During the 2010 BCAIM Contagious Conference, Concerto Marketing conducted a real-time survey of delegates using handheld electronic devices. Over 200 attendees took part in this survey about key issues, trends and topics impacting marketing professionals and our industry today.
During the 2010 BCAIM Contagious Conference, Concerto Marketing conducted a real-time survey of delegates using handheld electronic devices. Over 200 attendees took part in this survey about key issues, trends and topics impacting marketing professionals and our industry today.
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Mediajcsmyers
A brand, wrote Stephen King in 1971, “has to be a coherent totality, not a lot of bits.” The founder of JWT’s planning department knew that brands are most effective when all their elements come together as a single unique personality. What would King make of today’s fragmented world of marketing where communication is delivered quite literally in bits: a Facebook comment, a 140-character Tweet, a Pinterest image.
The driver for this is, of course, social media. In every sector of society where individuals and organizations interact, social media has emerged as a disruptive force. While the benefits of social media to marketers are many – opening a two-way dialogue with consumers, influencing word-of-mouth, building rich stores of data – the challenges for brands can’t be ignored. In particular, brands must consider how to tell a coherent story across a growing array of platforms and amid a cacophony of consumer and competitor voices.
How can marketers take advantage of all that social media offers while protecting the integrity of the central brand idea? Is it even realistic that one idea can support conversations with millions of consumers across hundreds of platforms in multiple formats? The answer is an unequivocal yes. Given the demands of the today’s media landscape, it’s never been more important for all marketing efforts to be unified under a powerful brand idea.
Delivering on the Promise: Five Ways to Drive Brand Effectiveness with Social...NM Incite
Building successful brands hinges on applying social media insights at every stage of the brand lifecycle. This white paper outlines 5 ways to effectively employ social media to drive positive brand equity and ultimately refine your strategy to create deeper, emotional engagement with your consumers.
According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project half of all adults in the US use social networking sites. Despite its obvious appeal as a marketing channel, social media is far from achieving "equal citizenship" status among the marketing mix, particularly for Business-to-Business marketers. This benchmark report will examine the pressures and challenges social media presents for B2B marketing, and the path taken by top performing companies to achieve success. Aberdeen's research shows that top performing companies have integrated social media marketing with existing, core marketing channels and processes.
In this ebook, Eric Paquette and Kevin Clancy deliver a first-hand account about how marketers have built a superior base of knowledge about their Brand Advocates to create a true competitive advantage.
Communicating an employer’s brand entails a lot more than merely having a careers page on your website and a LinkedIn company profile. All companies have a story to tell, not only about their products and services, but also about why they’re a great (or terrible) place to work. These stories sometimes lurk in the “below the surface” world of word-of-mouth, namely the mouths of employees, of ex-employees, of investors, and of executives. But companies can no longer afford to allow these stories to remain part of the enterprise’s collective subconscious. An employer brand disconnected from the companies other marketing messages, or worse yet ignored, represents real risk that can be experienced as an ever-increasing difficulty when it comes to attracting, hiring and retaining talented employees.
In this presentation, Todd Nilson, a 15-year recruiting consultant and social media strategist, will outline some leading practices for an effective employer branding approach:
* Getting started or Cultural Anthropology for Business
* Laying out your employer brand strategy
* Considerations for integrating your employer brand with your overall marketing and branding efforts
* Matching up your social media campaigns with word of mouth marketing
* Revving up your Careers Pages for maximum effect
* Your active and passive digital employer brand
* Metrics, measurement and accountability for your employer branding
Followers, Fans and Fairytale Endings: How to Monetize Social Media.Thomas Marzano
The latest study from iStrategy features contributions and expert guidance from leading digital marketers - including Facebook's Director of Sales, Matt Henman and McDonalds' Director of Social Media, Rick Wion - on how to monetize social media.
It's the end of 2010, and a majority of companies have ventured into social media as a publishing channel. Yet many aren't seeing the results they'd hoped for. That's because of the approach.
This whitepaper explores the concept of Engagement, Influence and Activation as end goals to corporate social media, not as a publishing channel but as a way to better connect, share and interact with your markets.
In many ways, the electricity industry makes an unlikely candidate for disruption. Not much changed between the 1880s, when Thomas Edison began building power stations, and the start of the 21st century. Top business leaders rarely had to think about electricity. They got their electricity from the power plant, or the local utility, or the government, and had little say in how it was produced, delivered, or managed. Utility executives, for their part, could make and execute long-term plans with a great deal of security. Demand tended to rise along with the economy; natural monopolies were the norm.
No longer. Several coincident, significant transformations are causing a revolution in the way electricity — the vital fuel of global commerce and human comfort — is produced, distributed, stored, and marketed. A top-down, centralized system is devolving into one that is much more distributed and interactive. The mix of generation is shifting from high carbon to lower carbon, and, often, to no carbon. In many regions, the electricity business is transforming from a monopoly to a highly competitive arena.
The past five years have been good to the auto industry. Following a cyclical downturn and a series of bankruptcies and harsh restructurings in the wake of the 2008–09 financial crisis, U.S. vehicle sales have been strong, especially for highly profitable trucks and SUVs. Globally, automobiles have grown more attractive than ever, with all kinds of exciting new technologies — impressive powertrain systems, mobile connectivity, advanced driver-assistance systems, maintenance monitoring, and the like — further exciting car buyers.
In the eyes of many in the industry, the future looks equally bright. Oil and gas prices appear likely to remain reasonably low for some time, encouraging big-margin SUV sales. The technology inside autos will continue to grow more sophisticated and affordable.
Automakers feel confident investing large sums of money in developing new features for their cars, particularly advanced safety and navigation options. Many suspect that they can make fully autonomous vehicles (AVs), machines that can drive themselves anywhere, under any traffic and weather conditions, without a human ever having to take the wheel, a reality within a relatively short time, as little as five or 10 years. That, in turn, would open huge new markets, it is hoped, as buyers — large fleets as well as individuals — flock to driverless vehicles and associated services.
There is much truth in the vision of fully autonomous vehicles. Certainly, there will come a time when commuters can relax, eat breakfast, and write emails on the way to work as their robotic taxis transport them on algorithmically chosen routes in perfect safety. But as the recent fatal crash of a Tesla in semi-autonomous mode sadly made clear, it will probably take decades, not years, for this vision to become a common reality.
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Mediajcsmyers
A brand, wrote Stephen King in 1971, “has to be a coherent totality, not a lot of bits.” The founder of JWT’s planning department knew that brands are most effective when all their elements come together as a single unique personality. What would King make of today’s fragmented world of marketing where communication is delivered quite literally in bits: a Facebook comment, a 140-character Tweet, a Pinterest image.
The driver for this is, of course, social media. In every sector of society where individuals and organizations interact, social media has emerged as a disruptive force. While the benefits of social media to marketers are many – opening a two-way dialogue with consumers, influencing word-of-mouth, building rich stores of data – the challenges for brands can’t be ignored. In particular, brands must consider how to tell a coherent story across a growing array of platforms and amid a cacophony of consumer and competitor voices.
