понедельник, 1 января 2018 г.

How to Succeed With a Customer-centric Marketing Strategy


A Modern Marketing Map for Customer-centric Success

You know that your customer is fundamental to your strategic success. At the heart everything you do and everything your organization does, should be an all-encompassing consideration of your customer.
Customer-core. Customer-centred. Customer-centric. Customer-obsessed.
Why?
Digital tools and channels have dramatically transformed the way buyers choose to purchase. They’re more empowered, and more inclined to research online before reaching out to a sales rep. Because of digital, the fate of marketing campaigns and sales pipelines lies very much in the hands of the buyer. And despite this shift in power, a large number of organizations still haven’t adopted a customer-centric approach to marketing and selling.
They’re preoccupied with their products, their marketing, their sales, their success. They’re preoccupied with themselves. But now it’s time to look at everything through the eyes of the customer. Your success starts with knowing thy buyer. 
What business problems do your customers face? What are their opportunities? What are they trying to accomplish? What is the environment in which they operate? These key questions should underpin the way in which you market and sell to them. Your primary motivation should be to identify and address the needs of the buyer. Or, in the words of renowned entrepreneur and marketer Seth Godin, “don’t find customers for your products, find products for your customers”.
So, are you ready to harness your own customer-centric attitude? I’ve developed a simple modern marketing map that you can use to chart your course to marketing strategy success. And it’s no surprise where you’ll find the customer… 

1st Pillar: INFLUENCERS

Establishing relationships with industry influencers is the first essential step in this modern marketing map. These are the people your potential customers trust, the people they listen to, the people they learn from. Associating yourself with these individuals not only increases your visibility; it increases your credibility too; according to McKinsey, peer recommendations generate more than twice the sales of paid advertising.
Influencer marketing has the power to humanize your brand and foster customer engagement in a much more organic way; the key is to accurately identify the influencers, or “smarty pants people” in your buyer’s world that can enhance your offering. For example, if you’re selling data solutions, who are the experts on big data? If you’re selling within the Internet of Things space, who are the bloggers covering the topic? Whether you’re using LinkedIn or social listening tools, you should be seeking out thought leaders, practitioners and early adopters. If an individual has authority in their industry, they have influence, and that influence can help you to amplify your message and become visible and credible to a much wider audience.
Reaching out to and engaging with influencers doesn’t just benefit marketers. Increasingly, salespeople aren’t just selling; in their efforts to add genuine value and educate the buyer, they’re becoming deep Subject Matter Experts, and should be learning from “smarty pants people” too!
When I was a sales rep at Eloqua, I considered SiriusDecisions to be the premiere research analysts, the smarty pants people, in the sales and marketing industry. As a kind of qualifying question, I would ask if my potential buyers were familiar with them; if not, I would share their content on modern marketing, because I knew it was the best in the field. I needed my buyer to become more knowledgeable, because the more informed they were, the more prepared they would be to purchase my product. I promoted SiriusDecisions heavily, joking that I was their best salesperson! But I wasn’t paid to promote them; I simply knew that their content and industry expertise would genuinely help my customers, as well as me.
I was attending industry events to learn where my buyers were learning. I needed to understand the world in which my buyers lived, so I needed to learn what they were learning, from whom they were learning it.

2nd Pillar: CONTENT

Self-empowered modern buyers are actively going out and seeking knowledge, trying to find their own solutions. Consequently, the problem that sellers and marketers are facing is that these buyers are no longer responding to cold outreach and traditional broadcast marketing techniques.
Call, email, call, email = ignore, delete, ignore, delete.
Traditional tactics aren’t working, as buyers turn to search engines and social networks to self-educate through the consumption of digital content. The important question is; what kind of content? After all, nobody Tweets your data sheet!
It’s important to align content to not only different stages of the buying process, but to specific buyer personas as well, as the kind of content that will engage and incentivize them will vary based on their characteristics and preferences. If your buyer is deeply technical, they’ll look for deeply technical content. If they’re highly strategic that same technically-oriented content won’t resonate with them in the same way.
Above all, you should look to create content that tells a story and is human, in a variety of formats. It could be a how-to video, an instructional webinar or podcast, a whitepaper (if your target audience is B2B), an ebook, an infographic. The format you select will ultimately depend on that buyer persona, and where they are in their customer journey. It’s important to not only create content, but curate it too. Content curation essentially involves sharing relevant third party content that will appeal to your target audience. More often than not then, you should be curating the content of the influencers that you’re trying to build relationships with.
Once created, you need to share your content in the space where your target audience exists, engages and learns, be it on LinkedIn, or via Twitter Chats. You want your audience to be compelled to curate your content. This is why content is a key pillar of social selling, as well as modern marketing; buyers are much more likely to consume content from people and peers than brands and logos. That’s why a piece of content’s “shareability” should be a key consideration for you during creation, curation and distribution.

