![]() |
Future marketingI have come to the realisation that we as humans are changing the way we react to marketing at a ridiculous pace. We expect different things from companies than we did last year. The old ways of doing business are gladly fading away. Advertising noise is ubiquitous and we are experiencing a sort of marketing fatigue - anaesthesia of the senses. To remedy this, marketers are always burning grey matter to think differently and be innovative - to stand out from the crowd and be noticed. We need to have a holistic approach to marketing involving product, marketing, content and innovation. ![]() ©Wavebreak Media Ltd via 123RF Omni-channel marketing became the most innovative way of engaging with customers across all their devices and across all channels. Creating a seamless narrative and experience to build lasting relationships with customers. This was, and still is, one of the most effective strategies marketers have at their disposal. But what's next for marketing as we hurtle towards the future - where customers expect a deeper bond with brands and their products. And where software and hardware production are becoming quicker, cheaper and easier to produce? The answer in my opinion is that we need a new paradigm for marketing. A fresh perspective, one where we look through the eyes of our customers, and not through the lens of a marketer. Future-marketing is where product, marketing, content and innovation meet. A unison of action that runs so subtly parallel with customer's lives and purpose that they hardly even notice they are active advocates of your brand. I have separated the four pillars product, marketing, content and innovation of this approach below: Business and its productsFuture-marketing involves your brand becoming more experiential, more interactive, more tangible and more usable. Innovation must occur both, on the product level and on the marketing level. On the product level innovation will be useful and value led. It will have real utility to the user, and align with their purpose and values. Your product will have to be the strongest marketing tool you have with a value-centric approach - where business and user goals run in tandem. One of the most salient brands doing this - for me anyway - is Patagonia Outdoor Clothing. Their commitment to business transparency and responsible business practices aligns perfectly with my values and mission for environmental preservation and sustainability. They provide outdoor clothing that I can wear with pride and identify with. How to align to the customer's purpose and values? An article on our autobiographical selves written by by Jennifer Ouellette explains this phenomenon in more depth. We seem to strive for the purest form of these self-identifiers. Action sport enthusiasts will want to be as pure and close to the archetypical narrative as possible and by being associated with edgy, action sport brands (I am thinking of GoPro/Northface/O'neill here) will inform them and others of who they are. Similarly a person who identifies themselves as a geek, or belonging to geek culture will own geeky paraphernalia that aligns them to the geek archetype. Why is this? Well, for geeks it is deeper than a love of geeky technology, and culture. It is a self-identification as an outlier, a non-conformist. It's a kind of exclusive and chauvinistic "I am part of this tribe and we are awesome", kind of mind-set. It's a form of tribe where belonging and a sense of commonality are felt. In my opinion, the need for self-identification is greater than the self-reinforcement from others. When we feel like we are the purest version of an archetype we feel sincere and genuine - we have purpose. External reinforcement is also important however. Look around you, very few people don't fit into a specific archetype. We are social animals and the need for belonging is fundamental. The deeper our business and its products resonate with the customer, the stronger the bond. A product that aligns to deep character values and purpose will elicit more advocacy than a product that resonates on a more superficial level - the level of transient interests and personality traits. Products that have a deeper connection with a customer will always be more successful and have real staying power in the market. MarketingIf products mostly sell themselves, where does that leave marketing? Marketing will serve an important role as the face and the voice of the brand. Purpose Marketing technology Marketing departments will be able to afford developing intelligent and crafty hardware of their own, they will go beyond just smartphone apps and social media. We are seeing a move towards ideas shaping what technology is capable of. Already we are seeing brands use new technologies in innovative ways. Beacon technology like: Estimotes Nearables, Apples iBeacon and Googles Eddystone, are all already being used in innovative ways. SXSW used iBeacons to alert attendees who downloaded the app, with their registration code, when they were near registration booths, making their experience that much more intuitive. Hillshire Brands used iBeacons to sell sausages by tracking users in stores and sending them coupons when they approached the section of the store where their sausages were being promoted. These are two innovative ways of using technology to influence consumers in their micro-moments. Another crafty use of technology is the Coca-Cola mini-bottle integrated digital campaign. Where customers were invited to create mini-me avatars of themselves in an online game. They then had to take care of these online mini-me avatars, and the winners of these games won the opportunity to create mini 3D printed versions of themselves. This campaign gained international recognition for innovation. People love to be wowed; they enjoy innovative new ways to interact with brands. This in combination with a campaign that really touches your customer on a deep emotional level is a recipe for success. ContentContent is the substance, the tangible focus on which marketing supports. Content is the "marketing product" that customers consume. It is the focus of all your marketing efforts. Without it your campaign is just a quasi-abstract combination of research, strategy, channel and media. Content is the value your marketing campaign provides to your customer - and there always has to be a value add to the customer. It could be an educational blog article, a delicious, cup of coffee, or a fun, little 3D printed version of you. Always make sure that your customer receives something in exchange for their attention and time. To add value to your customer you need to know what sort of content would best suit them. Advancements in audience insights and tracking mean that you will be able to target your content to the right customer, at the right time. Content will also have to be customised, giving your customer a sense of inclusion and familiarity with your brand and its content. Curate, syndicate and aggregate Business transparency If you like crowdsourced news check out Storyful which is a social news network that verifies the news articles for you. InnovationAh yes, the buzz word of the decade - innovation. Most people and marketers think of innovation as sparkly new smartphone apps, location beacons or nifty drone deliveries. Well, they are sort of right - but that is not the whole story. Technology is a huge part of innovation and plays a key role in innovation strategies, but organisations and marketers need innovative ways of thinking and innovative systems and operating models. Design thinking Most large corporations suffer from a slowness. They are encumbered by the weight of bureaucracy and protocol. In order to incorporate new ways of thinking and systems, businesses need new ways of operating. Whether it is agile workflows; scrum, kanban or scrumban methodologies, or something else. Whatever allows your business to evolve and become more customer-centric and therefore more successful. Sustainability and innovation Whether it is on a product, marketing, systems or any other level, innovation means a paradigm shift. A new way of thinking and doing business. Product, marketing, content and innovation are becoming so intermingled with each other it is hard to have clear cut distinctions between them. The age of marketing's pulling the wool over the eyes of consumers is done. Marketing and innovation These movements bring with it a wealth of modalities that could augment your marketing campaigns and enable even further integrated channels. In light of these new advancements, marketers will have to be more cognisant and sensitive to privacy and data issue. Offering a value exchange to customers, where sharing their data reaps great benefits to them. These issues are becoming salient among consumers and the media, and will probably become even more so in the future. What does the IoT and IoE movement mean for marketers? I don't think there is one single answer, but this is an exciting time for us marketers and if we wear our innovation hats, we can really change the landscape of what's possible. About Zane FordMarketing consultant at Absa Bank, with a passion for UX, technology, design and the online experience. zane.ford@absa.co.za. View my profile and articles... |