Cross-channel marketing – Dotdigital https://dotdigital.com Tue, 19 Sep 2023 13:01:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://mkr1en1mksitesap.blob.core.windows.net/staging/2021/11/favicon-61950c71180a3.png Cross-channel marketing – Dotdigital https://dotdigital.com 32 32 A complete guide on cross-channel, omnichannel, and multi-channel marketing https://dotdigital.com/blog/a-complete-guide-on-cross-channel-omnichannel-and-multi-channel-marketing/ Tue, 19 Sep 2023 12:02:44 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=61411 The world of marketing is always evolving, adapting to changes in technology and consumer behavior. With these changes come new terminology to describe the strategies and methods used for customer communication. It’s important to understand these terms to informed decisions about how to engage with your customers.

One area of confusion is the difference between ‘cross-channel‘, ‘omnichannel’, and ‘multichannel’ marketing strategies. By exploring these terms and their benefits, we can clear up any confusion and help you make the best decision for your business. So let’s investigate what these terms mean and how they can benefit you.

What is cross-channel marketing?

Cross-channel marketing is all about connecting with your customers across multiple channels. We’re not just talking about sending out a bunch of emails or posting on social media. It’s about creating a seamless experience for your customers, no matter where they are. 

Think about it, your customers are constantly switching between different devices and platforms throughout their day. They might be reading their inbox on their phone, browsing search engines on their laptop, or scrolling through social media on their tablet. By utilizing cross-channel marketing, you can reach them at each of these touchpoints and make sure they get a consistent message from your brand. 

Figuring out which channels your audience prefers and personalizing each channel is an important aspect of cross-channel marketing. Are your customers more active on social media? Do they prefer email? Once you have that figured out, it’s all about creating a consistent and tailored message that works across those channels.

Some key aspects of cross-channel marketing are:

Coordinated cross-channel strategy

Cross-channel marketing amps up your reach by strategically coordinating your campaigns across multiple channels. This creates a seamless, consistent message for your audience no matter which platform they use. 

Increase cross-channel reach

By using cross-channel marketing, you have the power to reach a larger audience thanks to the variety of platforms available. Each channel offers the opportunity to connect with different segments of your target market, amplifying your brand’s visibility and presence.

Personalized touchpoints across channels

Cross-channel marketing enables businesses to create personalized touchpoints with customers based on their behavior and preferences. By tailoring your message and content to suit the individual, you can effectively address their needs, desires, and pain points at various stages in the customer journey.

What is omnichannel marketing?

Omnichannel marketing is similar to cross-channel as it allows you to deliver a seamless and integrated customer journey across marketplaces, devices, channels, and platforms. 

When comparing omnichannel and cross-channel marketing, the main difference is that omnichannel integrates marketing efforts, data, and strategy under one umbrella while cross-channel does not.

With omnichannel, data is organized centrally and becomes more reliable. This creates more chances for personalization as customer data is synchronized, making it easier to deliver personalized content and messages. This approach enables retailers to offer shoppers the products they need, when and where they need them.

So how does it work? Let’s say someone finds your company through a Facebook ad and decides to view your website. With omnichannel marketing, you want to make sure that the messaging and branding on your website match what they saw in the ad. And if they decide to make a purchase, you want to make sure that their shopping cart is saved across devices, so they can seamlessly continue the checkout process on their phone or tablet.

Some key aspects of omnichannel marketing are:

Customer-centric focus

The primary goal of omnichannel marketing is to ensure customers have a convenient and engaging experience, regardless of the channel they use. By prioritizing the needs and preferences of your customers, you can create a unified experience that encourages brand loyalty and satisfaction.

Connected interactions

In an omnichannel strategy, all customer interactions are interconnected, allowing for a smooth transition between various touchpoints. For example, a customer browsing your website on their phone can continue shopping on your desktop site or in-store, experiencing the same level of personalization and tailored recommendations.

Data integration

Omnichannel marketing relies on integrated customer data that provides a holistic view of each individual’s preferences and behaviors. This information enables businesses to offer relevant content, promotions, and offers across all channels, enhancing the overall customer experience.

What is multichannel marketing?

Multichannel marketing is using different marketing channels to reach your audience. Instead of just relying on one method, like email or social media, you’re spreading your message across various platforms to maximize your chances of connecting with potential customers.

Think about it like fishing. If you only cast your line in one spot, you might catch a few fish, but you’re limiting your chances of reeling in a big one. But if you cast your line in several different spots, you’re increasing your odds of catching something awesome, right?

So, multichannel marketing works the same way. You’re casting your marketing net wider, reaching people through different channels. This approach amplifies your brand visibility, as you’re able to reach a larger and more diverse audience who might have different preferences when it comes to how they like to receive information.

Some key aspects of multichannel marketing are: 

Diverse channel selection

Multichannel marketing involves implementing a mix of channels, such as email, social media, content marketing, paid advertising, and traditional avenues like print or TV ads, to reach your audience. By leveraging each channel’s strengths, you can optimize your overall marketing strategy and reach a wider range of customers.

Channel-specific strategies

With multichannel marketing, each channel has its unique strategy, catering to the specific characteristics of that platform. For example, social media campaigns might focus on building brand personality and driving customer engagement, while email marketing is more targeted towards nurturing leads and driving conversions.

Measurement and optimization

If you use multichannel marketing, analyze the performance of each channel to determine which are most effective in achieving your business goals. Through data analysis and performance metrics, you can optimize your marketing strategy by allocating resources to the most successful channels and maximizing the return on investment (ROI).

What approach is best for me?

Choosing the right strategy depends on your business goals, resources, and the preferences of your target audience. To determine the best fit, consider these key factors:

Customer experience

If delivering a completely unified and immersive customer experience (CX) is your priority, cross-channel or omni-channel marketing may be best suited for your business. 

Personalization

For businesses looking to personalize messaging and engagement at specific milestones in the customer journey, cross-channel marketing offers the flexibility and customization needed to create targeted touchpoints.

Channel diversity

If your focus is on actively engaging with customers via multiple channels, without necessarily linking the messages or strategy between them, multi-channel marketing is the ideal approach.

How Dotdigital helps your cross-channel marketing strategy

Here at Dotdigital, know the importance of implementing comprehensive marketing tools tailored to your business goals and target audience. That’s why we’ve developed an innovative cross-channel platform as an all-in-one solution to help manage your channels.

With the Dotdigital platform, you can:

Connect with your customers on all their favorite channels

In today’s world, reaching savvy customers through multiple marketing channels is essential to stay ahead of the game. With Dotdigital, you can effortlessly connect with your audience across various touchpoints, leading to a more effective and rewarding marketing strategy.

