatment that makes them want to spread positive word-of-mouth about a brand. Also, tools such as the “My Account” function can become the hub for capturing things like Facebook engagement, as well as being a go-to location for discovering new ways to interact with the brand, such as mobile applications and communities. Loyalty programs can also be the launching pad for Sustained Engagement. They are a pathway for permission for closer and more frequent contact with your best customers. Long-term value always begins with a first connection—a purchase, a sign-up, a “follow” or a “like.” Strong loyalty marketers use enrollment to learn more about their new members, determine their potential, and identify what motivation will move customers to become further involved in the program. After that, the journey really gets rolling, as a loyalty program is the single best tool for focusing the dialog and continuously driving, recognizing and rewarding members. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 53
  • 54. The Transitionals: An Encapsulation of How Engagement is Changing As we analyzed the research from the Razorfish Links study with Virgin America and Loyalty Lab, one age group stood out to us—not because they tended to have high lifetime value (LTV) , or were big adopters of new technologies—rather, they best encapsulated the state of transition consumers and marketers are experiencing. It is a place where touchpoints— and the ways consumers interact with them—are continually dynamic, and often surprising. We call this group, aged 25 to 34, The Transitionals, because their behavior didn’t neatly fit in between the two other age groups we studied—the 24 to 30 group and those 45-plus. Rather, they exemplify one characteristic from each demographic: acting like the younger group, yet thinking like the older group. Like their younger counterparts, they may sometimes grab for their iPhone to Tweet about their dissatisfaction about a product or service. On the other hand, when asked to quantify the importance of the six Engagement Elements, their answers resembled those of their elders.
  • 55. chapter 05 Before we discuss them further, we should point out one very important thing: while right now, this group falls into the demo often referred to as Generation X, we expect that, as this generation ages, a new group of Transitionals will take their place. In other words, we believe that as technology continues to evolve, there will always be a group caught between the feelings of their elders and the behavior of those who are younger than they are. So, if right now this group is Generation X, a few years from now, it will be the next group that takes on these caught-in-between characteristics. It is worth taking a closer look at The Transitionals’ behavior because they are fascinating predictors of the engagement future we are already seeing, when channel importance and the way consumers want to interact with brands will not necessarily go hand-in-hand. Here is how this mapped out for The Transitionals in terms of engagement philosophy and engagement channels: Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 55
  • 56. • Engagement Philosophy: While the Engagement Elements ranked in the same order across all age groups, the Transitionals statistically were not as interested in feeling Valued, or in Efficiency or Trust as the younger demo. In fact, the 45+ group and the 25-34 year-old group agreed on the statistical importance of only one Engagement Element—Relevance. • Engagement Channels: The disconnect between engagement philosophy and channel use holds true across all age groups, yet The Transitionals are still particularly worth looking at because for them it is more pronounced. Additionally, they show a bigger disconnect between the new channels they adopt and the ones they use when they are trying to engage with a brand. While those in the 45+ group steer clear of services like Yelp, Facebook and mobile applications, The Transitionals are much more likely to use these channels. The Transitionals are also less likely to use channels that are still popular with the 45+ group, like the phone, email and postal mail.
  • 57. For marketers, The Transitionals are critical for understanding the next engagement wave—and the ones that may follow after that. As technologies and channels continue to proliferate, we will likely continue to see similar waves of adoption and transition roll across age groups. This means to speak across multiple generations and meet their engagement needs, it is critical to have multiple touchpoints. A 25-year-old may want a transaction conducted via a mobile app to be efficient; a 35-year-old may use that same app but be looking for it to deliver on a different Engagement Element. It is hard to predict at this point, but, as we said above, we expect there may always be a middle group of consumers in transition as new channels emerge; if this is so, it will require a calculated approach to CRM. After all, age groups have never existed in isolation. The younger generation may continue to influence the behavior of older ones, but they may never have the same priorities when it comes to their engagement needs. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 57
  • 58. Conclusion: The Beginning of Understanding Consumers and Engagement This may be the conclusion of our first “Liminal” report, but to us, it feels like the beginning— the beginning of discovering the connections between the ever-expanding roster of engagement touchpoints and what customers really want when they use them to engage with you. Of course, this book has also been deeply immersed in data. We hope, as you’ve read it, you’ve learned many specifics about the contemporary state of how consumers use channels; how they perceive engagement and the role social influence will increasingly play in many marketers’ strategies. We also hope you’ve learned some approaches to help you identify how your engagement strategy should map out going forward. It’s no longer enough to optimize current platforms but to constantly experiment—as consumers do—with newer ones that could have major impacts on your business.
  • 59. C However, the specifics in “Liminal” shouldn’t distract from its real point—and that’s to put a stake in the ground recognizing that the nature of engagement is changing as channels proliferate and consumer behavior changes. Thus, the Razorfish Links approach we took towards research in this report should be considered foundational—the building blocks for what we hope are annual studies by Razorfish of the liminality of consumer engagement. Several years from now, we may find it strange that people ever questioned whether mobile would become a dominant platform, or that Facebook, to some companies, was once thought of as a marketing curiosity. Liminal: The 2011 Razorfish Customer Engagement Report 59 We don’t know. What we do know is that whatever we discovered about consumer engagement this year will change, and we would like to have you with us as the journey continues in years to come.
  • 60. Privacy and Permission: Four Key Considerations All Marketers Should Think About Every time you browse the Internet in search of a new house, text a $10 donation to a charity, respond to an offer to receive more information about the iPad or check the balance of your 401(k) from your smartphone, you demonstrate trust that the information you choose to share will be protected. But, you also know these activities can be tracked and used by marketers to target you based on those behaviors. As the focus of this book is how to use online behavior to build richer engagement experiences, it is important that we address the front-burner issue of privacy. The online advertising, marketing and publishing industries are engaged in an ever-progressing and broadening debate about the proper handling of Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and the proper use of behaviorally targeted advertising. Here are four key considerations we think all marketers should ponder: