December 09, 2020 RSS Free Newsletters
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SUMMARY: ·
The word
strategy is often used broadly. And an overall marketing strategy for your
brand is important. ·
But each
campaign, each landing page, each ad, each product should have a strategy all
its own as well. ·
To get
some creative ideas to inspire the strategies behind your marketing, today we
bring you examples from a consulting firm, wine club, environmental
conservation organization, and niche business. |
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by Daniel Burstein, Senior Director, Content & Marketing,
MarketingSherpa and MECLABS Institute
This article was originally published in
the MarketingSherpa email newsletter.
For
any assignment we tackle in marketing – or in life for that matter – we have
two choices for how to approach it. Heads down. Or heads up.
The
heads down method is task-oriented, checking off the boxes on the steps that
need to happen in order to achieve the short-term objective. You can get
results from this approach when those tasks are applied with great skill.
But
the heads-up method is always questioning. Always probing. Trying to look at
each new assignment in a new way. And asking that ultimate question of “why?”
For many marketing activities, that why question would be something like “why
would the customer care?” or “why will this help us reach the customer?” or
“while will this help us meet our objectives?” This method can lead to a
radically different approach along with a radically better outcome.
To
further explore this dichotomy, feel free to watch Optimizing Tactics vs.
Optimizing Strategy: How choosing the right approach can mean all the
difference in your optimization efforts from MarketingExperiments (MarketingSherpa’s sister
publication).
Then
read on for quick case studies showing how your marketing peers have attacked
both major and minor initiatives with a strategic approach.
Quick Case Study #1: Consulting firm activates
all employees to share on social media, web traffic from social increases 70%
Do
you trust every single employee to represent your company to the world on
social media? Or do you rely on a select few “thought leaders” or “subject
matter experts?”
When I discussed this topic
with Jon Iwata, Senior Vice President
of Marketing and Communications, IBM, he told me “Our people — I don’t think it’s
unique to IBM by any means — if they’re not going to give away trade secrets in
a parking garage at midnight, they’re probably not going to do it in the
Twittersphere.”
Trust
is one issue. But activation is the other. It is one thing to allow employees
to share on social media. It’s quite another to actually
motivate them to do it with all their other tasks.
Everest Group is a midsize management consulting firm
that competes with mammoth firms. The company is using traditional and digital
marketing programs that include PR, SEO, and webinars, but sought
differentiation. They invested in a social engagement program which enables
their employees to share high-quality content on social and build their
personal brand – not just a few execs or subject matter experts building a big
audience.
This
social media presence is helping Everest Group take on global giants many times
their size. More web presence has led to increased opportunities, and Everest Group’s
overall revenue has grown by 38% year-over-year.
“Web
traffic generated from social has gone up 70% and overall web traffic has
increased, too. Bounce rate for traffic from social has gone down by 57%. What
that shows us is that more qualified visitors are showing up, and that
translates into more people engaging with our content and ultimately sales,”
says Peter Bendor-Samuel, CEO, Everest Group.
Bendor-Samuel
believes that empowering people to build their own presence and reputation is
the best way to also build the company presence and reputation in an extremely
powerful and authentic way.
All
employees have an easy-to-use tool that enables them to engage on social in a
relevant way in minutes a week and management can trust the process because of
a built-in compliance engine that acts as a guardrail.
The
management consulting firm gamifies its social media program. To incentivize
participation without making it an obligation, they launched a multi-month
contest that rewarded users with gift cards if they completed specific types of
social activities within the platform.
“One
of the most exciting aspects of the platform is how it has helped our newest
analysts and consultants to quickly jump into participating in social. They
have been able to easily select content that’s related to their focus areas and
others. In fact, the winner of our internal social media contest was an analyst
who had recently joined the firm,” said Andrea M. Riffle, VP of Marketing,
Everest Group.
“The
power of many voices is more impactful than the power of a single voice,” notes
Bendor-Samuel. “You know what I’ve been hearing from prospects?
‘Wow, you guys are everywhere.’ They see our content wherever they look. They
can feel our influence on the industry.”
Quick Case Study #2: Hyper-local B2B social
media targeting generates quality leads for consultant
The
best prospects for nonprofit consulting firm EDEN+ are often the
board members of local non-profits. These are the decision makers the firm
needs to reach.