Create seamless customer journeys

Dotdigital’s marketing tools help you send personalized messages to customers through email, text messages, and social media. By enhancing their experience at every stage of their journey, you’ll be able to build stronger relationships and drive engagement.

Supercharge your email marketing

Email is a powerful way to stay in touch with customers who want to hear from your business. Dotdigital’s email builder makes designing eye-catching emails a breeze so that you can grab your customers’ attention and inspire them to take action.

Turn texts into sales

Have you considered using SMS marketing to reach your customers? It’s a quick and effective way to connect with them in real time. With Dotdigital, you can integrate your text messages with other channels like email and social media to increase your chances of making a sale.

Grow, convert, and retain with social media retargeting

Looking to expand your customer base? Dotdigital has got you covered. With Facebook Lead Ads, you can easily acquire new leads and grow your marketing lists. Plus, keep your current customers engaged by showing them targeted ads after they visit your website.

Reduce barriers to purchase with live chat

Forrester says using live chat on your website can increase conversion rates by up to 40%. With Dotdigital’s live chat feature, you can make it easy for customers to get the help they need while also increasing their happiness and likelihood of buying from you. 

Reach customers anywhere with push notifications

Dotdigital helps you stay connected with customers by sending them timely push notifications on their smartphones. These messages remind customers of your business and encourage them to take action, like making a purchase.

Summary

So there you have it – the key differences between cross-channel, omnichannel, and multichannel marketing. Now that you’re in the know, it’s the perfect time to reevaluate your marketing strategy. The good news? Dotdigital’s cross-channel platform can make the journey smoother and more effective than ever before.

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How to build a martech stack for improved marketing performance https://dotdigital.com/blog/what-is-a-martech-stack-and-how-will-it-improve-your-marketing/ Thu, 11 May 2023 08:00:00 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=44795 What is a martech stack, you may well ask? I know I did when I first heard the term. Let’s break down exactly what the term means and how it can increase productivity and improve your marketing.

What is a martech stack?

A martech stack is simply the name given to the collection of marketing technology or software used by a business to support and enhance its marketing efforts. Even if you’re not familiar with the term, you likely already have one.

Forrester found that martech stacks now account for over 20% of the total marketing budget, and 56% of businesses planned to increase their allocated budget to spend on martech. Plus, a huge 82% of marketers said they plan to change their martech stack in 2022. There is a lot of growth in this area because marketing technology is constantly evolving, and martech frees up marketers’ time, and we all know that time is money.

The importance of a martech stack

The importance of a martech stack cannot be overstated in today’s digital age. With the proliferation of marketing channels and the vast amount of customer data available, a martech stack is essential for businesses looking to gain a competitive edge in the market.

By leveraging customer data from various sources, such as CRM systems, social media platforms, and email marketing campaigns, a well-designed martech stack can help automate and streamline marketing processes, improve customer targeting and engagement, and increase marketing ROI. By integrating various marketing tools and technologies, businesses can achieve a holistic view of their marketing efforts and gain valuable insights into customer behavior and preferences.

A martech stack also enables businesses to stay agile and adapt quickly to changing market conditions. As customer expectations and preferences evolve, businesses must be able to respond in real-time to deliver personalized experiences and relevant content. A martech stack can help businesses achieve this by providing the necessary tools and technologies to analyze and act on customer data.

How to build a martech stack

Curating your marketing stack isn’t as intimidating as it sounds. There are no rules and no expectations. It’s as simple as looking at what you need, both as a business and as a team, and going from there. Do you have an SEO specialist on your team, or do you need an all-in-one solution to automate your processes? Once you’ve got an idea of the areas you need support for or simply want to enhance, you need to look at your budget.

38% of marketers cited budget as a barrier to building a martech stack. However, a martech stack optimized for a marketing team’s needs is going to be worth the investment. Once you’ve figured out your priorities and your budget, you can start researching which options will work for you. There is no set number of technologies you should have in your stack.

Graph showing martech stack sizes in businesses. 19% 1-4, 44% 5-10, 30% 11-20, 6% 21+, 1% don’t know.

What does a martech stack look like?

Still unsure of exactly what a martech stack is? Let’s provide some examples. For SEO, we use Semrush for social media scheduling and reporting. Then, for marketing automation, we use Dotdigital (duh), and for CRM, we use Microsoft Dynamics. 

That’s just a fraction of our complete martech stack; we simply use technology that works for us, and you should do the same. No business and marketing team will be the same, so it’s highly unlikely any martech stack should be the same.

We have previously had other technologies in our stack too, ones that we’ve since changed to a new offering or simply no longer need, and we’ll likely add new ones in the future too. A martech stack is simply a name for the collective technologies and software your marketing team uses, it’s not a strict parameter, and it can be fluid.

So, how can tech integrations improve your marketing?

Dotdigital is an example of how technology can improve your marketing. Our platform unifies data, which in turn raises insights ready to empower hyper-personalized marketing messages, automated depending on customer behavior. Pretty impressive, right?

The martech industry is vast, with 9,932 martech solutions available. This means you’re highly likely to find what you’re looking for, no matter your industry or need. Dotdigital works with lots of different technologies to strengthen your marketing throughout the customer journey.

Some examples include:

  • Customer service platforms like Zendesk to keep records of all interactions in one place
  • CRM platforms to support sales team integrations and remove silos
  • Ecommerce integrations to improve understanding of customer behavior
  • Enhanced personalization through platforms like Movable Ink

If you have any questions about what’s possible, please don’t hesitate to get in touch.

Put into practice

For an example of how one of Dotdigital’s integrations can help, let’s look at Reviews.io. You can set up an automation program that sends customers an email asking them to review your brand on Reviews.io once they’ve completed a purchase. 

You can also have an automation set up to send a follow-up email based on the review they leave. Three stars or under? Nurture campaign. Four or five stars? Thanks for your review. Have you checked out this similar product? You get the idea.

The journey is seamless back and forth. You’re prompting customers from your communication platform, letting them provide a review on the review platform, and then following up on your communications platform. This is a great example of two technologies that offer different services working together to bridge the gap—exactly what a good martech stack is all about.

But wait, there’s more. You can also use the social proof editor within Reviews.io to create a graphic and have that automatically appear in your Dotdigital image library. That extra hit of social proof ready and waiting in your image library to add to your welcome campaigns can make all the difference to your conversion rates. 