How can marketers take advantage of all that social media offers while protecting the integrity of the central brand idea? Is it even realistic that one idea can support conversations with millions of consumers across hundreds of platforms in multiple formats? The answer is an unequivocal yes. Given the demands of the today’s media landscape, it’s never been more important for all marketing efforts to be unified under a powerful brand idea.
Delivering on the Promise: Five Ways to Drive Brand Effectiveness with Social...NM Incite
Building successful brands hinges on applying social media insights at every stage of the brand lifecycle. This white paper outlines 5 ways to effectively employ social media to drive positive brand equity and ultimately refine your strategy to create deeper, emotional engagement with your consumers.
According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project half of all adults in the US use social networking sites. Despite its obvious appeal as a marketing channel, social media is far from achieving "equal citizenship" status among the marketing mix, particularly for Business-to-Business marketers. This benchmark report will examine the pressures and challenges social media presents for B2B marketing, and the path taken by top performing companies to achieve success. Aberdeen's research shows that top performing companies have integrated social media marketing with existing, core marketing channels and processes.
In this ebook, Eric Paquette and Kevin Clancy deliver a first-hand account about how marketers have built a superior base of knowledge about their Brand Advocates to create a true competitive advantage.
Communicating an employer’s brand entails a lot more than merely having a careers page on your website and a LinkedIn company profile. All companies have a story to tell, not only about their products and services, but also about why they’re a great (or terrible) place to work. These stories sometimes lurk in the “below the surface” world of word-of-mouth, namely the mouths of employees, of ex-employees, of investors, and of executives. But companies can no longer afford to allow these stories to remain part of the enterprise’s collective subconscious. An employer brand disconnected from the companies other marketing messages, or worse yet ignored, represents real risk that can be experienced as an ever-increasing difficulty when it comes to attracting, hiring and retaining talented employees.
In this presentation, Todd Nilson, a 15-year recruiting consultant and social media strategist, will outline some leading practices for an effective employer branding approach:
* Getting started or Cultural Anthropology for Business
* Laying out your employer brand strategy
* Considerations for integrating your employer brand with your overall marketing and branding efforts
* Matching up your social media campaigns with word of mouth marketing
* Revving up your Careers Pages for maximum effect
* Your active and passive digital employer brand
* Metrics, measurement and accountability for your employer branding
Followers, Fans and Fairytale Endings: How to Monetize Social Media.Thomas Marzano
The latest study from iStrategy features contributions and expert guidance from leading digital marketers - including Facebook's Director of Sales, Matt Henman and McDonalds' Director of Social Media, Rick Wion - on how to monetize social media.
It's the end of 2010, and a majority of companies have ventured into social media as a publishing channel. Yet many aren't seeing the results they'd hoped for. That's because of the approach.
This whitepaper explores the concept of Engagement, Influence and Activation as end goals to corporate social media, not as a publishing channel but as a way to better connect, share and interact with your markets.
In many ways, the electricity industry makes an unlikely candidate for disruption. Not much changed between the 1880s, when Thomas Edison began building power stations, and the start of the 21st century. Top business leaders rarely had to think about electricity. They got their electricity from the power plant, or the local utility, or the government, and had little say in how it was produced, delivered, or managed. Utility executives, for their part, could make and execute long-term plans with a great deal of security. Demand tended to rise along with the economy; natural monopolies were the norm.
No longer. Several coincident, significant transformations are causing a revolution in the way electricity — the vital fuel of global commerce and human comfort — is produced, distributed, stored, and marketed. A top-down, centralized system is devolving into one that is much more distributed and interactive. The mix of generation is shifting from high carbon to lower carbon, and, often, to no carbon. In many regions, the electricity business is transforming from a monopoly to a highly competitive arena.
The past five years have been good to the auto industry. Following a cyclical downturn and a series of bankruptcies and harsh restructurings in the wake of the 2008–09 financial crisis, U.S. vehicle sales have been strong, especially for highly profitable trucks and SUVs. Globally, automobiles have grown more attractive than ever, with all kinds of exciting new technologies — impressive powertrain systems, mobile connectivity, advanced driver-assistance systems, maintenance monitoring, and the like — further exciting car buyers.
In the eyes of many in the industry, the future looks equally bright. Oil and gas prices appear likely to remain reasonably low for some time, encouraging big-margin SUV sales. The technology inside autos will continue to grow more sophisticated and affordable.
Automakers feel confident investing large sums of money in developing new features for their cars, particularly advanced safety and navigation options. Many suspect that they can make fully autonomous vehicles (AVs), machines that can drive themselves anywhere, under any traffic and weather conditions, without a human ever having to take the wheel, a reality within a relatively short time, as little as five or 10 years. That, in turn, would open huge new markets, it is hoped, as buyers — large fleets as well as individuals — flock to driverless vehicles and associated services.
There is much truth in the vision of fully autonomous vehicles. Certainly, there will come a time when commuters can relax, eat breakfast, and write emails on the way to work as their robotic taxis transport them on algorithmically chosen routes in perfect safety. But as the recent fatal crash of a Tesla in semi-autonomous mode sadly made clear, it will probably take decades, not years, for this vision to become a common reality.
In 2014, I spent a lot of time around soccer fans. I regularly hung out at the sports bars frequented by Los Angeles’s official Real Madrid supporters club. My friends constantly shared with me, via email and social media, soccer-related websites, articles, and videos highlighting soccer fans and their love of the sport — and I clicked on them. I posted on soccer blogs, and rang up a bunch of credit card purchases in Brazil in July, during the World Cup. If my phone, the sites I visited, and the merchants I patronized had been collecting all the data associated with the places I went, the people I spoke to, and even the purchases I made, an analyst could easily have concluded that I was an ardent soccer fan (or, as people outside the U.S. would say, a football fan). But I’m not; at least, I wasn’t. At the time, I was studying sports fans as part of a research project with Havas Sports and Entertainment, to understand their passions and how they engage with brands — especially the brands that sponsor players, teams, and events in hopes of giving sports fans the experiences that they want. In doing so, I wound up becoming a case study in my own project.
My data trail marked me as a soccer fan, and continues to do so to this day. As I go about my business online, I am continually served automatically generated soccer-related recommendations and ads.
My experience is, of course, not unique. The widespread use of mobile devices has shifted the way we think about, understand, and participate in the world. Sometimes by permission (but often without our awareness), we continually funnel our locations, habits, desires, and selves into a pool of knowledge that every company wants to drink from in order to better understand and serve us. Each of us increasingly leaves behind trails of data that become crucial in shaping our digital identity.
B2B Marketing: 5 Outstanding Ways to Leverage Social Media in a B2B Setting b...Julie Bevacqua
Julie Bevacqua shares tools to brand yourself as a market leader, such as Social Connector and Jigsaw, and social media platforms such as LinkedIn and Plaxo.
by John Bell, Global Managing Director, Social@Ogilvy.
The following is a plan describing a simple and practical way for business leaders to think about gaining the benefits of social behaviors (and the technologies supporting those behaviors).
In many ways the promise of a ‘social business’ is to get us back to what we care about — people working together to create something of greater value than they could have if they had remained unconnected and apart.
eROI The Measurement Model: Old and New Puget Sound AMA June 9, 2010Dylan Boyd
Keeping ahead of marketing and advertising trends is a challenge. An even steeper hill to climb? Getting a handle on which trends best suit your company’s needs, goals and budget. And, in this market it’s vital that whichever techniques you do use supply you with results that are measurable.
Join eROI to learn the top 10 things that can shape your ROI model for 2009 and beyond.
WHAT'S IN IT FOR YOU?
Which online trends you should be watching
How storytelling is the new campaign
What tools you can use to listen, learn and measure
Determine what success is and how to define it
http://www.convergeenterprise.com : Converge Enterprise is a leading Cloud CRM company offering an innovative collaboration network portal connecting Customers, Partners and Employees through social and mobile cloud technology.
In a spin-off of her lively article of the same title, marketing strategist Kelli Schmith shares her down-to-earth perspectives on approaching social media for the first time. If you’ve been tempted (or cajoled) into creating a Facebook fan page or tweeting your latest sales promotion, start with this webinar. You’ll learn what really determines whether you’re ready for social media and what questions you need to ask yourself before you dive in.
In the webinar, we discussed: Why Facebook and Twitter, etc., might (or might not) be the place for everyone. The 2 questions you have to ask (and answer) before you jump in. Three (safe) ways to dip your toe into social media.
Social Activation chapter of our Tech Trends 2014 report.
Includes Sony Pictures social analytics case study, applying advanced modelling techniques to optimise marketing spend between traditional and digital channels.
Gaining and Maintaining a Competitive Advantage with SOCIAL MEDIA (WSI - Cyprus)WSI (Cyprus)
You keep hearing about social media and how it's spreading like wildfire. But as a business
person with a crazy schedule - saddled with the added stress of rocky economic times and a
shrinking marketing budget - you need to know: Is there any real business value to social media,
or is it mostly buzz? And if there's value, how on earth will I have time to learn it and use it
effectively?
INTEGRATED MARKETING - GETTING IT RIGHTHnyB Untangle
Social Media Strategy & Delivery for Business. HnyB Untangle – A Specialist Social Branding and Promotion Company delivering Social Branding, Social Advertising, Social Marketing and Social PR solutions.
HnyB Untangle is an agency fuelled by passion to create brands which are loved by people and is driven by smart thinking.
HnyB Untangle engage Social Branding opportunities with innovative solutions crafted to produce measurable results.
HnyB Untangle's brand of creative strategic solutions are defined by our people, our processes, our network and exhaustive experience of our team.
An Conghui, president of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group and CEO of Geely Auto Group, explains the future of flying cars and the value of an international brand.
For Greg Lehmkuhl, president and CEO of Lineage Logistics, temperature-controlled supply chains for perishables are one of the world’s next great platforms.
As more and more companies in a range of industries adopt machine learning and more advanced AI algorithms, the ability to provide understandable explanations for different stakeholders becomes critical. If people don’t know why an AI system made a decision, they may not trust the outcome.
"𝑩𝑬𝑮𝑼𝑵 𝑾𝑰𝑻𝑯 𝑻𝑱 𝑰𝑺 𝑯𝑨𝑳𝑭 𝑫𝑶𝑵𝑬"
𝐓𝐉 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐬 (𝐓𝐉 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐦𝐮𝐧𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬) is a professional event agency that includes experts in the event-organizing market in Vietnam, Korea, and ASEAN countries. We provide unlimited types of events from Music concerts, Fan meetings, and Culture festivals to Corporate events, Internal company events, Golf tournaments, MICE events, and Exhibitions.
𝐓𝐉 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐬 provides unlimited package services including such as Event organizing, Event planning, Event production, Manpower, PR marketing, Design 2D/3D, VIP protocols, Interpreter agency, etc.
Sports events - Golf competitions/billiards competitions/company sports events: dynamic and challenging
⭐ 𝐅𝐞𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞𝐝 𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐬:
➢ 2024 BAEKHYUN [Lonsdaleite] IN HO CHI MINH
➢ SUPER JUNIOR-L.S.S. THE SHOW : Th3ee Guys in HO CHI MINH
➢FreenBecky 1st Fan Meeting in Vietnam
➢CHILDREN ART EXHIBITION 2024: BEYOND BARRIERS
➢ WOW K-Music Festival 2023
➢ Winner [CROSS] Tour in HCM
➢ Super Show 9 in HCM with Super Junior
➢ HCMC - Gyeongsangbuk-do Culture and Tourism Festival
➢ Korean Vietnam Partnership - Fair with LG
➢ Korean President visits Samsung Electronics R&D Center
➢ Vietnam Food Expo with Lotte Wellfood
"𝐄𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐲 𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐢𝐬 𝐚 𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲, 𝐚 𝐬𝐩𝐞𝐜𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐣𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐧𝐞𝐲. 𝐖𝐞 𝐚𝐥𝐰𝐚𝐲𝐬 𝐛𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐞𝐯𝐞 𝐭𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐬𝐡𝐨𝐫𝐭𝐥𝐲 𝐲𝐨𝐮 𝐰𝐢𝐥𝐥 𝐛𝐞 𝐚 𝐩𝐚𝐫𝐭 𝐨𝐟 𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐬."
Company Valuation webinar series - Tuesday, 4 June 2024FelixPerez547899
This session provided an update as to the latest valuation data in the UK and then delved into a discussion on the upcoming election and the impacts on valuation. We finished, as always with a Q&A
The world of search engine optimization (SEO) is buzzing with discussions after Google confirmed that around 2,500 leaked internal documents related to its Search feature are indeed authentic. The revelation has sparked significant concerns within the SEO community. The leaked documents were initially reported by SEO experts Rand Fishkin and Mike King, igniting widespread analysis and discourse. For More Info:- https://news.arihantwebtech.com/search-disrupted-googles-leaked-documents-rock-the-seo-world/
LA HUG - Video Testimonials with Chynna Morgan - June 2024Lital Barkan
Have you ever heard that user-generated content or video testimonials can take your brand to the next level? We will explore how you can effectively use video testimonials to leverage and boost your sales, content strategy, and increase your CRM data.🤯
We will dig deeper into:
1. How to capture video testimonials that convert from your audience 🎥
2. How to leverage your testimonials to boost your sales 💲
3. How you can capture more CRM data to understand your audience better through video testimonials. 📊
Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
Digital Transformation and IT Strategy Toolkit and TemplatesAurelien Domont, MBA
This Digital Transformation and IT Strategy Toolkit was created by ex-McKinsey, Deloitte and BCG Management Consultants, after more than 5,000 hours of work. It is considered the world's best & most comprehensive Digital Transformation and IT Strategy Toolkit. It includes all the Frameworks, Best Practices & Templates required to successfully undertake the Digital Transformation of your organization and define a robust IT Strategy.
