The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age
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Customer networks
TV, radio, out-of-door Broadcast Direct mail, brochure Product test, comparison In-store purchase Reward points Figure 2.3 Rethinking the Marketing Funnel. H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S 27 Today’s customer networks, however, make their biggest impact on the marketing funnel through an additional level, which I call advocacy. At this psychological stage, customers are not just loyal; they advocate for the brand and connect the brand to people in their network. These custom- ers post photos of products on Instagram, write reviews on TripAdvisor, and answer friends’ product questions on Twitter. Thanks to search engine algorithms, this type of customer expression is heavily weighted to influ- ence search results. Each customer’s advocacy thus feeds back up to the top of the funnel and has the potential to increase the magnitude of awareness, consideration, and so on through the funnel. (This extended, or looped, marketing funnel is sometimes renamed the customer journey, with new names invented for the same stages of the funnel, ending in advocacy. But the model is the same.) Now every business needs to go beyond driving potential customers to the stages of purchase (action) and repeat purchase (loyalty). Businesses need also to engage, nurture, and inspire repeat customers to enter the stage of advocacy, where they will contribute to the growth of the business in the rest of its customer network. At the same time that the funnel is influenced by customers’ net- worked behaviors, their range of possible touchpoints with a company is increasing dramatically. In addition to advertisements, store shelves, and possibly a call center, today’s customers may be consulting a search engine, the company’s website, a mobile app, a local map search, a physi- cal retailer, online retailers, peers on social media, the company’s own social media accounts, instant chat, and customer review sites. Custom- ers are increasingly proactive in taking advantage of all these resources. Customers who are standing in a store looking at a product display are likely to use a mobile device to check prices, additional product details, and customer reviews. They may also check shipping options if they don’t want to carry the product home. And they may be instant messaging a quick snapshot to their friend or spouse before making a final decision on color or model. In a study at Columbia Business School on “Showroom- ing and the Rise of the Mobile-Assisted Shopper,” we observed all these behaviors and more. 7 These touchpoints open multiple paths to a purchase. To effectively market to customers, businesses must think about the specific needs that will lead customers to take one path to purchase versus another: How quickly do they need the product? How price sensitive are they? Do they 28 H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S already have a preferred brand? How close are they to physical retailers? And so on. Businesses can increase their influence by mapping and opti- mizing the customer experience on each path. They begin this process by developing an “omni-channel” view of the customer—based on an under- standing that the same customer may be using a tablet app and a desktop computer and walking into a store. Designing each touchpoint experience What Is a Customer Worth? One of the most important questions any business must face today is, How much are my customers worth? As customer interactions expand across more digital touchpoints, measuring the return of marketing investments requires new financial tools. Chief among them is a model of customer lifetime value—the profitability of each customer for your bot- tom line over the long term. For any business, some customers are more profitable than others, and some may even be costing you money. Customer lifetime value can be shaped by various factors: frequency of purchase, volume of purchase, price point, reliance on discounting, and loyalty or attrition rate. To build a model, you will need historical data and the involvement of your finance team. (To get started, you can read Managing Customers as Investments by Sunil Gupta and Don Lehm- ann. 8 ) Once you have a customer lifetime value model, it is extremely helpful in segmenting your customers, defining objectives for new customer strategies, and measuring the impact of things like customer engagement and advocacy. In a networked world, though, customers add value in more ways than just their transactions over time. Increasingly, new business models are being built where the customers’ participation, data, and collective knowledge are a business asset and a key competitive advantage. This more intangible value of customer networks can even be a factor in the financial valuation of firms. Customer participation is a key driver of stock price for social networks such as Facebook or LinkedIn. When Yahoo paid $1 billion for the popular blogging platform Tumblr, it was not for Tumblr’s paltry revenue but for its large network of young, active, creative users. Of course, the challenge in acquiring a firm for its customer network is that continued customer loyalty is not assured. When Google purchased Waze for $1.1 billion, it was critical to maintain the participation of Waze’s customer network to justify the full price