And the best part? No one on the team had to spend time looking for good reviews, creating an image, and manually uploading it to Dotdigital. The result is stronger marketing campaigns, as well as more time on your hands.

Working together

As soon as you’ve identified the technology you need, make sure it works together. As we’ve just explored, your martech stack is there to support you and make your day-to-day run smoother. You don’t want to be bogged down in manual tasks to share data from one platform to the next.

When your technology works together, it’s going to be more effective overall. Knowledge is power right? If system B knows what a customer has done on system A, it can better market to them based on this and let systems C, D, E, and F know too. 

Of course, it won’t be this linear in reality, as your customers’ journeys aren’t linear. Your stack will be a collection of tech platforms that work in different areas as and when they’re required, in no particular order.

The point remains that your tech platforms communicating with each other is key. Data-driven marketing is imperative for success. The technology is there to strengthen your customers’ journey, so being aware of what happens throughout that is crucial. Think of your stack more like a web, with each piece of technology or software able to connect with each other. 

You need to ensure that multiple systems are integrated to transform a wealth of customer data into reliable, contextual, and timely insights and make that information easily accessible to other platforms that can take action on those insights.

Choosing technology partners based on their integration capabilities with your existing technology is imperative to building a marketing stack you can rely on. This will in turn improve your customer journey, and as we all know, a positive customer experience leads to higher rates of customer loyalty.

How can Dotdigital improve your martech stack?

With 46% of marketers citing the complexity of integrating the technologies as their top barrier to creating a martech stack, we understand it can feel daunting. We know that your time is valuable, so we offer both out-of-the-box integrations so you can get started straight away and a bespoke solution if your stack requires a bit more tailoring. (Our developers always love a new challenge).

Our marketing automation software is the best in the biz thanks to data unification, cross-channel functionality, and leading marketing automation. And while our platform does a lot, it can’t do everything.

Dotdigital is designed to work with the best of the best in other areas too, such as ecommerce, social media, review platforms, and so on, so that you can create a truly joined-up stack. Our integration hub is a great place to start exploring, as it explains how you can integrate Dotdigital with other marketing software.

Embrace technology

Marketing is a broad discipline, and there’s a lot to keep track of. As consumers have largely moved online, the tactics and tools used to engage with customers have become more and more technology-based. 

Back in the day, print advertising and direct mail were huge channels, these days, social media ads and email marketing are more common. Even billboards, which used to be printed out and pasted on by someone climbing up a ladder with a bucket and brush, are now digital screens that can be updated at the touch of a button.

The point is, technology is undeniably a huge part of marketing, and it’s only going to continue to grow. It can be hard to know where to start, what’s going to be worth your investment, and how to make it all work together. 

However, if you start by looking at what you need, researching what’s available, and curating a stack tailored to your business, it’s going to benefit both your marketing output itself and your team’s productivity.

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How to unify customer data for data-driven marketing https://dotdigital.com/blog/unify-customer-data-for-data-driven-marketing/ Tue, 11 Apr 2023 09:01:31 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=37404

Dotdigital Blog

How to unify customer data for data-driven marketing

Data-driven marketing is no longer a theoretical and innovative approach, it should be a fundamental part of your marketing strategy. 

Data-driven marketing has been a buzzword for digital marketers for a while now; it has long been emphasized as the tactic behind marketing success. In fact, the majority of marketers in a recent survey cited data-driven marketing that focuses on an individual as “the single most exciting opportunity” emerging in the industry.

Data-driven marketing, two men working together on a tablet

What is data-driven marketing?

Data-driven marketing is an approach to marketing that focuses on strategies built on insights pulled from big data. This data is a collection of customer information, interactions, engagements, and purchases that can be used to form predictions about future behaviors.

Ultimately, the goal of data-driven marketing is to enhance and personalize the customer experience to drive growth, conversions, and customer retention.

Data-driven marketing is no longer a theoretical and innovative approach, it should be a fundamental part of your marketing strategy.

Brands around the world have accelerated their digital transformation as a result of the global pandemic that hit back in 2020 and has forced marketers to re-evaluate their digital engagement strategy. Similarly, there has been a significant shift in customer behavior as they opt more and more to interact with brands through digital experiences.

But, where many brands have experienced unusual and rapid growth in the number of customers discovering them online, there have also been unusual buying behaviors and increasingly high churn. In response, marketers are doubling down on their efforts to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of their data.

With technology and platforms like Dotdigital so fundamental to modern marketing, it’s essential brands focus on how to get the best value possible from the big data they have available. Can it unify all your sources of data? How quickly can you pull insights from your data?

Why is unified data important?

Today, most companies are ‘data-rich’. That is, they have vast amounts of data on their audience. The trouble lies in a company’s ability to tap into that data. 

What is data unification?

Data unification is the process of collecting raw data from multiple sources, systems, and formats and standardizing it so it can be treated as a single source of unified and accurate data. 

In a study by Econsultancy, only 23% of brands believed their organization was ‘very strong’ in terms of being able to pull actionable insights from big data. When you consider the numerous benefits of having a single source of data truth, it’s clear to see why so many businesses are stating that improving their data and insights is a top priority for 2022. 

Graph showing senior marketing tech priorities

Benefits include but are not limited to: 

  • More accurate analytics and enhanced business intelligence 
  • Higher data quality  
  • Reduced overall costs  
  • Higher ROI 
  • Faster time-to-market 
  • Optimized sales and marketing 
  • Faster and more accurate decision-making
  • More visibility of cross-selling and up-selling opportunities 
  • Improved employee productivity 
  • Smarter product management 
  • Improved operational risk management  
  • Reduced supplier onboarding costs 
  • Streamlined supply chain management 
  • Enhanced compliance with privacy legislation 
  • Superior customer experience (CX) 

Organizations need to ensure that they have the ability to unite multiple systems, transform them into clean, reliable, contextual, and timely data and make it easily accessible to teams across the business.  

 

Data unification is not a 'nice-to-have'. It’s essential for efficient data-driven marketing that drives profits, growth, and customer retention.  

What to consider when streamlining and unifying your martech stack

For true organization-wide success, you need to go further than unifying your internal systems. Being able to understand and interpret online and offline customer behavior will empower your marketing team, offering new ways to automate and optimize marketing spend and feed the sales funnel.  

Unfortunately, the constant evolution of marketing solutions and changing expectations of customers means that martech stacks often become a mishmash of systems.  

The biggest perceived barrier preventing marketers from creating the ultimate customer experience is ‘poor integration between tech systems’. But, when looking deeper into the problem, it is more likely that the true problem lies with marketers either using multiple technologies or vendors, without a unifying platform. 