Editable Toolkit to help you reuse our content: 700 Powerpoint slides | 35 Excel sheets | 84 minutes of Video training
This PowerPoint presentation is only a small preview of our Toolkits. For more details, visit www.domontconsulting.com
Premium MEAN Stack Development Solutions for Modern BusinessesSynapseIndia
Stay ahead of the curve with our premium MEAN Stack Development Solutions. Our expert developers utilize MongoDB, Express.js, AngularJS, and Node.js to create modern and responsive web applications. Trust us for cutting-edge solutions that drive your business growth and success.
Know more: https://www.synapseindia.com/technology/mean-stack-development-company.html
Business Valuation Principles for EntrepreneursBen Wann
This insightful presentation is designed to equip entrepreneurs with the essential knowledge and tools needed to accurately value their businesses. Understanding business valuation is crucial for making informed decisions, whether you're seeking investment, planning to sell, or simply want to gauge your company's worth.
At Techbox Square, in Singapore, we're not just creative web designers and developers, we're the driving force behind your brand identity. Contact us today.
[Note: This is a partial preview. To download this presentation, visit:
https://www.oeconsulting.com.sg/training-presentations]
Sustainability has become an increasingly critical topic as the world recognizes the need to protect our planet and its resources for future generations. Sustainability means meeting our current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs. It involves long-term planning and consideration of the consequences of our actions. The goal is to create strategies that ensure the long-term viability of People, Planet, and Profit.
Leading companies such as Nike, Toyota, and Siemens are prioritizing sustainable innovation in their business models, setting an example for others to follow. In this Sustainability training presentation, you will learn key concepts, principles, and practices of sustainability applicable across industries. This training aims to create awareness and educate employees, senior executives, consultants, and other key stakeholders, including investors, policymakers, and supply chain partners, on the importance and implementation of sustainability.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Develop a comprehensive understanding of the fundamental principles and concepts that form the foundation of sustainability within corporate environments.
2. Explore the sustainability implementation model, focusing on effective measures and reporting strategies to track and communicate sustainability efforts.
3. Identify and define best practices and critical success factors essential for achieving sustainability goals within organizations.
CONTENTS
1. Introduction and Key Concepts of Sustainability
2. Principles and Practices of Sustainability
3. Measures and Reporting in Sustainability
4. Sustainability Implementation & Best Practices
To download the complete presentation, visit: https://www.oeconsulting.com.sg/training-presentations
RMD24 | Retail media: hoe zet je dit in als je geen AH of Unilever bent? Heid...BBPMedia1
Grote partijen zijn al een tijdje onderweg met retail media. Ondertussen worden in dit domein ook de kansen zichtbaar voor andere spelers in de markt. Maar met die kansen ontstaan ook vragen: Zelf retail media worden of erop adverteren? In welke fase van de funnel past het en hoe integreer je het in een mediaplan? Wat is nu precies het verschil met marketplaces en Programmatic ads? In dit half uur beslechten we de dilemma's en krijg je antwoorden op wanneer het voor jou tijd is om de volgende stap te zetten.
Discover the innovative and creative projects that highlight my journey throu...dylandmeas
Discover the innovative and creative projects that highlight my journey through Full Sail University. Below, you’ll find a collection of my work showcasing my skills and expertise in digital marketing, event planning, and media production.
VAT Registration Outlined In UAE: Benefits and Requirementsuae taxgpt
Vat Registration is a legal obligation for businesses meeting the threshold requirement, helping companies avoid fines and ramifications. Contact now!
https://viralsocialtrends.com/vat-registration-outlined-in-uae/
VAT Registration Outlined In UAE: Benefits and Requirements
The Social Life of Brands
1. strategy+business
ISSUE 68 AUTUMN 2012
The Social Life of Brands
A marketing strategy informed by neuroscience can help companies
enhance customer engagement — and make better use of tools like
social media.
BY MATTHEW EGOL, MARY BETH MCEUEN,
AND EMILY FALK
Scan this QR code with your smartphone to take a free
10-minute survey to gauge how well your company is using
and learning from digital data. This Digital Customer
Centricity Profiler will help you see how your capabilities
for customer centricity compare to leaders in your market
and industry. You can also take the survey at
www.beadigitalleader.com.
REPRINT 00118
3. The
Social Life
of Brands
A marketing strategy informed by neuroscience can
features marketing, media & sales
help companies enhance customer engagement —
and make better use of tools like social media.
by Matthew Egol, Mary Beth McEuen, and Emily Falk
It was love at first sight for Nathan Aaron. The pany has made a misstep.
North Carolina graphic artist, illustrator, and social me- Eric Ryan and Adam Lowry, the cofounders and
dia proprietor first saw Method Inc.’s high-style, envi- chief executives of Method, are not put off by Aaron’s
ronmentally conscious household cleaning products on familiarity or independent-mindedness. On the con-
display in his local Target store. He was smitten. trary, they think he’s a dream consumer, and their mar-
2
“What caught my attention immediately was mint keting strategy is built around people like him. “To suc-
dish soap.… Now, I’m a mint fanatic! Crazy about the ceed in a world of earned and social media requires you
stuff.… Plus the gorgeous Karim Rashid packaging to shift your mind-set from talking to customers to in-
didn’t hurt things one bit. And that was the beginning spiring advocates,” they wrote in The Method Method:
of my, should I say, lust affair, with Method.” Aaron 7 Obsessions That Helped Our Scrappy Start-Up Turn
wrote that in 2008, in the first post on his new blog, an Industry Upside Down (Portfolio/Penguin, 2011).
methodlust.com. Since then, he and a community of “Not only do advocates make good business sense by
like-minded consumers have posted more than 1,000 buying more of our products more often, but also they
paeans and gripes there, all devoted to the Method engage us — online, in writing, on the phone, and in
company and its brand proposition (fashionably de- person — teaching us all sorts of stuff we wouldn’t have
Illustration by Richard Mia
signed, beautifully scented, nontoxic cleaning products). figured out on our own.”
Methodlust.com is nothing more or less than a fan site, Would your company consider Nathan Aaron a
similar to one you might see for a hit movie or television dream consumer or a loose cannon? Would you encour-
show. It contains reviews of the company’s products, age his public affair with your brand and listen to his
commentary on its marketing strategy, interviews with ideas, or demand that he stop? Would you even know
employees at all levels, and reader polls — plus fierce he was out there? Your answer says a lot about your ap-
critiques when Aaron (or a reader) thinks that the com- proach to marketing and customer relationships.
4. Matthew Egol Mary Beth McEuen Emily Falk
matthew.egol@booz.com marybeth.mceuen@maritz.com ebfalk@umich.edu
is a partner in Booz & is vice president and executive is an assistant professor of
Company’s communications, director of the Maritz Institute communication studies and
media, and technology in St. Louis, Mo. The institute psychology at the University of
practice. Based in New York, is an independent network Michigan in Ann Arbor, where
he focuses on marketing of thought leaders working she directs the Communica-
strategy and capability devel- to create next-generation tion Neuroscience Lab. She is
opment related to digitization, business practices based on also a research associate at
social media, and shopper human science research. the Research Center for Group
marketing. Dynamics at the Institute for
Social Research.
