OgilvyOne Report on The Future of [Social] Selling

OgilvyOne Report on The Future of [Social] Selling

Speed Summary | OgilvyOne Report on The Future of [Social] Selling
Brian Fetherstonhaugh, Chairman & CEO OgilvyOne Worldwide, the interactive marketing and consulting arm of the Ogilvy Group, has just published an interesting research report on the future of selling (embedded below – click through to slideshare to download).
Based on insights from 1000 sales professionals across the world, the report outlines the future of selling with 6 key guidelines, all relevant to social commerce.  For the time challenged, here’s the speed summary:
Buying is changing; the new infosphere of social media, information asymmetry and distributed information means buyers have more information than ever before, and are now less dependant on sales information.
However, despite being information rich, buyers today are often insight poor – they don’t know what to do with all the information available to them.  The new opportunity in sales is to help buyers analyse information available by turning it into insight for making smarter buying decisions.
Many brands and businesses have yet to adapt to the new infosphere of social media, information asymmetry and distributed information.  A six-point guide to future-proofing sales (online or offline) includes:
  1. Adapting to the New Buyer Journey – throw out the 19th Century AIDA model.  The new model is a (digital) word of mouth powered virtuous circle not a funnel – trigger event -> research -> shop and buy -> use -> share (trigger event) [cf. McKinsey's Loyalty Loop] (image below)
  2. Use Online Content as Digital Bait – use content to draw customers to your sell.  There are three kinds of digital bait
    • Beliefs and Points of View – a differentiating [polemic, even] opinion on your category
    • Expertise – provision of high quality expert information
    • Invitations and Offers – making it worth their while
  3. Develop New Listening Skills: Digital Footprints – understand and harness digital buying signals, search terms, prior purchases, social media readership (blogs, forums…), white paper downloads…
    • IBM studied the exact language that IT buyers use in their searches about software topics and then custom designed a whole raft of inexpensive “how to” videos around these topics. IBM posted them on YouTube and tagged them with exactly the same words that buyers use when they search. Lead volume and quality increased
  4. Future-proof Marketing Skills with Behavioural Economics – understand how costs and incentives pattern customer behaviour, emotionally and rationally – elevate the design of offers and response mechanisms to a rigorous science
    • Sometimes, increasing the price will increase sales volume, not reduce it.
    • Consumers are irrationally biased toward the “middle” choices on a menu.
    • Creating a convenient default option is one of the most effective ways to make a sale. Human inertia stands in the way of selling.
    • Adding more choices often will result in fewer yeses, not more
  5. Learn a New Way to Sell: Social Selling – exploit digital word of mouth and word of mouth platforms such as Facebook (500m users, 130m mobile members) as selling platforms
    • The best way to think about social media from a sales perspective is as digital word of mouth; social media has had an enormous impact on buying behaviour: 65% of successful sales professionals believe social media is integral to their sales success
    • Think of sales as the new status update: P&G is selling 29 brands on Facebook, Ford Explorer launched on Facebook [cf. Fiesta Movement], offered fans priority/early test-drive opportunities
    • “My philosophy, I.C.E.E., stands for Inspire, Connect, Educate or Entertain. I try to have each of the tweets I send out fall into those categories” Tony Hsieh CEO Zappos.
  6. Sales and Marketing as Partners not Opponents – rather than act as tennis opponents, sales and marketing should be team members in a basketball team.  Whereas salespeople were paid to honor the dollar and respect the brand, and marketers paid to honor the brand and respect the dollar, the two functions need to work hand in glove to be functional.
    • Together marketing and sales should endeavour to be:
      • Empathetic – starts from the perspective of the buyer
      • Problem-solvers – asking the right questions to diagnose the problem, and then pitching what you sell as the solution
      • Communicators – clarity of message, inspires and motivates action
      • Trustworthy – delivering on what you promise
      • Beer-worthy – customers want to share time with you
      • Relentlessly energetic – evangelise tirelessly
  7. View more documents from Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide.

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HBR on Social Media & New Rules of Branding

http://socialcommercetoday.com/speed-summary-hbr-on-social-media-new-rules-of-branding/

HBR on Social Media & New Rules of Branding

Speed Summary | HBR on Social Media & New Rules of Branding

This month’s Harvard Business Review has a spotlight on social media and branding, with astand out article by McKinsey, based on a global study of 20,000 consumers.  In a nutshell, the article argues that many brands are spending their marketing budgets in all the wrong places, based on an outmoded “funnel” marketing model – and proposes an evidence-based alternative.