Unifying your data sources can reduce costs by 25-35% and increase speed to market by 30%. Bringing together your marketing stack, pruning legacy systems, and modernizing applications will enhance customer experiences, drive customer retention, reduce costs, streamline marketing and sales workflows, minimize code maintenance and end data siloes. Now, let’s look at what you need to consider when unifying your stack.  

Single customer view  

90% of people now travel across devices and touchpoints to complete a single task, generating tons of data along the way. Legacy and outdated systems like CRMs can no longer process, sync, and interpret this data in real-time. A single view of the customer pulls all this information together. 

What is single customer view?

Single customer view (SCV) is a single location for every individual you interact with. It provides you with an overview of all the data you’ve collected throughout their relationship with your brand.  

Your SCV should sit at the heart of your business. Customer-centricity is essential for survival in this modern, digital-first world we live in. An SCV gives all departments and teams access to valuable information to improve performance. Executives can use it to make key business decisions supported by accurate and insightful data. Marketers can use it to deliver more personalized and profitable campaigns. Customer support agents can use SCV insights to resolve issues faster. The potential for growth and success is limitless. 

Overall, the improvements you can make to the customer experience will improve retention, increase customer lifetime value (CLV), and directly impact your bottom line.  

2. Cross-account reporting 

As your business grows and develops, you need a martech stack that grows with you. Whether you have multiple storefronts, operate in different regions each with individual currencies, or manage separate brands under one umbrella group, you need to be able to pull information on your sales, campaigns, and marketing activity across all facets of your business. 

Getting a bird’s-eye view of your performance through cross-account reporting across all regions and business divisions gives decision-makers in your company a clear view of what’s happening. This helps all teams identify risks, weaknesses, and missed opportunities where performance can be optimized. Similarly, campaigns and activities that yield high rewards can be double-downed on, invested in, and used to drive business profitability.

3. Open integrations 

When streamlining your marketing systems, you need to know your data unification platform plays nicely with others. That means, it is open to integrating with the vast number of other systems out there.  

With so much data at your fingertips, you need to have confidence that you can tap into this and gather insights with speed. At the same time, you don’t want to find yourself limited by your platform’s ability to integrate with new tech as you grow. You need a platform that can do it all.  

Open APIs and self-serve functionality enable you to continue to grow your martech stack while keeping your systems streamlined.  

Data unification = data action + data collection

Data unification is not a ‘nice-to-have’. It’s essential for efficient data-driven marketing that drives profits, growth, and customer retention.  

We’re in a new era of customer expectations. Changes to data regulations and increasing privacy consciousness means customers are more engaged with brands’ data collection methods than ever before. At a time when trust in brands is at an all-time low, customers want to know the value they will get from sharing their data. How will marketers put it to use to improve their experience?  

It is your brand’s responsibility as data stewards to use data respectfully and create valuable customer experiences. Marketers must think about what actions they want to take and what data they need before they begin collecting data.  

Unifying your data into a single source makes this data and insight accessible, not just to the marketing team, but to the whole business. Decisions can be made across the business with your customers in mind. True customer-centricity is only possible if you connect all your data.  

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10 ways to keep your blog relevant https://dotdigital.com/blog/10-ways-to-keep-your-blog-relevant/ Fri, 05 Aug 2022 07:53:31 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=39655

10 ways to keep your blog relevant

Woman in yellow jumper smiles as she works on a laptop

A blog is a key content marketing channel, it’s a way for you to show yourself as a thought leader and provide value to your readers. Studies show that 70% of consumers feel closer to a company as a result of content marketing, and 80% of US internet users interact with blogs. So blogging is certainly a strong channel. We write blogs all the time, and we’re hoping that as you’re here, it means you enjoy them, so here are some of our top tips to keep your blog relevant.


1. Think big picture

Khloe Kardashian Drama GIF by Bunim/Murray Productions - Find & Share on GIPHY

When you’re creating your blog strategy and content calendar, plan blogs that compliment your company’s overall marketing and PR strategy. It sounds obvious, but it can be easy to go off and write about a topic without considering how it’s relevant to the overall strategy. So be sure to write content that matters, and will appeal to your audience.


2. Be engaging

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Reading a blog should be a pleasure, not a chore. Blogs can be pretty informal so write how you would speak, and keep things chatty. This will naturally warm people to your brand as your personality shines through, and keep them coming back. In terms of structure, hook readers with an informative intro that piques their interest and go from there. Which leads to…


3. Have a digestible layout

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No one wants to read a big wall of text, so break it up. Utilize headers, images, quote blocks, and bullet points to stop it from being a solid block of text – and always remember to test your layout on mobile. A lot of people don’t have the time or patience to read a whole blog and may just want to read a certain section, so make sure your blog is structured clearly. Another strategy to please those short on time is to make your content skim-able by using H2s and bullet points.


4. Add value

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Content marketing is all about providing value to your readers. Give people something back for their time, whether that’s knowledge, advice, or simply entertainment. Make sure you’re sharing accurate and valuable information that’s new to your readers. Add context, and explain why this subject is important, and then have action points, advice, and learnings for people to take away. (And in terms of adding enjoyment, we always find gifs go down a treat.)


5. Do your research

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A blank page can be daunting, so having a plan is a great place to start. There’s a reason you want to blog about this topic, so get that down on paper and expand on it. You need to know what you’re talking about before you start, so do some research into the topic, see what other people are saying, and decide the angle you’re going to take.


6. Prove it

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If you’ve done detailed research, you should find yourself armed with statistics that back up your point. Be sure to include this data to reinforce what you’re saying. Marketing is all about seeing results, so use data wherever you can to add extra weight to what you’re saying – and always ensure you’re using reliable sources. Utilize graphs or quote blocks to highlight these points and help with your overall readability and design.


7. Don’t skimp on SEO

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SEO allows search engines to find your blogs easier and builds site authority. You have to play by the rules to get found, so make sure you’re doing keyword research and then using these phrases in your content. Just don’t shoehorn them in, find a way to work in key phrases that don’t have a negative impact on your overall content. Another key thing to consider is internal links, this also helps keep people on your site for longer as they jump from blog to blog.

You also need to pay attention to SERPs – search engine results pages, so ensure your page title, meta description, and URL are both accurate and engaging.


8. Be adaptive

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As with all successful marketing strategies, you need to optimize. Especially if you’re just starting out with a blog, you need to be keeping a close eye on your analytics. You can then see which topics and style of content are being read, and those that aren’t. Over time you’ll also learn which days of the week, and times of day get more traffic too. Use this information to inform your ongoing strategy and don’t be afraid to try new things.