Nathan’s devotion and Method’s response to it of the company that produces it, and the values they
are becoming more typical. Some might attribute this share about it. Some marketers, like Whole Foods, Ikea,
trend — the increasing use of community engagement and eBay, are consciously evoking a shift in attitude
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by marketers — to the rise of online social media: Face- that grew more prominent in the Great Recession: a de-
book, Twitter, YouTube, fan sites, and social marketing sire for less acquisition of goods (or even experiences),
websites (also known as private-label media) created by and for more meaningful, lasting forms of fulfillment.
companies themselves. (See “Scaling Up Social Media,” Companies that promise simplicity, connection, and
by Christopher Vollmer and Karen Premo, s+b, Autumn sustainable benefits can gain the most from this shift —
2012.) But the trend represents a more fundamental but only if they deliver.
change in marketing practice, linked to insights from
social psychology, behavioral economics, and neurosci- Two Systems of Thought
ence and brain research. Every form of interaction be- Marketers who want to build a strong social life for their
tween companies and consumers — taking place online brands can start by better understanding the social na-
and offline, in stores and over mobile devices, in brand- ture of thought and action: the interpersonal, cognitive,
ed content and by word of mouth, and indeed through and emotional triggers that link human interaction with
all direct consumer experience — is now understood to emotional experience.
be shaped by the social nature of brands. People essentially have two ways of thinking.
3
As marketers put this insight into practice in so- Through several decades of research, cognitive scien-
phisticated ways, a one-way message or image can no tists have come to recognize them as deeply ingrained,
longer compete. The value of a brand is linked to the complementary systems; psychologist and Nobel lau-
relationships it fosters: the social connections among reate Daniel Kahneman made them the central theme
people who buy the product or service. Managing these of his book Thinking, Fast and Slow (Farrar, Straus &
connections at every scale, from an individual contact Giroux, 2011). Social cognitive neuroscientists such as
to a message that reaches millions of people, is the fun- Matthew Lieberman have also identified brain regions
damental task of marketing today. that map to these two systems, with each playing a role
With the right conditions in place, a brand can in social interactions.
move beyond a purely transaction-based relationship to The first system — often referred to as System
become a platform for an experience that feels to con- One, “reflexive thinking,” or the Thinking Fast system
sumers like friendship. Great marketers have known — manages habitual thought. When people take men-
strategy+business issue 68
how to do this for decades, of course, but it is now pos- tal shortcuts, have a gut reaction, or form a rapid first
sible to make authentic connections more consistent- impression, they are using this system. Thinking Fast
ly. Tapping into the social nature of a brand this way seems to operate effortlessly, often generating first im-
means thinking differently about the expectations that pressions within a tenth of a second. These impressions
consumers have for the product or service, their view are shaped by other ingrained and automatic thoughts
5. — current emotional states, prior experiences, habitual Thinking Fast. As habits develop, consumers reach for
attitudes, and social norms — any of which may be re- that brand with less conscious thought. Their percep-
lated to products or brands in some contexts. The snap tions of themselves using the brand, and of others who
judgments of Thinking Fast don’t necessarily register use the brand, may also change.
as conscious impressions or decisions, but they can be Imagine setting out to buy a relatively complex
powerful and self-reinforcing; every time a person acts product, like a mobile telephone. You might walk into
automatically, a neural pathway is invoked and the a retail electronics store with an expectation based on
thought is made a little stronger and more accessible. years of experience and perceptions, ingrained in the
However, the quick impressions of Thinking Fast reflexive (Thinking Fast) networks of your brain, about
are not sufficient on their own to meet the challenges of “geeky” technology, manipulative service contracts, and
even a relatively uneventful day. People therefore rely on unhelpful salespeople. This pattern of thought arises
the second cognitive system — known as System Two, instantaneously when you enter, making you skeptical
“reflective thinking,” or the Thinking Slow system — of sales arguments.
to process their thoughts, reactions, beliefs, and expec- But if friends have told you ahead of time that they
tations more deliberately. The Thinking Slow system had a positive experience at that store location, you
is not exclusively rational; it is also influenced by emo- may slow down your thinking a bit. Then suppose the
tions. But it comes to the forefront in a more conscious salesperson you encounter is skilled and knowledgeable
way when people are sufficiently motivated or attentive. enough to describe other uses for the phone that reso-
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The Thinking Slow system takes place in parts of the nate with your needs — for example, as a navigation
brain (for example, the prefrontal cortex) where thought system that can help you find restaurants in unfamiliar
processing can feel relatively demanding or draining. neighborhoods. The reflective, Thinking Slow parts of
The brain has a limited capacity for reflective thinking your brain might come to the forefront. Repeated ex-
at any one time. periences with a salesperson who is honest and knowl-
Although they occur in different parts of the brain, edgeable might lead you to develop a feeling of trust to-
the reflexive (Thinking Fast) and reflective (Thinking ward that retail store. If you keep returning, you might
Slow) systems operate together. Each influences the oth- sooner or later revert to Thinking Fast, but now with a
er. Social psychologists studying persuasion — such as higher degree of brand loyalty embedded in your day-
Richard Petty, John Cacioppo, Robert Cialdini, Alice to-day behavior. Within the brain, loyalty can become
Eagly, and Shelly Chaiken — have long observed this a habit.
phenomenon in experiments; when people are distract- The flip side of the coin also holds; for example, if
ed or don’t care much about the issue in question, they you can’t easily return a garment or resolve a frustrating
revert to reflexive thinking. But when the stakes are banking problem, your brain might register the same
4
high or there is less distraction, people tend to engage type of conflict and negative emotion that it would if a
in more reflective thought. Social neuroscientist Wil- friend betrayed you. Distaste for that company’s brand
liam Cunningham has suggested that these two systems would then color the starting point of your future in-
work together iteratively; the brain balances their rela- teractions with the brand via the Thinking Fast system.
tive influence according to a number of factors, includ- In either case, when the brain is motivated to expend
ing how motivated the person is to think hard and how energy on the Thinking Slow system, and there is good
much experience he or she has in a given situation. reason to change basic attitudes about the company
How does this apply to marketing? Because people and its products, the consumer is more likely to feel
are rapid meaning makers through Thinking Fast, and that change.
deliberate meaning adjusters through Thinking Slow,
the development of brand loyalty is a complex and shift- The Social Nature of the Brand
ing process. Both thinking systems are involved in pro- Brand loyalty, when ingrained this way, also makes an
cessing each impression, and every impression matters. individual more likely to talk about the brand with oth-
Initial decisions to select or change a product or service ers — which, in turn, reinforces the loyalty. Thinking is
may involve the Thinking Slow system. But over time, social or at least deeply affected by human interaction.