of the acquisi- tion. Google immediately announced that Waze would not be rolled into Google Maps but would be kept as a separate product run by the original Israeli team that started it. Customer networks are extremely valuable, but they are intangible assets that can’t be swapped and leveraged as easily as real estate or factory equipment. H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S 29 in isolation, as if it were for a different customer, dilutes and disrupts the brand experience. An omni-channel experience uses design to integrate the path to purchase as it moves from one touchpoint to the next. Whereas the funnel is a macro tool for thinking very broadly about customers’ psychological states, the path to purchase is a lens for looking at customer behaviors much more specifically. Both perspectives illustrate the necessity of understanding customer motivations and needs more deeply than ever. They also point to two striking new imperatives for every busi- ness: create compelling experiences at each step of the path to purchase, and drive customer advocacy at the end of the funnel so as to engage and co-create value with the most involved customers. These imperatives raise important questions: How do you engage customers in their networked world? What motivates them? What are they looking for? Five Customer Network Behaviors In the research for my book The Network Is Your Customer, I sought to answer this question: What kinds of digital offerings most deeply engage customers in their digital lives? I started by looking at hundreds of cases—across con- sumer and B2B industries—of the products, services, communications, and experiences that had been embraced and adopted by customers during the first two decades of the World Wide Web and the mobile Internet. What I found was a recurring pattern of five behaviors that drive the adoption of new digital experiences. I call these the five core behaviors of networked customers: r Access: They seek to access digital data, content, and interactions as quickly, easily, and flexibly as possible. Any offering that enhances this access is incredibly compelling. Think of text messaging on early mobile phones, which revolutionized communications with the ability to receive and send messages from anywhere at any time. From the convenience of e-commerce to today’s latest instant messaging apps, customers are drawn to anything that provides the immediacy of sim- ple, instant access. r Engage: They seek to engage with digital content that is sensory, interactive, and relevant to their needs. From the early popularity of Web portals, to the spread of online video, to next-generation virtual realities—their digital desires are marked by a thirst for content. The old media adage that “content is king” is at least half right. Although 30 H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S content makers may struggle to earn profits in the digital era, there is no question that the desire to engage with content is a key driver of customer behavior. r Customize: They seek to customize their experiences by choosing and modifying a wide assortment of information, products, and services. In a generation, customers have gone from having a handful of televi- sion channel options to a digital world with more than a trillion web- pages. They have been trained by their digital networks to expect ever more options for personal choice, and they like this. From Pandora’s personalized radio streams to Google’s search bar that anticipates their search terms when they type just a few characters, they are drawn to increasingly customized experiences. r Connect: They seek to connect with one another by sharing their expe- riences, ideas, and opinions through text, images, and social links. This behavior has driven the entire explosion of social media—from blogging, to social networks like Facebook or LinkedIn, to online niche communities that gather around a shared passion, vocation, or viewpoint. All of these incredibly popular platforms are driven by the behavior of individuals using small bits of text and images to signal to others that “here is where I am, what I’m thinking, what I see.” r Collaborate: As social animals, they are naturally drawn to work together. Accordingly, they seek to collaborate on projects and goals through open platforms. This is the most complex and difficult of these five behaviors, but it doesn’t stop them from trying. Whether building open-source software together, raising money for causes they believe in, or organizing write-ins and protests around the world, they seek collaboration. As illustrated in figure 2.4, these customer behaviors can be leveraged strategically through a set of corresponding customer network strategies. These can be used for strategic planning for any industry, business model, or customer objective. I have used them in executive strategy workshops with hundreds of companies facing widely varying customer challenges. By starting with a strategy rooted in customer behavior, businesses can avoid the trap of technology-first thinking (What’s our Twitter video strategy?) and focus instead on value to the customer and the business. Let’s take a look at each of the five strategies in depth, with examples. Then I will present a tool that you can use to choose which customer net- work strategy is best for a given business scenario. |
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