Let the games begin

by JODIE SANGSTER

We hear a lot these days about the new buzz term “gamification” but do we really know what it means and is anyone really doing it anyway? Well the answer seems to be ‘yes’ and if analysts at Gartner are to be believed it’s time for us to sit up and take notice. 

According to Gartner, by 2015 a gamified service for consumer goods marketing and customer retention will become as important to companies’ marketing departments as Facebook and Twitter. Gartner further predicts that in less than three years more than 70 percent of Global 2000 organizations will have at least one gamified application.  

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When Loyalty is Just a Dead End

BY PHAEDRA HISE, Colloquy.

Is your loyalty program a four-lane superhighway, or just a dead end?

I recently had two radically different shopping experiences which highlighted how the back-and-forth flow of information can drive lift and repeat business, but a dead-end program can crash customers out.

Recently I bought flowers for my daughter’s ballet concert. I don’t always remember to take flowers for the showy stage-door presentations after the performances, so this time I decided to go all out with two dozen baby-pink rosebuds. But when I got it home, an hour before showtime, I opened the wrapper to discover that the blushing pink petals were actually hiding two dozen dead roses. The heads fell completely off the stalks as my panic mounted.

Fortunately, my florist has a loyalty program, and I figured this would save the day. I remembered a similar incident with my grocer a few years earlier. At checkout, the bagger overlooked my two pounds of cooked shrimp, and I got home (two hours before a party) to discover it wasn’t there. I called the store to explain the situation, and got put on hold.

My guess is that while I was on hold, the manager was looking me up. Here, the loyalty program was working like a superhighway – with information flowing instantly into the company, and then affecting the way workers reach out and communicate with customers on the fly. The manager would have seen that I lived five miles away, had been a member of the program for ten years, purchased lots of gourmet food every week, and had a growing family. Apparently I was parked firmly enough in their sweet spot for them to fix the problem: A clerk hopped into his car and hand-delivered my shrimp to the house just in time for guests to arrive.

I expected similar treatment from my florist, and when I explained the problem I again got put on hold. But here the stories take two different roads.

My florist’s program, alas, was more of a dead end. It consisted of a paper punch card, which was designed to keep me coming back (and it did), but no data was flowing into the store to define my value or inform their decision-making. If the store had gathered my personal information and linked it to the POS system, the manager (or even the shop assistant) would have seen that I had been a loyal customer for over six years, lived nearby, and bought flowers on average twice a month. Armed with a few guidelines for loyalty program member service, the clerk could have offered to deliver fresh flowers. Or, at the very least, credited my card instantly for the purchase and offered a free flower arrangement the next time I stopped in.

Instead, when the manager came back on the line she explained that I would have to return the dead flowers for credit. No trust that my story was true, no coupon for free flowers, and definitely no delivery offer.

The more powerful loyalty program flows in both directions – as an internal tool for gathering data and applying insights, and also a method for communicating with customers and expressing appreciation. Are your sales clerks gathering the right information, and do they have the guidance and authority to use that to make quick decisions regarding your best customers?

The moral of this tale is that the grocer won: I never shopped another, even when a larger competitor opened closer to my house. I also told the story to everyone I knew. But right now, I’m looking for another florist.

Article supplied by Phaedra Hise for Colloquy.

The “Undercover Boss” should also play the role of the customer

bY BILL BROHAUGH

Recently, I was having a bit of trouble getting into the website of one of the loyalty programs I belong to. When I typed in my username and password, I learned that “Your username is not recognized” on several tries. OK, it’s been a while since I’ve used the site, I thought, and I’m probably mis-remembering this particular username. So I
decided to create a new account–using the same username. Which I couldn’t do
because “That username is already in use.” In use, but not recognized?

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Net Promoter Links to RFM

by TIM TYLER

From the early days of data-driven marketing, it has been known that marketers can predict which customers are most likely to respond to an offer by ranking them on the basis of;

  • how Recently they have transacted with you
  • how Frequently they have transacted with you
  • how much Money they have spent with you.

It is also well known that of the 3: RFM, Recency is the best predictor of future business.

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The Customer Experience Ecosystem in Social is critical

BY GEOFF DE WEAVER, FOUNDER & CEO TOUCHPOINT DIGITAL AND PH.D CANDIDATE

In 2011 and beyond, the Age of the Customer, the only sustainable competitive advantage is knowledge of and engagement with customers. The successful companies are customer-obsessed, like: DELL, IBM, Zappos.com, Apple, Starbucks and Amazon.com. Executives in customer-obsessed companies today  “reapply” budget dollars from areas that traditionally created dominance in the “Mad Men” days – brand advertising, distribution lockup, mergers for scale, and supplier relationships – and invest in four priority areas today:

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Time-Place-Person Advertising

THE GOLDEN TRIFECTA OF MOBILE RELEVANCE by natasha rawlings

A new report has just been published YouGov which finds, not surprisingly, that regular display advertising on mobile is not going to cut it with the vast majority of mobile users. Not only do people ignore these ads, but 79% find them irritating too.

The nugget to come out of this research, and this has been echoed in other reports I have seen, is that: ‘Just over a quarter of respondents said they would welcome more advertising if it offered money off deals or special offers and 21% said they don’t mind ads that are relevant to them’.

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Ethnic Marketing White Paper

Deriving greater value from your relationship marketing program

With over 47% of Australia’s population being born overseas, mainstream Australian marketers can’t ignore the opportunities from ethnic marketing.

Following on from Sheba Nandkeolyar’s informative presentation to the RMCM Council on ethnic marketing, this white paper from the RMCM Council focuses on how mainstream marketers can target this growing market segment … More >

Social Media Marketing

Building a more meaningful relationship with the consumer

The intent of writing this paper was to develop a basic framework for direct marketers to appreciate what social media has to offer them. It would be great to capture your ideas for future social media white papers. We’d greatly appreciate your feedback, it will help us work in a ‘perpetual beta’ mode that challenges our current mindsets in how we structure and present content. Mike Hickinbotham, author … More >