9. Post regularly

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Having a regular posting schedule means that readers know what to expect. How regular will depend on your capacity, and on your subject matter too – you don’t want to write blogs with nothing to offer just for the sake of posting. A regular schedule also helps with SEO.

By having an overall blog strategy and a content schedule, you’ll find it much easier to stay consistent, and see the rewards.


10. Promote your blog

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You’ve put all the effort into planning, researching, and writing your blog so don’t just publish it and leave it to be stumbled upon. Of course if you’re doing your SEO well, your blog will be found by search engines, but there’s more you can do. Utilize your other digital marketing channels to support the distribution of your blog. Share your blog on social media, paid ads, and in your email marketing campaigns. Also include a sharing block within your blogs so that readers can share your content with others easily.



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What role does your martech stack play in improving customer retention? https://dotdigital.com/blog/what-role-does-your-martech-stack-play-in-improving-customer-retention/ Mon, 25 Jul 2022 06:30:24 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=39000

What role does your martech stack play in improving customer retention?

It’s official: customers are running the show.  

Today’s economic climate has made customer loyalty a vital ingredient for marketing success. But, with budgets cut and customers more concerned about value for money than ever before, customer loyalty is getting harder to achieve.  

Happy smiling man at his laptop marketing professional

Customers are happy to shop around and track down the best brand that suits their needs at any given time. They’re less rooted in the recognized and more willing to try new brands. This works in your favor for customer acquisition but makes retention that much harder.  

What is customer retention?

Customer retention refers to your business’s ability to retain customers over time. It’s generally a percentage metric measuring how may customers are retained by the end of a set time period.  

Switched-on customers are engaging with a broad range of brands. In fact, today’s customer is 40% more likely to try new or different brands than five years ago. Only 29% prefer to stay with brands they’ve tried before.  

How to calculate customer retention rates

There is a simple formula you can use to calculate your customer retention rate:  

CRR = ((A-B/C) x 100 

CRR: Customer retention rate 
A: The number of customers you have at the end of a set time period 
B: The number of newly acquired customers during the set time period 
C: The number of customers you have at the start of a set time period 

E.g. ((2000-543)/1500) x100 = 97% CRR 

That’s not to say that all the hard work that goes into your brand marketing is irrelevant. Customers expect brands to have presence and purpose, but that alone is not enough to retain customers and drive repeat purchases.  

Today’s consumer is 40% more likely to try new or different brands than five years ago. What does this mean for customer loyalty?

Customers want value and accessibility

Dotdigital’s latest report into customer behaviors found that the top three motivators for signing up to newsletters are:  

  • To claim the signup discount/offer (35%) 
  • To hear about future promos (33%) 
  • To become part of their loyalty programs (30%) 

Pair this with the fact that affordability and value for money are key considerations during the purchasing process, and it’s clear that customers are looking for the best deal they can get.  

We also discovered that once a customer has subscribed to your email marketing, 31% interact with your social media channels once a day. Most customers (57%) interact on social channels at least once a week. And, in addition to this, 38% claim to visit a brands website at least once a week too.  

This re-emphasizes the importance of creating connected and consistent experiences across all your channels.  

One stack for all your marketing goals

It has been predicted that by the end of 2022 there will be nearly 10,000 marketing technology solutions available for marketers.  

Statista chart total martech solutions 2021
Chief Martec. (2022). Number of marketing technology solutions available worldwide from 2011 to 2022. Statista. Statista Inc.. Accessed: July 21, 2022. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1131436/number-martech-solutions/

With the vast number of technologies on offer, it’s not surprising to discover that 80% of marketers plan to update their marketing stack this year.  

Statista marketers planning on changing martech stack
MarketingCharts. (2022). Share of marketers who plan to change their marketing technology stack in selected economies worldwide in 2022. Statista. Statista Inc.. Accessed: July 21, 2022. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1304117/marketers-planning-change-martech-stacks/

If you’re amongst the vast majority of marketers looking for a change, it’s important you build a martech stack that can do it all. But, if the goal is improved retention, what do you need to be looking for?  

Marketing automation

Marketing automation is your hub, the central point of your marketing stack that brings everything together and keeps the wheel turning.  

As well as simplifying workflows and improving the efficiency of your team, an intelligent marketing automation platform will offer you data-driven insights and advanced reporting options. This will empower you to continuously optimize and develop your marketing strategy.  

Customer data

Today, the bulk of customer interactions with your brand come online. When building your ultimate marketing stack, you need to be constantly thinking about your customer data. You need a CRM or ecommerce platform that plays nicely with others.  

What is CRM?

CRM stands for Customer Relationship Management. It’s software that manages interactions with customers and potential customers and helps businesses build strong customer relationships. Effective use of a CRM will enable you to streamline processes so you can increase sales, improve customer service, and increase profitability.  

Your CRM and your marketing automation should be a match made in heaven. Interactions recorded in your CRM will trigger and inform your marketing automation strategy.  

Single customer view

If you’re looking to improve retention, understanding your customers is essential. The only way you can get a truly comprehensive view of your customers – their drives, motivations, and needs – is with a single customer view.  

Single customer view (SCV) pulls in data from all your platforms to create a 360-degree profile of your customer. This gives you insight into your customers like never before. Crafting personalized and relevant customer journeys is a big winner when it comes to customer retention, and with SCV this is made easy. 

Loyalty programs

Loyalty programs are now one of the three top motivators driving new email subscriptions. Intelligent and engaging loyalty programs can be created using a loyalty management system.  

A loyalty management system helps you build stronger relationships with your audience. Depending on your business and your goals, there are many different types of loyalty programs you can add to your marketing strategy. Tiered programs allow customers to gain access to additional benefits as they advance through the ranks. Points-based programs reward customers for the money they spend.  

In order for a loyalty program to work, it needs to be stacked with your automation program and your CRM. This enables effective tracking. When a customer spends money or interacts with your brand a fully integrated stack will ensure it’s tracked in your loyalty program. 

Reviews, social proof, and UGC

Social proof is a vital part of new customer acquisition – people trust the unbiased reviews of their peers more than the word of the brand – but it’s also a great retention tool.  

Customers’ drive towards more personalized and relevant content stems from their desire to be seen as more than just a contact in the address book. Collecting and displaying customer reviews and UGC (user-generated content) demonstrates that you’re a brand that listens to its customers and has nothing to hide. Authenticity is an important factor in creating loyal customers and nothing is more authentic than a review.  

