
David Arrowsmith
Sr. VP of Business Solutions
Protagona Worldwide
darrowsmith@protagona.com
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Q: Are you talking to me?
For ten years now, marketers have been promising more intelligent and
effective means of communicating with their existing and potential
customers. But the reality, argues David Arrowsmith of Protagona, is still
far removed from that.
And the problem is not one of technology - that is available today! Rather,
it is a case of having the right people and processes, and the wherewithal
to make it happen.
"Are you talking to me? Yes, you, that enormous retailer which, despite
enjoying my custom for the last 10 years, still sends me highly aggravating
and insultingly impersonal direct mail imploring me to buy services I
neither want nor desire, or indeed already subscribe to, with you. Come to
think of it, you're starting to annoy me. Why, when there's so much
technology available to you, do you insist on alienating me instead of
understanding my needs and desires? In fact, I've had enough. I'm taking my
business elsewhere. So if you are talking to me,
you can stop now. I don't
shop with you any more."
Another lost customer, and one whose move probably will never be noticed.
And in today's ferociously competitive markets, coupled with uncertain
economies made even more uncertain following 11 September, every customer
counts. Airlines, banks, insurance firms, food and petrol retailers, and
Internet services operations all face the same acute pressures, driven now
by a customer base that expects quality, choice and service as well as a low
price, and looks forward to near-instant gratification of those
expectations.
The difference between winning and losing now is much narrower than it's
ever been. But you wouldn't know it by the way most companies behave towards
their customers and prospects. Wrong names, wrong addresses, wrong offers
and wrong prices...
This is not a case of technology haves and have-nots. This is about making
good the promises that have been made by marketeers for the last
10 years
and more - that their methods would become at once cleverer, subtler, less
invasive and much more effective in gaining and retaining customers. For
over a decade now we've been waiting without any discernible movement.
True, the general environment has become more customer-friendly, but given
the investment and hype over the last dozen years, we're justified in
expecting things to have turned out so much better. One to one marketing,
data mining, data warehousing, customer self-service, smart cards, brand
loyalty, intelligent agents, intelligent profiling, multimedia touch points,
salesforce automation, and supply chain and customer relationship management
(SCM and CRM) have conspired to fill many more column inches than shopping
trolleys. Brand managers, it seems, have learned little since 1990, or if
they have they've failed to translate their education into best practice.
The good news is that there are some very good examples of intelligent and
considered
marketing, predominantly among fast-growing small and medium
sized companies, suggesting there is some hope after all. Moreover, those
instances highlight the value of people and process over technology alone,
and the importance of making each individual feel just that - cross and
up-selling does work when offers are personalised and relevant.
Getting it right requires the right people and processes. And that
ultimately means having the skills in place that bridge marketing and IT.
Why? Because the type of detail of customer information required by
marketing departments invariably rests within the realm of technology
departments, which historically have held the purse strings for marketing
software and systems. That in turn means IT hasn't invested if no benefit to
its operations has been made clear, and which is why successful marketing
operations need a close ally in the CEO's chair.
Without that level of understanding and commitment, marketing will continue
on
its aimless course, doing the same thing again and again and expecting
things to change. Already you can see budgets being trimmed, which will
result in lost market share and more hand-wringing and hope that some
external factor comes along to improve things.
Not only are such actions commercially inept, you could go further and argue
that, in a marketing context, the lack of use of the data that big companies
hold on us is criminal. You would think a multi-billion turnover airline
could offer free sun tan oil and paragliding discounts with your next
booking to Spain, where you go every year, as an incentive to maintain your
custom. But since they don't, losing that customer, who has every right to
be upset at such crass avoidance, should come as no surprise (although it
inevitably will).
And in that lies the heart of the issue: customers, not products, now drive
marketing. With so much choice available and prices increasingly within a
tighter band, consumers
are not happy being inflicted with the same launch
material, at the same time, offering the same product at the same price as
50,000 others.
That, as they say, is bass-ackwards. Instead, the consumer's readiness and
availability to buy is what should be driving marketing organisations, and
that information can only come by applying the right people, process and
technology spanning all transactions and touch points. In this model, each
customer is allocated an individual marketing campaign, building on current
and previous buying activities and habits to sell the right product at the
right time, and at the right price. Simple.
If it is so simple, why isn't it happening? The answer, perhaps
surprisingly, is not a technology one. That side of the equation has now
been solved. The problem lies with the remaining 90% involving people and
process, and having the wherewithal and creativity to put it all together.
But make no mistake, this will happen
and, what must sound alarm bells for
the majority of commercial organisations, is already happening within a
handful of early adopters, predominantly in the US. The process provides
more than anything else the competitive advantage in markets where so much
else is the same. Credit cards, phone lines, bank accounts and car
insurance: all are virtually indistinguishable as commodities, and only
inertia and sloth prevents most customers from switching more often or even
at all.
Imagine what happens when one of them starts communicating directly and
personally with a steady stream of relevant offers and service options.
Picture a wholly new entrant operating on the Internet stealing a march on
the incumbent four or five market leaders. They won't know what hit them.
And as they haemorrhage customers you can be sure they'll point to virtually
everything else before admitting that they couldn't market sugar to a boiled
sweet maker.
In the meantime, expect more mass
mailings and meaningless messaging. But be
consoled by the notion that you will be sold to much more intelligently and
with much greater consideration in the not distant future!
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