The article by David C Edelman – McKinsey Global Digital Marketing Strategy, and entitled “Branding in the Digital Age: You’re Spending Your Money in All the Wrong Places“ can be accessed here(pay-wall), but below you’ll find the speed summary, with implications for social commerce – we think it’s useful. And if you don’t have time for that, here’s the summary of the summary

  • CEPEA – Bin the funnel model of marketing, the new consumer decision journey is CEPEA – Consider, Evaluate, Purchase, Enjoy, Advocate.
  • CEP the CEPEA – Trash media-centric marketing;  marketers should build strategy around customer-centric Customer Experience Planning (CEP) that delivers the brand promise coherently and consistently along touch-points of the CEPEA decision journey
  • Rather than simply add a social layer to e-commerce, or an e-commerce layer to social properties, smart social commerce should focus on the consumer decision journey, with the objective of helping people make smarter shopping decisions – where they most need that help.
  • Every social commerce program should begin with understanding the consumer decision journey with a view to identifying touch points that are most influential in facilitating decisions.

From this…

…to this

Branding in the Digital Age: You’re Spending Your Money in All the Wrong Places.

David C Edelman – McKinsey Global Digital Marketing Strategy

  • Consumers today connect with brands in a fundamentally new way, often through media channels that are beyond manufacturers’ and retailers’ control.  This means traditional marketing strategies must be resigned to accord with how brand relationships have changed
    • Consumers still want a clear brand proposition, what has changed is when – at what touch points – consumers are open to influence
  • Once, a shopper would systematically winnow his brand choices to arrive at a final selection and complete his engagement by making a purchase.  Now relying heavily on digital interactions, he evaluates a shifting array of options and remains engaged with the brand though social media after a purchase
    • Marketing mis-spend is often the result of using a bad funnel metaphor, whereby consumers were thought to use a process of elimination to get from a wide consideration set down to a final choice.  This bad metaphor leads to bad marketing – paid media push marketing used to drive consumers along the imaginary funnel, culminating in retail promotions to open wallets at point of purchase.
    • However, this two-pronged marketing strategy does not reflect the consumer decision journey (CDJ); there is more to the CDJ than “consider” and “buy” phases.
    • The new CDJ is CEPEA – CONSIDER-EVALUATE-PURCHASE-ENJOY-ADVOCATE, with a LOYALTY LOOP shortcut leading to re-purchase (and skipping future consideration and evaluation) if enjoyment experienced meets or beats expectations
      • Rather than begin with a large consideration set, consumers today manage massive choice with smaller initial consideration sets, but that may grow, based on active evaluation

From an accompanying McKinsey Quarterly article: The Consumer Decision Journey

      • After consideration phase, consumers will now actively evaluate options, seeking input from peers, reviewers, retailers, brands and competitors.  Rather than shrink, the number of options under evaluation may grow during this phase
      • Increasingly consumers will continue evaluation right up to the moment of purchase in store – thus point of purchase (placement, packaging, availability, pricing) is increasingly important
      • Post purchase, interaction continues – 60% of facial skin cream consumers do online research on the product after purchase.  If they enjoy the product, they’ll advocate it to others, thus becoming a touchpoint themselves – influencing further purchases, and enter into an ENJOY-ADVOCATE-REPURCHASE loyalty loop that buy passes initial phases of the CDJ
  • Smart marketers will study the “consumer decision journey” for their products and use the insights they gain to revise strategy, media spend and organizational roles.
    • First, marketers should stop media-centric budget allocation, and replace it with customer-centric approach, targeting stages in the CDJ
      • 79-90% of marketing spend goes to advertising and promotions that hit consumers at the consider and buy phases, but consumers are often more open to influence at the evaluate and advocate stages
      • The bad funnel metaphor leads to an outmoded and outdated marketing strategy that vastly over-weights the significance of paid media.  Today owned media (websites (and customer service, sales, packaging)), shared media (social sites) and earned media (third party site content) are significant touch-points

    • Second, marketers should begin by running a pilot based on the new rules of branding for a particular product in a particular market to demonstrate the potential of a more sophisticated approach to senior leadership
      • 1) Chart the customer decision journey for your product – what they do, what they see and what they say, for the five CEPEA stages
        • This will involve an upfront shopper research project (protocol analysis) to understand the CDJ, and identify key touch-points of influence
          • (e.g. when are offline channels such as TV advertising and word of mouth most important (consideration phase), do consumers use the website during the evaluation phase (no – less than 1 in 10 do), do they use search engines (no, they go directly to Amazon)?