When building your stack, you need a reviews platform that can plug in and play with all your marketing channels. Automated emails and SMS should be triggered as part of the post-purchase journey to collect feedback. You need a review platform that can be pulled into your emails, landing pages, and websites.  

Every brand looking to improve customer retention should have an integrated reviews platform.  

Cross-channel

No marketing channel works in a silo. The whole point of creating a marketing technology stack is to break down any and all siloes. So you need a platform that empowers your team to work smoothly across channels.  

An effective customer journey is consistent across your website, social media, email, SMS, chat, and every channel in your arsenal. That means messaging and personalized experiences too. A fully integrated stack will have one single source of data truth.

For users of data-first platforms like Dotdigital, that will mean that every interaction on every channel is recorded in a single customer view that will enable you to reach customers on their favorite channel about their favorite products.  

Building for retention

Customer loyalty has changed and it’s easy to see why. Vast choice, free shipping and return, and accessible customer service has reduced the risk customers face when then they experiment with new brands.  

But there’s still a silver lining. The expanding martech market means that there are more solutions available to businesses of all shapes and sizes, in every industry and vertical than ever before. With that, comes more opportunities to create experiences that retain customers and boost loyalty.  

Data is at the core of all marketing strategies, no matter the goal. Do you need to drive more conversions? Data will tell you where customers are dropping out of the funnel. Are you aiming to grow your contact database? Data will tell you what tactics encourage sign-ups and which channels are the most effective. Want to boost retention? Data will give you the insights to create engaging and personalized journeys that keep customers coming back for more.  

Truly effective marketing – the kind of marketing that does all of the above and more – comes from a stack that’s built with growth and expansion in mind. As channels increase and customer behaviors change, you need a stack that can adapt to the market. The quicker and more efficiently you can pivot, the more reasons you’ll be able to give customers to stick around.  

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How using data in your campaigns will score you points https://dotdigital.com/blog/how-using-data-in-your-campaigns-will-score-you-points/ Tue, 14 Jun 2022 08:00:42 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=37682

How using data in your campaigns will score you points

Man celebrates whilst looking at laptop

Many brands have a whole host of data, but aren’t always sure what to do with it. We’re always talking about using data to enrich your communications. Data doesn’t lie, it’s interesting, it’s powerful, and it can really improve your message.

Traditionally data is considered a bit dull, but we’re not talking about adding Excel spreadsheets to your newsletter. In fact, please never do that. But we are talking about weaving data into your overall message to add depth, authority, and impact.

Fantasy Premier League (FPL) do this fantastically. FPL, for the uninitiated, is exactly what it sounds like – a website and app that allows you to create a fantasy team alongside the English Premier League to earn points, create leagues to play against friends, and compete with other users all around the world. For many it’s just a bit of fun, for others it’s a serious deal, with FPL experts existing and sharing tips each week, it’s certainly a platform with invested fans.

FPL is a free-to-play service, so it makes its money through sponsorships and paid ads. This means that customer engagement could be flippant, and it’s also obviously incredibly seasonable. As a result, the brand needs to work really hard to keep users engaged, and as an email geek, I have to say it does a stellar job with its email campaigns.

Let’s take a look at some examples of how it does this.


Building excitement

FPL season intro email campaign FPL season intro email campaign

This first email from FPL to kick off the season, was chock full of content. FPL start by building excitement, and then immediately let the reader know what to expect as the season progresses in terms of email communications, explaining what they will contain, and when they’ll be sent. FPL could have also linked to its preference center here to give readers a chance to reduce this if they wish, but it can be found in the footer so we’ll let them off.

The usage of data in this email is relatively basic as not much has happened yet, simply using first name personalization, and including the team name are nice touches to make the email feel informed and sophisticated. The email campaign also includes lots of content for readers to click through and consume in the run-up to the first game week, demonstrating value in the form of extra content for being subscribed.


Round-up reports

FPL monthly review email campaign FPL monthly review email campaign

Each month FPL send out an email detailing your performance over the month. This campaign is a combination of generic stats across all players, and those tailored to the subscriber’s performance. This data covers both the previous month, and also includes a roundup of the season so far. The email also expertly utilizes personalization, with the opening copy clearly personalized with both first name, and written to reflect the reader’s personal performance over the month. This is a great level of personalization you don’t see often.

The email campaign isn’t just a reel of stats though, it also includes educational content you can click-through and read, another clear demonstration of the value you get for being subscribed. Also finishing off with a fun game, no doubt to encourage clicks, and a final helpful reminder and CTA present in the footer to keep users engaged.


A year’s worth of data

FPL general season review email campaignFPL general season review email campaign

 

At the end of the season FPL send out a season round-up email, full of stats and insight. It sends out both a generic, and a personalized campaign. In this first one they once again make clear what’s to come, telling readers they can expect their personalized wrap-up that weekend.

The overall review campaign summarizes the whole season, with tons of stats and factoids. By including stats on how many other players were active this season, it builds the sense of community amongst readers.

The email, like all of their campaigns, is well designed and includes a gif rotating the ‘top performers’ to make the whole campaign feel super slick.

The email finishes off with a quiz, encouraging users to tweet them their score using the predetermined hashtag. This is a great use of cross-channel pollination. As the season is coming to an end, many users will be less interested in receiving emails, so FPL are aiming to get as many subscribers as possible to join them on other channels, in this case social media – thus widening their reach. It’s a smart move.


Make it personal

FPL personalized season review email campaignFPL personalized seasonal review email campaign

Next we have the personalized end-of-season wrap-up email. The campaign includes a huge amount of stats, personalized to the subscriber. Detailing things such as highest rank throughout the season, number of transfers made, and so on. The stats included are a collection of personal, the average, and the best for each particular stat. This gives a huge amount of information and context for the player, and perhaps even an ego boost if they have done particularly well. This is a really strong example of data usage, it provides the user with something valuable, something they wouldn’t get if they weren’t subscribed.

The email concludes with a thank you message. Knowing that this is likely the last email many will open for a while as it’s the end of the season, it’s a nice touch to thank subscribers and acknowledge them as real people. Even in this section they include some data, sharing how many others are playing, which builds on the feeling of community, and reinforces the brand’s position as the popular choice.


Data collection

FPL email campaign asking users to do a survey

FPL also use its emails to gather even more data. Of course it has a ton of behavioral data that is collected in-play, but not a lot of zero-party data.

This email was sent out to subscribers, asking them to share their thoughts. Surveys are often seen as a burden for consumers, FPL negate this with positive copy explaining the value exchange in completing it (getting to influence something you care about) and also add in a reward element with a prize draw.