as people integrate that product or service into their Some brands, such as BMW, Burberry, Coca-Cola,
routines, the decision to purchase or use it migrates to Heineken, Lego, Nike, Starbucks, Virgin, and Volks-
6. wagen, have tapped into consumers’ hearts and minds broadly emotional associations related to that product
at various times because they are associated with a sense or service will proliferate. When Aaron perceives that
of community. others value his information, he is more likely to con-
Since Aristotle, philosophers have identified social tinue sharing it, and to attract others to jump on board.
relationships (in addition to reason and emotion) as im- This social sentiment about brands need not be limit-
portant factors in persuasion and influence. Starting in ed to a fan site like methodlust.com; it can appear in
the 1930s, social psychologists verified experimentally any context, facilitated directly by brands and retailers
the importance of social relationships in influencing at- across both digital and physical touch points.
titudes and behavior; beginning in the 1970s, behavior- How, then, can your company shift to a relation-
al economists confirmed that market interactions also ship-driven approach to marketing — anchored in au-
have a strong emotional and cognitive component. thenticity, trust, and multifaceted connections? There
Now, a growing number of social psychologists and are four tenets, which form a convenient acronym:
marketing researchers use social media to study the link Reframe, Understand, Listen, and Engage (RULE).
between social norms and purchasing decisions. They
are finding that the context of a community influences Reframe: Focus on the Whole Person
how people interpret their experiences, and may shape Many companies are still learning how to design every
their willingness to have an authentic relationship with touch point to generate a greater level of social interac-
a brand, rather than just engage in a transaction. For tion and participation. The new forms of marketing,
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example, when people expect others they know to re- grounded in building relationships, are to conventional
act with approval to a product or service, they are more marketing what interactive games are to television dra-
likely to react positively themselves. ma. Instead of a single, point-to-point narrative, present-
Neuroscience research also suggests that social cues ed the same way to every audience member, the cam-
shape the way the brain responds to information. Social paign is an immersive experience, in which the play is
cognitive neuroscientists and neuroeconomists, includ- unpredictable and both players — the consumer and the
ing Greg Berns, Daniel Campbell-Meiklejohn, Vasily marketer — may respond quickly. It is less scripted, and
Klucharev, Malia Mason, Michael Norton, Hilke Plass- consumers have an active hand in shaping the outcome
mann, and Jamil Zaki, have shown that preferences — of the game. The authenticity of connection is critical; a
and the neural responses involved in computing those brand that is not trusted cannot survive in this milieu.
preferences — tend to change depending on whether To develop this level of authenticity, marketers
people have been told what other people think. must learn to connect with the consumer as a whole
The brain doesn’t process all people equally. It has person, including those drives and motivations that
long been known by social psychologists that human were formerly considered irrelevant to product con-
5
beings cognitively favor some people over others. Wil- sumption. One useful body of work for this is the
liam Cunningham and Jay Van Bavel (director of the four-drive motivational theory developed by two or-
social perception and evaluation lab at New York Uni- ganizational science professors at Harvard Business
versity) have found that the systems in the brain that School, Paul R. Lawrence (who died in 2011) and
signal motivational relevance are more active when peo- Nitin Nohria (currently dean of the business school). In
ple see other people who are members of their team or their book Driven: How Human Nature Shapes Our
group, in comparison to outsiders. Choices (Jossey-Bass, 2002), they proposed that people
The social nature of thought, combined with the are motivated and make choices as a result of four in-
neuroscience of brand loyalty, should be a major factor nate drives: the drive to acquire possessions and status;
in marketing priorities. Every touch point in a consum- the drive to bond and relate with others; the drive to
er’s life should be treated as a pivotal moment, an op- learn and understand the world; and the drive to defend
portunity to reinforce the connection between the con- what they consider important. Marketing has long at-
strategy+business issue 68
sumer and the brand. Touch points that encourage the tempted to address these drives, but different campaigns
sharing of social sentiment may be especially powerful have focused on different ones. The more drives that are
reinforcers. Thus, the more often that people like Na- taken into consideration by marketers — not just the
than Aaron post their recommendations online through drives to acquire and defend, but also the drives to bond
ratings, reviews, tweets, and commentary, the more and learn — the more loyal consumers become. With
7. Brands that grew the most were explicitly connected
in people’s minds to fundamental human values such
as joy, pride, and the desire to improve society.
socially oriented marketing, it’s particularly important page 7.) The reason, from a neuroscience perspective,
to balance all four drives, rather than emphasizing only may have to do with the reflexive nature of deeply held
one or two. values. When these values are called to mind, the as-
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For example, Kimberly-Clark’s marketers engaged sociated emotions and memories may transfer (through
all four motivational drives in their Potty Project cam- Fast Thinking) to other concepts, including some brand
paign created for Huggies Pull-Ups training pants. references. Indeed, when information about brand attri-
They considered all the stressful dynamics of potty butes tied to values (such as protecting the environment
training: the drive to acquire (gaining status as a good or honoring tradition) is manipulated in experiments,
parent by successfully training your children); the drive people for whom the value is personally relevant are sig-
to bond (by having a better relationship with your kids); nificantly more likely to make decisions focusing on that
the drive to defend (by avoiding conflict in the home); attribute. In short, there appears to be a rapid connec-
and the drive to learn (by mastering parenting skills). tion in many people’s minds between the relevance of a
The Pull-Ups team created a website (pull-ups.com/ brand and the fundamental things they care about.
na/) with instructional videos, featuring a community Different values are important to different indi-
of parents learning together. It showed ways to make viduals, but values themselves tend to be broad moti-
potty training a cooperative, relatively fun-filled task for vational constructs, adopted by people the world over.
parent and child. In just three months, the Potty Proj- One of the most comprehensive studies of values was
6
ect became a top destination for potty-training parents, conducted by Shalom H. Schwartz, a social psycholo-
garnering 857,000 visits, which totaled 45,387 hours, gist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Schwartz
and 1.9 million video views. Even better, parents shared classified human values into 10 types: power, achieve-
the experience; the amount of material sent on from the ment, pleasure (hedonism), stimulation, self-direction,
site to visitors’ friends exceeded the project’s target by universalism (which includes values like social justice
400 percent. and world peace), benevolence, tradition, conformity,
and security. He concluded that group cultures influ-
Understand: Align to Consumers’ Values ence the priorities people place on these values; higher-
In a study of 50,000 brands, former Procter & Gamble priority values are powerful motivators because they
global marketing officer Jim Stengel found that those are central to people’s concepts of themselves, and are
that grew the most over a 10-year period (on average, bound to deep emotions.
three times faster than the overall group, from 2000 Thus, when people engage in brand experiences
through 2010) had one thing in common. They were that activate their high-priority values, they may be
explicitly connected in people’s minds to fundamental more likely to identify with the brand and develop an
human values such as joy, connection with other people, emotional connection with it. A recent Starbucks cam-
adventurousness, pride, and the desire to improve soci- paign on behalf of social consciousness may work this
ety. (See “The Case for the Brand Ideal,” by Jim Stengel, way, by connecting perceptions of the chain with the
8. The Case for pressed what we stood for. I brought subconsciously — aligned it with the
it back, which was then an unheard- concept of human growth. We became
the Brand Ideal of move at P&G. We also created more than a maker of peanut butter.