From an accompanying McKinsey Quarterly article: The Consumer Decision Journey

      • 2) Develop your marketing strategy around a coherent CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE PLAN that leverages the key touch points in the CDJ
        • Match experience to expectations and keep it coherent
          • e.g. Apple’s CEP involving systematically removing jargon across all touch points, making technology friendly across all touch points through online help videos, ads, and in-store Genius Bars
          • e.g. Nike offers a coherent experience, bringing the just do it motto to life with online tools and events that help people to just do it.
      • 3) Allocate resources accordingly and embrace three new roles for marketing
        • Orchestrator” – Many touch-points are now owned media – customer service, packaging, website and sales – and marketers need to coordinate this media, either through internal collaboration or direction in order to offer a coherent Customer Experience Plan
        • Publisher” [Content Supply Chain Manager] – The rise of shared and owned media means that marketers now have to produce or commission vast amounts of content – all of which should work together to deliver a coherent experience (one McKinsey client estimates each product launch requires the production of 160 prices of content, involving 20 parties across 30 touch-points – this needs management
        • Analyst” [‘Marketplace Intelligence Leader] – The success of your CEP will depend on acting on insightful customer understanding, itself the result of data collection and analysis.  This means bringing research and analytics under the umbrella of marketing, rather than stuck in IT and research silos
  • Implications for social commerce
    • Most digital marketing – including social commerce – is still based on old and defunct funnel/AIDA model (leading to a fetishization of traffic, transactions, conversion and paid media), whereas the way consumers navigate the digital media landscape has fundamentally changed.  Social Commerce managers need to become “Orchestrators” and “Content Supply Chain Managers” at ease with earned, shared, and owned media as well as paid media…  We need to rethink social commerce in terms of UX (user experience) and realise that the future of social commerce, and more broadly, digital marketing, is Customer Experience Planning
    • Rather than simply add a social layer to e-commerce, or an e-commerce layer to social properties, smart social commerce should focus on the consumer decision journey, with the objective of helping people make smarter shopping decisions – where they most need that help.
    • Insofar that the essence of social commerce is the concept of word of mouth applied in the context of e-commerce, social commerce solutions have a naturally fit with the Advocacy phase of the consumer decision journey – where consumers themselves become brand influential brand touchpoints

From an accompanying McKinsey article on advocacy

 

    • Because the Advocacy phase of the Consumer Decision Journey is part of the “Loyalty Loop”, the implication is that from a consumer decision journey perspective, social commerce may be primarily a Loyalty Loop solution (suited for stimulating loyalty rather than acquisition)
    • Social Commerce should be deployed as part of an integrated Customer Experience Plan, not as a standalone initiative.  Critical consideration should be given to Experience (UX) delivered by social commerce.  If your social commerce solution doesn’t offer a gold standard experience within the consumer journey, you’re unlikely to reap rewards.

From an accompanying McKinsey Quarterly article: The Consumer Decision Journey

From this…

…To this

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소셜커머스 메타사이트, 소셜커머스 사이트를 모아서 보여주는 사이트 모음

 

소셜커머스 사이트들을 모두 모아 보여주는 소셜커머스 메타사이트!

 

 

오늘거래되고 있는 반값할인 정보들을 한 사이트 에서, 한 눈에 확인하실 수 있어요.

 

 

 

다원데이    http://daoneday.com

반값닷컴  http://www.banggab.com

오픈데이즈  http://www.opendays.co.kr

와우24      http://www.wow24.net

하이티켓   http://hiticket.co.kr

하루하나  http://www.haroohana.com

다할인   http://www.dahalin.co.kr 

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2011 디자인 트렌드

The 2011 trends in interactive design

2011년 디자인트렌드에 대해 잘 정리한 자료가 있어서 공유합니다. 원본은 아래에 있구요~~

http://www.slideshare.net/ProphetsAgency/the-2011-trends-in-interactive-design

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도와주세요! 아이패드가 생겼어요.

IT 관련 블로그 "껍데기의 거시기 세상!" 을 운영하고 계신, 파워블로거 껍데기님이 만드신 책입니다. 애플의 이전 "아이폰4가 생겼어요" 의 저자이기도 하시구요.
한마리도 정리하자면 이 책은 너무너무 쉬운 기능위주의 기본서입니다. 폰트나 전체적인 책의 구성 역시 쉽고, 크고, 편하게 볼수 있습니다.
실제로 3-4시간만집중하면 다 읽을수 있을정도의 분량과 쉬운 이해를 하도록 돕고있는 스타일을 가진 책입니다.

아이패드의 활용에 관한 시장상황이나, 제품군이 가지고 있는 차별화요소에 대한 부분이 소개 되어 있지는 않습니다.

이미 애플의 제품군인 아이폰을 사용하고 계신 사용자라면 권하기 어려울만큼 기본적인 기능소개에 초점을 맞춘 기본서이지만
그럼에도 분명 "아이패드의 여러 기능들을 활용해서 할게참 많겠군" 하고 생각하게 되실 만큼 이것저것 다양한 기능들을 활용할수 있도록 소개해 주고 있습니다. 유용한 앱과 활용방법이 많긴하지만 대부분 유료앱을 많이 소개해주고 있어서, 나에게 필요한건지 잘 판단하시고 구입하셔야 할것같습니다.

개인적으로 가장 맘에 들었던 앱은 아이패드를 컴퓨터 서브 모니터로 사용하는 앱이었는데요~
MaxiVista라는 앱인데. 9,99달러입니다.

너무 큰 기대를 하지 않고 가볍게 "아, 이게 아이패드구나, 이렇게 활용하는기능도 있구나" 정도의 느낌으로 보시면 좋을것같네요~

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