Conclusion

FPL have shown how you can seamlessly include customer data to create an engaging campaign that adds real value to the subscriber. Of course not every brand has this much data on their customers, and sharing what you do have won’t always be appropriate, so take inspiration and see what could work for your brand.

Customers know that you have their personal data, and not all of them are comfortable with that. Increased privacy measures are being introduced by big tech companies to reflect consumer desire. Brands need to work hard to change this attitude. Brands should be innovating their communications, to show consumers that sharing their data is a good thing, and can benefit them.

In these examples FPL are simply sharing relevant data to inform, entertain, and engage the consumer. In other industries you can use the data you have to inform your content, ensuring consumers get emails that are relevant to them, and even make their life easier.

For example, in B2B you could use behavioral data such as webinar attendance or registration, to recognize a subscriber’s interest in a topic and use this to inform and influence the follow-up content you send to them.

Ultimately, email marketing has lots of tools available for you to create detailed, personalized campaigns your subscribers will enjoy, and you can do it at scale. So have a think about how you can utilize data to make your customers’ experience better, and create campaigns that prove data is anything but boring.



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The future of customer retention: empathic marketing https://dotdigital.com/blog/the-future-of-customer-retention-empathic-marketing/ Thu, 12 May 2022 16:07:23 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=35579

The future of customer retention: empathic marketing

Customer retention is a cheap and efficient strategy that ensures business and profit growth.

Customer acquisition costs are on the rise and look set to stay that way. Changing social situations and consumer behavior has forced businesses in every sector and every vertical to focus on the online side of their business. That means competition is fierce. You’re fighting for attention in an already crowded marketplace.

It therefore makes sense that marketers have redoubled their efforts to retain their customers. Customer retention is a cheap and efficient strategy that ensures business and profit growth.

That’s not to say it’s your only strategy. To continue to grow, you need to acquire new customers and grow your marketing database. But, once you have these customers, the countdown starts and the race to retention begins.

Every interaction from the day of subscription is a part of your customer retention strategy. Everything down to the ease of checkout, customer experience, and post-purchase journey will have an impact on a customer’s loyalty to your brand.

The more carefully you consider the customer journey – every aspect of it – the easier you’ll find it to retain your customers.

Woman looking at phone smiling happy marketing

What is customer retention?

Customer retention refers to a business’s ability to retain customers over time. Your customer retention rate is impacted by how many new customers are acquired, and how many existing customers churn at the end of a given time period.

The move towards customer retention

Dramatic shifts to the customer lifestyle have significantly changed their expectations with regards to their online experiences. For nearly two years, the COVID pandemic forced customers and brands to forge online relationships across digital channels.

During that time, they discovered their true value. Brands were fighting for their attention, their data, and their business. It has truly become the buyer’s market.

Social issues have come to the forefront

This came at a time when social issues were brought to the forefront of social consciousness. Issues such as sustainability, employee rights, data handling, and diversity and equality have become vital to the customer’s decision-making process. They want to know the brands they do business with are human at their core – that they care about their customers, community, and society as a whole.

Agile brands are winning

Agile brands who were able to adapt have won big. They have been able to grow and retain customers who are happy to stay loyal to a brand that shares their values on these big issues.

Brands must connect on a human-to-human level

As we all begin to feel the pinch due to the rising cost of living, inevitably customers are going to be even more cautious about who they do business with. Brands who are able to connect with their audiences on a human-to-human level will reap the rewards of loyal customers and their long-term business.

Empathy, agility, and creativity

If the recent pandemic taught us anything, it’s that brands need be empathetic, agile, and creative to survive and thrive in today’s digital marketplace.

In an article for Forbes, SAP’s Maria Morias stated that she believed changing buying behaviors and preferences during the pandemic would lead to a call for “flexible, creative, and empathetic experiences”.

Empathetic experiences are not new

Empathic experiences are not a new concept for marketers. For years, we’ve been exposed to buzzword driven articles about customer-centric marketing. Digital-first marketers have long been advocating the importance of customer centricity – putting the customer at the heart of everything you do.

Marketers must focus on what customers truly value

But empathetic marketing it about more than just that. With the phasing out of third-party cookies, hyper-targeting has lost it appeal among customers and marketers alike. Brands need to take a more measured and human approach. Too much personalization can come across as creepy, and lead to customers asking questions about how much personal data you have on them and how you’re using it.

Instead, marketers should be focusing on what customers truly value.

What is empathetic marketing?

Empathy is a person’s ability to see events and situations from another’s perspective – to put yourself in their shoes. Empathetic marketing similarly means that brands are able to see the world from the customer’s point-of-view. Brands are genuine and can empathize with their customers, understanding their aims, goals, and motivations, and therefore create authentic connections.

Don't be creepy with personalization

Just because advancing technology makes hyper-personalization possible, doesn’t mean marketers need to use it in every interaction. Use it when it’s relevant. First names in subject lines; localized copy in dynamic content blocks; lookalike product recommendations based on recent browsing history in abandoned browse campaigns.

Marketers must build trust-based relationship with customers

Truly empathetic marketing is about organically building trust-based relationships with customers. It’s about acknowledging the role emotion plays in the customer’s decision making and how this impacts their reaction to your marketing campaigns. It’s not always about the hard sell.

Treat customers as humans

Customers want to be thought of as humans first. They want brands to acknowledge when something is sad or that the customer might not want to receive certain information. This is where your marketing team’s agility and creativity come into play.

Be open and honest in your marketing and loyalty follows

Authenticity is essential for building trust. If you offer customers the option to opt out of Father’s Day communications or you proclaim to support an ongoing social issue, you need to be able to back it up. What content are you going to produce in lieu of Father’s Day content? What is your brand doing to support the Black Lives Matter movement? What steps are you taking to make your business more sustainable?

The more open and honest you are in your marketing; the longer and stronger customers’ loyalty will be.

Just because advancing technology makes hyper-personalization possible, doesn’t mean marketers need to use it in every interaction. Use it when it’s relevant!

Cross-channel empathetic marketing

As well as being empathetic, authentic, and human, changing expectations require you to meet customers on their channel of choice. That means, connected experiences are more important than ever. Consistency and authenticity will help you build the trust you need to retain customers. That means your voice and message has to be consistent on every channel.

If you’re forward-thinking and empathetic enough to ask customers if they wish to opt out of Father’s Day communication, ensure you’re acknowledging multiple situations in your Father’s Day messages on social media. Celebrate the new fathers, fathers to be, fathers far away, fathers no longer with us.