a full-page newspaper ad campaign We were a partner with moms in their
by Jim Stengel headlined “The Answer Is No,” which young children’s development.
explained that our peanut butter had Any brand is simply the collec-
no cholesterol, no preservatives, and tive intent of the people behind it. To
T he pivotal assignment during
my early career at Procter &
Gamble (P&G) was Jif peanut butter. Jif
no artificial colors or flavors. It was
based on the top 10 questions moms
asked us about Jif. In tune with our
everyone your business touches, from
employees to consumers, the brand
defines who you are and what you
was a US$250 million business when I overall effort to support their values, stand for as a business. If you want
joined its brand management team in we held national promotions in which great business results, you and your
1984. Before consumer engagement we donated 10 cents per jar to local brand have to stand for something
became the vogue in marketing, we parent–teacher associations. compelling. And that’s where brand
conducted an unusual number of in- These efforts transformed Jif ideals enter the equation.
home visits and “shop-alongs” with from a sleepy business to an explo- A brand ideal is a shared intent
moms. These occasions sharpened my sive growth story. We achieved rec- by everyone in a business to improve
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team’s sense of Jif’s core customers. ord market share, gaining two full people’s lives. The ability to lever-
They weren’t simply women between share points in a market in which age this ideal is what separates great
the ages of 18 and 34; they were highly fractions of a share point had been all business leaders from good, bad, or
engaged moms with young children. but impossible to win without erod- indifferent ones. A brand ideal is a
As a result, my guiding thought ing margin. We also attained record business’s essential reason for being,
was to make Jif the most loved peanut profitability, with increases in total the higher-order benefit it brings to
butter by exemplifying and support- profit and profit margin of 143 per- the world.
ing what these moms valued. We had cent and 110 percent, respectively, in Does a shared goal of improving
to have the highest quality and make the first year, and even more the fol- people’s lives sound too idealistic for
sure there were no traces of carci- lowing year. These results became a the rough-and-tumble of business?
nogenic aflatoxins, which are toxins highlight of my career and the careers What about practical, hard-nosed
produced by mold, in the peanuts we of key members of our small manage- goals such as making the quarterly
used. We had to address concerns ment team. numbers, increasing market share,
about health and nutrition. We had to Looking back on these decisions, and cutting costs? All of these practi-
7
have great taste that young kids loved. which seemed largely intuitive at the cal goals are crucial. It’s also neces-
Jif had abandoned its famous time, I now recognize that they exem- sary to want to be the best-performing
“Choosy mothers choose Jif” slogan plify a critical, but often overlooked, enterprise around, with the highest
for “Taste the ‘Jifference’ in Jif.” But principle of marketing: the power of standards, the strongest people, and
our deeper understanding helped me ideals. By aligning the business with the most satisfied customers. But the
realize that the older slogan better ex- moms’ values, we implicitly — and best businesses aim higher.
values of universalism and benevolence, reinforced its performance. He held a leadership meeting in New
through visible actions, including the company’s own Orleans that included a day of community service;
employee benefit practices. Starbucks chief executive 11,000 store managers worked together in neighbor-
officer Howard Schultz started the campaign himself, hoods that had been damaged by Hurricane Katrina.
strategy+business issue 68
basing it on the idea that authenticity must be present Since then, Starbucks has created a series of campaigns
in any cause-based marketing effort or its influence will that tie its corporate identity to voting, recycling, rain-
be limited. forest preservation, economic revival, and other social
It kicked off in 2008, soon after Schultz was causes.
brought back to the company as CEO to turn around In his own writing, Schultz asserts that Starbucks
9. They don’t get there through vi- only six months. Its core businesses We also had to model the ideal our-
sion and mission statements. When were stagnating, and its people were selves. And we had to measure all our
you strip away the platitudes from demoralized. activities and people in terms of the
those documents, what’s left typically A.G. Lafley, then the CEO, asked ideals of our brands and the company
boils down to: “We want our current me to take on the role of global mar- as a whole. The success of that effort
business model to make or keep us keting officer to help transform the brought P&G’s extraordinary growth
the leader of our current pack of com- culture of the company to one where- from 2001 on.
petitors in current and immediately in “the consumer is boss.” I jumped at The business case for brand ide-
foreseeable market conditions.” This the challenge, and proposed building als is not altruism or corporate social
is a formula for mediocrity. It aims too the best marketing organization in the responsibility. It concerns connecting
low, locking an enterprise into a busi- world — attracting the best talent; fo- what happens inside a business with
ness model based on the agenda of cusing on growing the market share what happens outside it, especially
the business, not that of the customer. of the majority of our businesses; and in the “black box” of consumers’
If such a statement mentions the cus- making our marketing known, recog- minds and the way they make deci-
tomer at all, it’s the customer as seen nized, and admired by all the people sions. If you’re willing to align your
from the company’s point of view and important to P&G’s future. business with a fundamental human
in terms of the company’s agenda. To hit these big targets, we need- ideal, you too can achieve extraordi-
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Truly sustainable business mod- ed an even bigger goal: identifying nary growth. Imagine the possibilities
els are linked to fundamental human and activating a distinctive ideal (or that creates for you, your people, and
values — an ideal of improving people’s purpose, as P&G dubbed it). We would your community.
lives. This clarifies the business’s true improve people’s lives; that would be
reason for being, which in turn sup- the explicit goal of every business in Jim Stengel
ports open-ended processes that can the P&G portfolio. We could then es- www.jimstengel.com
drive many different business models tablish each business’s true reason is the former global marketing of-
in succession. The model will have to for being as the basis for new growth, ficer of Procter & Gamble and is a
change with market conditions, and the and we could link them all into a consultant to senior management
only sure basis for creating viable busi- strong foundation for P&G’s recovery and an adjunct professor at the UCLA
ness models over the long term is when by building each business’s culture Anderson School of Management.
a business and its customers share an around its ideal. This essay is excerpted from his book,
agenda. To hit higher targets and stay Every P&G business had to com- Grow: How Ideals Power Growth and
in front of the competition requires municate its ideal internally and ex- Profit at the World’s Greatest Compa-
8
an ideal. ternally. Lafley and I and the rest of nies (Crown Business, 2011).
Procter & Gamble had a remark- the senior management team ex-
able run in the first decade of the pected all the business leaders to
21st century. But in 2000, it was in articulate how each brand’s individual
big trouble, having recently lost $85 identity furthered P&G’s overarching
billion in market capitalization in mantra of improving people’s lives.
had foundered in the mid-2000s because in pursuing Listen: Deepen Consumer Insight
rapid growth it became disconnected from its own One hallmark of effective marketing has always been
values. The perception of Starbucks as a yuppie-style collecting signals and feedback from purchasers; now,
gentrifying force, for example, built up negative asso- marketers have richer opportunities for listening to
ciations and cost the company the loyalty of some con- consumers and learning what they want, need, and
sumers. One result of his new approach is a significant value. Digital media enable this capability; a staggering
leap in appeal to both consumers and employees; they amount of data about products, brands, and companies
see the company, and its CEO, as making a sincere, sus- can be gathered by tracking and analyzing what people
tained commitment. say and do online. But the most significant aspect of
10. Enterprise Rent-A-Car monitors tweets and
comments posted on social media sites each day.