3rd Pillar: COMMUNITY

I am a big believer in ecosystem and partnership. At Eloqua, for example, we founded a community called Topliners. It was an online space where our customers could interact, where our employees were engaged and our partners educated. We shared inspirational success stories, facilitated supportive forums and published informative content. We even hosted offline events to bring our community together.
Beyond facilitating valuable communication, we were able to segment our community based on industry, geography, whether they were B2B or B2C. This allowed us to build detailed customer personas and helped us to better understand what they cared about, the challenges they were faced with. Not only did we facilitate the customer conversation, we listened to it, and joined in. When nurtured properly, a community has the ability to produce authentic sharing, learning, teaching and engagement.
A company that has excelled at promoting a customer-centric community is Gainsight, who is helping to define and grow the customer success movement. A core piece of their mission is to build the “biggest community of Customer Success folks around”. They do this in four ways;
  • Their Customer Success University, which offers a series of e-learning modules to help Customer Success Managers upskill and provide more value to their employers
  • Pulse Local, a networking community with local chapters that hold meetings and networking receptions to complement their online discussion community.
  • Pulse Conference, an annual conference that favours thought leadership and relationship building over product-centricity.
  • Career Hub, job postings of companies looking to hire Customer Success professionals.
By creating opportunities to connect customers and cultivate a sense of community, you can enhance the ongoing effectiveness of your marketing strategy, build your brand’s reputation, earn the trust of your customers and drive revenue!

4th Pillar: ADVOCACY

Your best salespeople are not on your payroll. They’re your customers, who are willing to say good things about you. Buyers today not only have more choice, they have louder voice, which you can leverage to your brand’s advantage.
The traditional perception of customer advocacy is something like a reference program, which is based on gathering references to help sales reps enhance your company’s credibility and acquire more customers. But what does a customer reference program offer the customer in return for their reference? It’s a one-way approach that offers no benefit or incentive to the customer.
I think the best advocacy programs are those that find ways for you and your company to provide value to your customers. Examples of this would be if your customers are quoted or referenced in the media, if they’re speaking at events or winning awards; you could amplify their achievements through your own social media channels.
The key to developing advocacy is clear communication. It’s not overselling, or letting your customer buy before they’re ready. You have to create an amazing customer experience end-to-end; great products, honest and accurate marketing, responsible salespeople. Even as a sales rep, my job has never been to sell. It has been to understand where the customer is in their buying journey, help them be ready to buy, and then coach them to success
If you want to turn a potential buyer into an actual advocate, you have to design your entire process to create advocacy. Advocacy is not random, and it’s not by chance. It’s about people, about the relationships you create. You need to craft experiences that evoke emotion. Advocacy is reciprocal, and earned. Be an advocate for your customers so your customer will want to advocate for you. 

Summary

The most effective marketing strategies are driven by a customer-centric culture. A customer-centric organization is where every process starts and ends with customer success in mind. It’s a culture, not an event or a department.. Every aspect of your company should be aligned with the sole purpose of creating an optimal customer experience. When you do this for your customers, they will in turn champion your success.
About Jill Rowley - Evangelist and Start-Up Advisor
After 6 years in management consulting, 52 quarters in software sales at Salesforce and Eloqua, a year leading Social Selling at Oracle, Jill Rowley provides #SocialSelling evangelism, education and enablement services to help companies market and sell to the modern buyer. She is also an Advisory Board member at numerous tech companies including HubSpot, TrackMaven, Speakeasy, and Vidyard. 
Jill is passionate about culture, customers, content, connections and community. She is dedicated to elevating the sales profession and determined to inspire more colleges and universities to offer professional selling curriculum and degrees.
You can connect with Jill on LinkedIn or follow her on Twitter.
Sophie Elizabeth Smith
https://goo.gl/KyEK5V