Empathetic marketing and data

In order to adapt quickly, efficiently, and with great impact, data is essential. Real-time data syncs enable you to create seamless customer experiences.

The better you understand your customer, the easier it will be to create campaigns that will resonate with them long-term. When customers feel seen and understood, they’ll choose to interact with your brand. When they feel as though you share their values, they’re more willing to spend more time and money with you.

Personalized, targeted, and clever marketing is now the rule, not the exception. To stand out from the ever-growing crowd, you need to be connecting with customers on a deeper level. Appeal to their interests as a person, not just as a customer. You’ll soon find your brand connects with people in a way that invokes a strong sense of loyalty that feels natural to the customer, and stands the test of time.

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5 marketing trends defining customer experience in 2022 https://dotdigital.com/blog/5-marketing-trends-defining-customer-experience-in-2022/ Mon, 28 Mar 2022 07:00:25 +0000 https://dotdigital.com/?p=32991

Hitting the Mark

5 marketing trends defining customer experience in 2022

Customer experience trends

Over the last couple of years, the marketing landscape has changed dramatically. The recent pandemic has led to an increase in shipping and acquisition costs while seeing customer unsubscribe rates increase. 

At the same time, consumer behaviors and expectations have also changed irrevocably. Shoppers are becoming more selective about the brands they choose to interact with, they demand immediate attention whether that be query responses, speedy delivery, or search results.  

Similarly, these expectations are seeping into the world of B2B, NFP, and non-commerce marketing. Customers want to have similar experiences, no matter who they’re interacting with. First and foremost, modern customers want to be treated as human beings.  

In our latest Hitting the Mark report, we evaluated the customer experience delivered by 100 brands worldwide. From this, we’ve been able to identify five key trends that will help you engage with customers, no matter your sector or vertical.  


1. Authentically engage with your audience

In a new world where customer loyalty is hard to come by, shared values are on the rise as a key factor in the decision-making process.  

Customers want to connect with brands that have a purpose beyond making money. Doing business with a brand that shares its values – such as sustainability, environmentalism, or humanitarianism – makes the customer feel good because they know their business is helping a good cause.  

But brands must do more than say they support a cause. To really connect with your audience, your brand must be authentic and honest. That means clearly stating your goals and objectives, outlining how you hope to achieve them, and keeping customers informed about your journey.  

Modern customers are far too savvy to fall for sweeping statements or greenwashing claims. The only way you’ll be able to drive conversions and improve customer retention is through open and honest communication of your values.  


2. Communicate your brand story

As well as connecting with your shared values, customers are looking for brands that stand out from the crowd. The rapid emergence of DTC brands in the ecommerce world has proved that customers are happy to shop with new and upcoming brands if they tell their stories well. After all, who doesn’t love a business started in someone’s parents’ garage? 

Your brand story is what sets you apart. It should be the central vein of everything you do and everything you say. That means it goes far beyond your ‘About Us’ webpage. It’s your personality and you need to let it shine. 

The best way to do this is in an editorial newsletter. We’ve often talked about the steady decline in genuine newsletters. As marketers, we often get dragged down by the idea every email we send needs to drive conversions. Of course, that’s the end goal of email marketing, but sometimes looking at the bigger picture helps give us a greater perspective.  

Editorial newsletters are all about creating connections. They demonstrate that you know what’s important to your audience while adding value to the overall exchange. Providing additional or educational content alongside your marketing, customers will feel as though they’re getting more out of the relationship than they’re putting in – dramatically improving their overall experience.  

And, ultimately, that will lead to stronger, longer-lasting relationships between you and your customers. 


3. Be wise in your data collection

Recent changes to laws and regulations surrounding data privacy have made customers more astute to the way brands use personal data. What used to be a simple exchange, the newsletter subscription process has become more complicated due to increased mistrust.  

News stories about data breaches and companies selling personal information now mean that brands must demonstrate themselves to be trustworthy before they can obtain an email address.  

Once again, the answer to this marketing conundrum is simple: be open and honest. Integrity is something customers are looking for in the brands they do business with. Right from your very first interaction, at the point of subscription lay out the facts for your new prospective customers.  

  • What information do you need?  
  • Why do you need it? 
  • How will you use it in the future? 
  • What will be the benefit to the customer?  

But that’s not the only way to collect information. There are many smart tactics you can employ to get to know your customers. Some brands get customers to complete quizzes to learn what customers are after. Others send out surveys or have intelligent preference centers. All empower the customer to determine the course of their own journey. 


4. Create journeys with positive friction

What is positive friction? Positive friction refers to the process of putting light friction in the right stage of the customer journey.  

As marketers, we strive to make the customer journey as smooth and seamless as possible, but sometimes, in doing so, we can create more problems. For example, a five-second checkout process is great for reducing cart abandonment, but what happens when the customer wants to change their delivery address? They’ll have to contact customer services and wait to get the problem fixed.  

Adding a little bit of friction here can prevent these kinds of mistakes from happening. Offering simple options along the customer journey can help you create conversion-driving experiences with fewer problems. For example, offering alternative payment options, such as Klarna or Afterpay may better suit the shopper in the moment. Or, adding chat widgets to pages with a high bounce or exit rates can remove barriers to conversion.  


5. Always be thinking about retention

As Dotdigital’s resident marketing guru, Gavin Laugenie always says, customers start depreciating from the moment they sign up to your email marketing. That is the point where they are the most engaged, and from then on, it is a constant battle to keep them.  

A lot of work has gone into the conversion-driving part of the customer journey, but what happens to them after that? Post-purchase, or post-conversion depending on your industry, is an often-overlooked stage of the customer journey. This typically happens because transactional emails such as order confirmation or onboarding programs are automated.  

But, as a result, they’re also at a pivotal stage of the customer journey. Having just converted, you need to give customers a reason to keep coming back. Weaving in your brand story, showcasing product recommendations, or driving new clients to free learning resources will keep them engaged for longer.  

Retention isn’t always about loyalty programs – though they are proven to significantly improve engagement. Every interaction you have with a customer will influence their decision to come back to you in the future. It’s time to turn our attention to these hidden moments and build upon them.  



HTM

Unlock more secrets to CX success

Learn more about the ideal customer journey and how you can build experiences that drive conversions, growth, and retention with our latest research report, Hitting the Mark.  


Access the report


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Why cross-channel marketing matters https://dotdigital.com/blog/why-cross-channel-marketing-matters/ Thu, 24 Feb 2022 10:00:00 +0000 https://dot.tiltedchair.co/why-multichannel-marketing-matters/