Before
and after doing a sales pitch in person, the nonprofit consulting firm’s team
ran a Facebook ad campaign that targeted these people using the following
parameters:
1.
within five miles of the
rural non-profit
2.
had an interest in the
mission of the organization and
3.
within the age range
that board members spanned based on looking at the nonprofit’s website.
“Facebook
tried to tell me that a target audience of 54 people ‘would not help me reach
my goals,’ but in fact it was the complete opposite. I knew my 12
decision-makers were within that 54-member audience,” said Eric Heininger,
Managing Director, EDEN+.
Heininger
knew the strategy worked because board members told him during the sales
pitches. His team has since replicated this process with similar results.
“Remember
that you don't need hundreds of bad leads, you need 12 pinpoint precise
interactions to make a sale,” Heininger advised.
Quick Case Study #3: Radio wine club only
generates one sale
As
Marshall McLuhan said, “The medium is the message.”
When
it comes to advertising and marketing, the media you use to communicate affects
how your customer interpret your message. For example, our research discovered
that American consumers trust print ads
in newspapers and magazines more than any other medium when making a purchase decision, while
online pop-ups were the least trusted. So the same message in a newspaper ad
and an online pop-up may receive a very different customer response.
Here’s
a great example. Uncorked Ventures went through a long set of negotiations to
set up a series of branded wine clubs for radio hosts.
“We
were thrilled. We had these incredibly professional shout outs, including on
the shows,” said Mark Aselstine, Founder, Uncorked Ventures.
After
running the ads both during commercial breaks and with the hosts while on air,
the company was only able to generate one sale.
“Yes,
one wine club member from a show with close to 500,000 daily listeners. My
takeaway – selling wine on the radio doesn't work,” he said.
Quick Case Study #4: Promoting customer
doubles sales for environmental conservation organization’s program
This
next example hits particularly close to home for me. At MarketingSherpa, we get
relentlessly pitched by PR firms for advertising agencies, marketing platforms,
and business consultants. The pitches are usually along similar lines – “our
agency or platform does great stuff.”
But
do you, dear reader, just want to be told that an agency or technology is
great? My guess is no. Which is why we focus on specific examples of how the
work was actually done, and focus on the brand-side/client-side marketer who is
actually in charge of the project. Because we want to inspire your next great
work, not just tell you to buy a piece of technology.
So
the pitches that do work are the ones that say – “We have this great customer
who did this great thing. Here’s how they did it. (and oh by the way we
helped).”
Keeping
that in mind, let me tell you about this next example to get your creative
juices flowing. Click A Tree is an organization dedicated to reforestation.
Back
in August the company teamed up with a restaurant called St. Ottilien as part
of its Food for Future program – the restaurant plants one tree every time
customers buy a specific dish.
In
August, they sold 60 Food for Future dishes. In September, that number moved up
to 75.
Then
Click A Tree team went to work and contacted all the local press they could
find. The lowest-hanging fruit was the magazines and websites that already
wrote about this restaurant on another occasion.
These
publications were contacted first, informing them about this new cooperation,
and about the rising sales numbers and the clients’ interest in this idea.
Once
they were done with press that had previously written about St. Ottilien, they
contacted the rest of the press in the area.
“Within
the space of three weeks, we landed three major publications, including the
state-wide newspaper Badische Zeitung, the local Chilli magazine, as well as
the state-wide radio station baden fm,” said Chris Kaiser, Founder & CEO,
Click A Tree.
Thanks
to this press, sales of the Food for Future increased to 152 in October – a
more than 100% increase compared to September and over 150% more than August.
That meant 152 trees being planted for October alone, and 287 trees over the
past three months.
“The
strategy is simple: Find a partner to work with, and then promote them. That
way you don't come across as self-promoting, yet you nonetheless profit from
the success of the campaign,” Kaiser advised. “It once again proves – we're
always stronger together.”
Quick Case Study #5: Lead quality improves for
unique, niche business thanks to change on FAQ page
Customers
have a series of questions they need answered before deciding to purchase a
product. The number and depth of these questions varies based on how complex,
expensive, and unique your product or service is, so mapping the prospect
conclusion funnel to show how
different elements of your marketing answer key customer questions can be an
effective strategy.