3 Ways Customer Listening Powers Marketing Effectiveness


Today customers can make sure that their voice is heard like never before. And, if marketers don’t have measures in place to listen, they are turning a deaf ear to potentially significant problems and missing out on essential insights for improving their customer experience.
Following are 3 ways to leverage customer listening and examples of how companies are putting these strategies into action.
1. Realize that Customer Listening (and Responding) is a 360-Degree Commitment.
Engagement with customers includes business partners who are also the face of your brand. So, how every aspect of your brand listens to the voice of your customer and responds is key.
For example, NASCAR made the decision to revamp its marketing and listening in five key areas. But that’s not where it ended. NASCAR also encouraged its business partners and drivers to do the same.
“We developed an industry action plan,” stated Steve Phelps NASCAR CMO, “… A plan for digital and social, a plan for driver star power–and within each plan, [we came up with] a number of different action items … [In an] effort to be thought leaders who provide the best available experience to our fans. We strongly encourage those across the entire landscape of the sport to embrace digital and social media — from drivers and teams to tracks and corporate partners.”
2. Customers are More Than Numbers, They are People, Talk to Them … (And listen.) 
Data gives you a good view of what customers are doing. However, it is not going to tell you why or give you the emotional factors like a conversation. Personal interactions can be more valuable than all the big data you will ever collect. 

Starting in October, Flow and Columbus Business Solutions, a telecommunications company serving the Caribbean, asked customers to tell them how they felt. Michele English, Columbus’ executive vice president and chief customer officer noted, “Our plan is to significantly enhance our customer ‘listening’ systems and ensure that feedback is integrated into our daily decisions and connected to our customers’ experiences across the organization… we have to design and implement [operational processes] to ensure that every customer touch point in the organization can support our customers’ needs efficiently and effectively… We now look forward to more customer feedback. “

The Company designed an easy to use online customer survey and sent communications to customers to encourage them to complete the survey and tell the company what matters. 
3. Make Conversation (and Listening) Easy with Social Communities Online communities enable the exchange of ideas in discussion forums, polls and social media. They provide brand information, mitigate problems and provide opportunities for a collaborative two-way conversation.
Southwest Airlines launched a Listening Center to monitor its online communities using a keyword-based listening tool that pulls in mentions from social platforms. The Listening Center monitors insights in real time to quickly identify issues and immediate engagement opportunities. Customers can connect their Twitter handles to their Rapid Rewards frequent flier numbers to get personalized servicesSouthwest Airlines also leverages the Listening Centers to send apology letters for delays, find new opportunities for engagement and implement company-wide customer care.

Alice Wilson, social business advisor for Southwest’s marketing organization notes that sharing the information collected is the key to listening success. “The customer feedback means something different to each [department] and can inform each group in a different way…From a social care standpoint, [employees] want to help assist and resolve. But somebody from the marketing team may be looking at that [data and ask], how do we alter communications to help these future situations?…The point is not to keep it as a silo.”
Keys to Effectively Listening to the Voice of Your Customer:
  • Listening should be at the heart of your marketing strategy.
    Listening lets you understand the “why” of what your customers are doing and experiencing so that operational issues, communication, and experience can be overhauled for a more positive overall brand impression.
  • Learnings from Listening Needs to be Shared with Every Part of your Business.
    Having data without acting on the implications does nothing for your business. Set standards for how the insights from your listening programs are regularly integrated and shared with all departments so that changes and actions are put in motion to respond to customer needs and comments.
  • Meaningful Dialogue Based on Listening.
    Develop authentic, honest and direct conversations based on listening, which lead to meaningful connections and two-way dialogue.
  • Use Listening to Develop Strategies.
    Once you launch programs to listen, develop means for incorporating these learnings into new strategies that address the issues identified in customer conversations. Put in motion ongoing review of the data collected through listening programs so that you have a clear roadmap that delineates what customers are expecting, their pain points and their current/future demands.
  • Listening Objectives Must be Established.
    If you don’t know how you are going to listen, you will not be able to hear what your customers are trying to tell you. Whether you have the means to set up a full scale listening center, a social monitoring program, a survey, or a call center monitoring program, know what you are implementing and how you will regularly harvest and utilize the insights.
In summary, customers have a lot to say and they want you to listen. The good news is that customers generally have valid concerns and smart advice to offer. Marketers and customers will both benefit if the marketer creates multichannel ways of listening to customers and processes for acting quickly on their input.\