Showing posts with label facebook twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label facebook twitter. Show all posts

Monday, 7 March 2016

How to use social at each stage of the customer journey


Maker's Mark
Social media is an integral channel throughout the entire customer journey. However, each stage requires a different approach and messaging to effectively reach and engage customers.
Here’s how to use social media at each stage of the customer journey.
Customers need different things from brands at each stage of their journey. At the start, they need more information on their options and details on the product/service.
In the middle, after they’ve begun to narrow their choices, they need to verify the options.
And toward the end, they need ongoing support and ways to easily share their experience.
Social media is an integral channel throughout this journey, but plays a different role at each stage for both the consumer and for your brand.
Following are the foundational ways to use social media and set expectations throughout the customer journey.

Interest

The interest phase is when customers are first becoming aware of a want or a desire, and first becoming familiar with your brand, products and/or services.
This is your opportunity to create awareness and ensure your brand/products/services are included in the initial consideration set.
Use social media channels to post educational, informational and entertaining content. Quality of content is tantamount here.
Don’t simply post content for the sake of it. Ensure that it is well written and/or designed, can be easily viewed on both desktop and mobile devices, and provides value to your audience.
Utilizing the paid promotional features on the various social networks helps to extend reach to a broader audience.

Research

During the research phase, customer are narrowing down their options and learning more about these select choices.
At this stage, you need to provide more information about your business, and the key features and benefits of your products/services.
Use social media to link to specific product, service or category pages, fact sheets or FAQs, and relevant resource content.
Answer all questions posed directly through your social media channels.For an additional, proactive step, find people on social media channels that are in need of support, but haven’t directly approached your brand. Helping these individuals in their time of need can help win you new business.

Validation

In the validation phase, customers are looking for proof or verification that the purchase decision they are about to make is the right one. You can help substantiate your brand by providing easy access to legitimate, third-party reviews and information on your products/services.
Beardbrand Facebook Post
Beardbrand shares articles and blogs about its products and company, improving credibility and providing third-party reviews.
Make sure your company is accurately listed on all relevant review sites, and that you have included reviews on product pages.
Then use social media channels to share existing customer reviews and testimonials, and encourage others to add new reviews.
You can also reach out to industry bloggers to ask for product reviews, just be sure they’re including the appropriate disclosure notices on their blogs and site.

Decision

In the decision phase, the customer has selected their best choice and is ready to take action. Here is when you need to provide the path of least resistance to conversion.
Use social media at this stage to post sales, discounts or other promotional offers and link directly to the conversion page(s).
Use paid retargeting campaigns on Facebook and Twitter to bring customers back that have already visited your website.

Retention

The retention phase is when customers come back to make repeat purchases from your brand. This is your opportunity to ensure customers are satisfied with your offering and are aware of the value that you provide to their lives.
Use social media to provide ongoing customer support and stay top of mind for existing customers. Answer questions and respond to concerns in a timely and helpful fashion.
Ask for feedback directly about their experience with your products/services, inquire about how you can make improvements (and then actually make those changes!).
And post new offerings, promotions and announcements on your social media channels.

Advocacy

In the advocacy phase, customers turn into promoters after being delighted with their experience.
You must inspire this advocacy through superior performance and well-structured influencer and brand ambassador programs.
Makers Mark Brand Ambassador
Maker’s Mark has a long-standing brand ambassador program that encourages social media activity by providing exclusive perks.
Use social media to identify and engage with customers that have powerful and authoritative social media networks of their own.
Reshare and engage with customers saying positive things about your brand. Develop a user-generated campaign to encourage real stories from real customers, and share the most compelling submissions on your social channels.
Customers have different mindsets and needs at each stage of their journey, and use digital channels in varying ways throughout.
When you understand how and why they are using social media, you can provide the right content and messaging to help guide them through their journey.

Saturday, 14 November 2015

4 E.A.S.Y opportunities you must master before 2016

easy-st-flickr-569593575-4c368e5f9d-z

Creating consumer-centric experiences and solutions can be "easy" and will help separate the winners from the losers in 2016.

As technology continues to innovate at a pace more rapid than we can implement or wrap our heads around, we continue to be challenged with assessing new changes, seeing around corners, and latching onto a few key initiatives we believe will drive success. One of these recent phenomena occurs at the intersection of experience, design, and technology. Firmly grounded in what Forrester has deemed "the age of the customer," the ability to create consumer-centric experiences while exploring innovative solutions for creating strong bonds, has unlocked unlimited potential that truly drives the bottom line.
While it may seem challenging or confusing to some, harnessing these opportunities is quite E.A.S.Y in theory. Winning at this level is dependent on your ability to master these four mandates.

1. Experience

Experience is king these days. Ask yourself this question: Do your customers find your brand experience engaging, exciting, and enticing?

If you are not obsessing over every single brand experience, you are not just missing out - you are losing. This is not limited to your product either; your app might be great and your website might be fantastic, but how does the customer view your brand?

Great brands like Coca-Cola are finding incredible ways to merge the innovation with experience in subtle but powerful ways, partnering with companies like DanceOn for the recent season of Dance Showdown.


2. Addictive ideas

Do you offer addictive ideas that move people to act?

Channel Uber here. Initially, no one needed Uber - it was only after trying it did people realize the app's true potential. Now, many love it so much, that they will even Uber kittens to cuddle with for 15 minute increments.
uber-kitten
Your products or offerings need to have an addictive quality to it. Find this quality and capitalize on it in a fun and innovative way.


While Uber continues to display success here, Chipotle has also done this brilliantly with its Cultivating Thought author series
This campaign has not only added to the Chipotle's addictive quality, but it also brings a taste of culture to hungry consumers too.

3. Solve a simple problem; simply

We’ve all become prey to the Alice in Wonderland "rabbit hole" conundrum.
alice-rabbit-flickr-3355824586-305ea883d1-o
After setting out to create something, it becomes a myriad of mazes, twists, and turns so complex that sometimes launches completely fail or campaigns never make it live.
"Keep it simple" is a strong mandate we should all live by. Ringly's smart jewelry keeps it simple and fulfills an important need by "filtering the most important messages down to your core group" via one product - a ring. Its success stems from its sensational, yet simple model.

ringly

If your efforts are not laser-focused at solving one core problem, you have some work to do.

4. Yap, yammer, and yell

This mandate is critical. No matter how amazing your brand experience is, how addictive your products are, or how masterfully you can solve problems with ease, if you do not have the infrastructure in place to make it sharable in a powerful and meaningful way, your success will be limited.
Ad blocking, Facebook Instant Ads, and a myriad of other challenges have made it critical to partner with an expert in this area. For example, companies like Spotify, GE, The Dodo, and others have chosen to do this with RebelMouse, a publishing platform that leverages SEO and social discovery to distribute content.

To sum up

No matter what size, shape, or type of company you are involved in, make 2016 the year you master these four E.A.S.Y steps and innovate in a compelling way. Your customers will thank you.

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