Here
is an interesting example that came across my desk. Because the venture is so
unique, the entrepreneur realized the importance of answering customer
questions. While you may think customers already know so much about your
product or service, an outlier example like this can be a great reminder that
customers have a lot of questions that, if they go unanswered, will either
cause potential customers to avoid your business (and you never know about it)
or end up with marketing that generates a set of unqualified leads that burn
your sales reps’ time with no good result. Now on to the example…
Samantha
Varnerin is in a very niche field – she is a professional therapeutic cuddler.
Being in a niche field, customers naturally have a lot of questions, so she
crafted an FAQ (frequently asked questions) section for her website, Snuggle with Sam. The FAQ answered the questions that people asked her at
networking events and in interviews.
“Despite
that, 18% of my pre-session phone calls were with people that did not pass
client screening. Why? Because many were hoping I was going to do more than
cuddle.... Bleh.”
She
tried her own marketing experiment with ads on Craigslist. While the experiment
to obtain clients directly through ads did not work, it did give her ideas for
improving the FAQ.
“I
noticed that my Craigslist ad responses had different questions than the polite
ones I was getting asked in interviews or at networking events,” she said.
“This told me something important: people were uncomfortable asking the real
questions they wanted to ask me, and potential clients were having a hard time
figuring out what I stood for because they weren't asking and I wasn't
answering them. I rewrote my FAQ’s to many of the questions I was getting from
my Craigslist ad responses.”
An
analogy for your organization may be only focusing on the questions potential
customers ask your sales reps or customer service agents. But what questions do
your customers have that they are uncomfortable asking in person or at all?
What are their unspoken concerns?
Since
the change to the FAQ page, visitors have been spending an average of 21
seconds longer on the FAQ page, and most of the initial calls have been
scheduled right after a potential customer viewed the FAQs. Vernerin has also
had 50% less calls that did not pass client screening. “More importantly, the
clients I have on calls have been a higher quality and were booking more
often,” she said.
Quick Case Study #6: Hoover leverages DRTV
campaign for latest branded innovation, more than doubles distribution in major
retail accounts
"We
launched our newest carpet washing innovation (SmartWash) with traditional
marketing tactics and a few key retail launch partners in April of 2018. In the
fall of that same year, we went live with a direct-to-consumer campaign,” said
Hannah Hennessy, Senior Media Manager, TTI Floor Care North America (parent company of Hoover).
“Due
to the success of that campaign we saw an increase [in] consumer demand through
a 4X lift in direct sales and we more than doubled our distribution in major
retail accounts. We continued to leverage that momentum to launch the next
generation in the carpet washing category the following year,” she said.
The
team promoted the new SmartWash technology with 30-minute direct response
television ads (DRTV) which allowed them to more fully tell the story of the
new technology. “One of the things that direct to consumer allows you to do is
shift and adjust and tweak your message so that you’re appealing to a multitude
of your end consumer. In 30 seconds you’re rolling the dice that you picked the
right point to feature,” said Mary Harden Williams, Senior Director, Marketing
Communications, TTI Floor Care North America.
While
the result of the campaign was to expand its retail presence, one of the
reasons for taking a direct-to-consumer (D2C) approach was, as the name
suggests, building a direct relationship with customers. “You know Amazon could
decide one day to make an Amazon Basics SmartWash. And they could probably make
a good product, and maybe for half the price. Then what happens?” said Ken
Kerry, co-founder, Script to Screen. “If you have that direct-to-consumer
relationship, you’re not as vulnerable.”
But
the approach was appreciated by retailers as well. “A true a-ha moment for me
was how much retailers appreciate the direct-to-consumer experience because at
the end of the day…the beauty of long form, you’re passively engaging with some
folks who are going to learn everything they need to know about your product or
engage with your brand and get a really good feeling, and they may choose to
purchase it at a retailer because that’s how they choose to buy,” Williams
said.
One
of the major challenges the team was trying to overcome was convincing
potential customers that they really could effectively wash carpets clean as
easy as vacuuming. To get this message across, they leveraged testimonials in
the DRTV spots, stories of real homemakers using a Hoover vacuum to simplify
their lives by making vacuuming and cleaning so simple and effective it gave
them more time with their children and families.
According
to Kerry, a good testimonial shows “the entire story told by an individual in
context to their experience – that’s when a potential customer can really see
what another person has gone through as well [as] be able to relate that
experience to their own situation. It’s when there is contextual relevance in a
story that the authentic nature of the comment exudes empathy and
relatability.”
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