Whenever a negative comment is posted, the
customer care team immediately reaches out.
listening is not the technology; it’s the way companies Insights like these can help marketers better understand
use what they learn. the implicit and emotionally charged elements that the
Consider, for example, the services provided by an consumer took from the experience, elements that can
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online software company called Bazaarvoice. Founded significantly shape future interactions with or percep-
in 2005, Bazaarvoice compiles ratings and reviews of tions of the brand.
products and services posted on hundreds of brand Companies need keen customer-insight capabili-
and retailer websites, allowing companies to use those ties to make sense of customer feedback and respond
insights to strengthen their capabilities for reach- effectively. They need to integrate consumer percep-
ing customers. (Its business partners include Salesforce tions gathered from multiple touch points. One com-
.com, SAP, and Booz & Company, the publisher of this pany that is building its listening capabilities this way is
magazine.) Enterprise Holdings, the parent company of Enterprise
Global manufacturer 3M also gathers Bazaarvoice Rent-A-Car, National Car Rental, Alamo Rent A Car,
data and uses it in both marketing and R&D. It has and WeCar. Enterprise uses surveys and social media
collected thousands of reviews and comments from to track customer experience. Information on factors
more than a dozen retail sites and mobile apps, as well such as perceived wait time is gathered, analyzed, and
as Facebook postings, using them to improve market- reported from all the branches and representatives. This
ing campaigns or create new ones. In one case, the com- drives clear frontline accountability for delivering an
9
pany’s Precision Ultra Edge nonstick scissors were sell- exceptional customer experience. Enterprise’s commit-
ing below expectations. 3M changed its product copy, ment to listening led it to create a customer care team
quoting the language consumers used online (“they’re that monitors tweets and comments posted on social
great for cutting fabric and photos, with a comfortable media sites from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day. Whenever
grip”). Among the results was an increase in the click- a negative comment from a distressed customer is post-
through rate for banner ads. Customer feedback gath- ed, the team immediately reaches out to the customer
ered online also led to the redesign of other products. to resolve the issue. Enterprise’s leaders also consider
Listening to customers, both through social media the customer perception information when they rede-
and with more traditional research methods, requires sign the company’s services.
going beyond what customers say to better understand-
ing their emotional experience with the brand. For ex- Engage: Humanize Touch Points
ample, Maritz Research conducts some of its customer- The brand experience is no longer restricted to the tradi-
strategy+business issue 68
experience research with a “make or break satisfaction” tional organizational silos of advertising and marketing.
methodology, surveying customers to understand the Now, the entire company takes part in strengthening
key encounters that either made a brand experience relationships and brand advocacy. This might involve
great (like finding unexpected treats in a hotel room) or mobile marketing (with the smartphone acting as a
broke the connection (like finding bugs in a hotel bed). connection point across the full purchase journey from
11. the customer’s couch to the store shelf), store displays A Better Brand Relationship
(where brands can engage shoppers with solution-ori- Many marketers — and some consumers — may won-
ented merchandising), the anticipation of future behav- der how far companies should go in pursuing enduring
ior from past customer behavior data (through vehicles brand-to-consumer relationships. Conventional market-
such as frequent-shopper cards), and the redefinition ing, focused on the explicit value of products and ser-
of technical support (as in Best Buy’s Geek Squad or vices, is easier and more familiar.
Apple’s Genius Bar). In the most farsighted companies, But social engagement is not just unavoidable. It
mobile marketing is a means of bringing the commu- represents a far more effective use of marketing effort
nity to the shelf. When an apparel shopper photographs and resources, and at its best, it represents a more hu-
a garment and texts “What do you think?” to a friend, man approach to engaging consumers. By using the
the friend’s positive response may activate social emo- four RULE activities — reframing, understanding, lis-
tions that solidify the brand connection. tening, and engagement — companies can invoke the
Building a high level of customer engagement kind of social learning that leads to long-term, mutu-
through experience can require broad-based cultural ally rewarding relationships of any sort. On their side,
change within a company; employees must align their companies will deliver products and services that are
actions with the values of the brand. This type of more closely tied to the values and ideals held by both
corporate alignment is often perceived in the breach employees and consumers. Of all the moments of truth
— when an environmental disaster, quality crisis, or along the total brand experience, the ones that make
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ethical scandal damages the company’s reputation and the most difference could turn out to be the repeated
bottom line. By now, many consumers are looking for social connections that create bonds among the people
authenticity, and companies can only “walk the talk” who are part of the brand community. The social life
by creating cultures where brand values are expressed of a brand can be an integrative force for a more holis-
every day. With the right kind of cultural initiatives, tic approach to marketing, in which companies build
training programs, and incentive structures, the actions long-term, multifaceted, and fruitful relationships with
of frontline employees — who represent the part of the the people who identify with their brand ideals and
organization that customers usually see — can be a choose to buy and advocate on behalf of their products
critical component of the brand experience. and services. +
Embassy Suites Hotels has engaged all its “team Reprint No. 00118
members” (as it refers to employees) in the creation of
a socially rewarding brand experience. The company’s
culture is focused on this, and is characterized by the
Embassy Suites service statement: “Gracious, engaging
10
and caring…making a difference in the lives of others
— in ways both big and small.” The ongoing culture
Resources
initiative, “Make a Difference,” encompasses a number
of programs that influence the behavior of employees, Charles Gremillion, Make Their Day: The Power to Make Guests Happy
other stakeholders, and guests. For example, new team (Tribe, 2011): By the director of Embassy Suites’ brand culture, on the
power of a great customer relationship.
members are introduced to The Deal — a booklet that
Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow (Farrar, Straus & Giroux,
outlines goals, expectations, behaviors, and “secrets to
2011): Compelling guide to the two overarching systems that govern
success” that catalyze the distinctive Embassy Suites thought.
brand experience. A complementary program called Paul R. Lawrence and Nitin Nohria, Driven: How Human Nature Shapes
“Make a Difference…for you” enables hotel managers Our Choices (Jossey-Bass, 2002): How to build a business that meets the
to acknowledge team members for their contributions; drives to acquire, bond, learn, and defend.
acknowledgments include certificates of achievement Jim Stengel, Grow: How Ideals Power Growth and Profit at the World’s
Greatest Companies (Crown Business, 2011): Research-driven manifesto
and a selection of other nonmonetary rewards. The
on the link between what brands stand for and how they prosper.
payoff for this attention has been dramatic; in 2011, for
Maritz Institute: www.themaritzinstitute.com
example, Embassy Suites took the top spot in the J.D.
For more thought leadership on this topic, see the s+b website at:
Power and Associates annual North American Hotel
strategy-business.com/marketing_media_sales.
Guest Satisfaction Index Study in its category.