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DRIVING ACTIONS AND REACTIONS ENGAGING YOUR CUSTOMERS IN THE NEW DIGITAL WORLD The report at a glance 2 25 years driving digital change Basic communication principles have remained unchanged for many years. The emergence of leaner more agile operators who are developing digitally attuned alternatives to the traditional services of large organisations threaten many established organisations. 7 What you can control, what you can’t control and what you can influence The contemporary digital landscape is three dimensional and many of its facets are outside of the direct control of the organisations that seek to engage with the customers who are using it. 10 Tactics and strategies Often individual strategies fail to deliver to business objectives effectively because their focus is too narrow and they fail to consider the three dimensional customer journey. Tactics employed in pursuit of a targeted customer engagement strategy can be quickly deployed, measured, refined and re-deployed. 16 Knowing your customers In order to be tactical, organisations need to develop a deep understanding of their customers, habits, motivations and needs. Creating personas and visualising scenarios and user stories will help everyone to understand the tactics to employ. 20 Tactics, tactics, tactics While every organisation should take the time to step back and think about their strategic vision, this should not stop constant innovation. Lots of small changes and incremental tactics can lead to big impacts. 54 Finally Think Big, Act Small, Move Quickly, which is to say that quickly implemented tactics can have the necessary impact to deliver value to you and your customers, while providing the impetus towards your future digital vision. 56 About Precedent Information on our thought leadership and services. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 1 25 years driving digital change Paul Hoskins Precedent Executive Chairman and Founder As Founder and Chairman, Paul has spent the past 25 years helping to transform businesses and improve the way they operate using the power of digital. He has a unique insight into the issues of digital brand and digital transformation, and in 2013 he was awarded a place in the British Interactive Media Association’s (BIMA) Hot 100, which recognised the impact he has had on digital. He has vast experience working across all of our key sectors, and has worked with leading organisations across the UK and Australia, including; Monash University, RSPCA, The London Stock Exchange, The British Council and The Australian Institute of Directors. Most recently he established our Hong Kong office where he is currently based, developing and strengthening our strategic offering and thought leadership in the Asia Pacific region to ensure we are driving real digital change across all of the countries, sectors and disciplines in which we operate. 2 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 After 25 years driving digital change, it seems appropriate to mark the occasion with the release of a report that takes a contemporary look at how organisations across all of our core sectors can drive actions and reactions from their customers, potential customers and peer groups. In truth, this report looks at what we as communicators have been trying to achieve for our clients since we went into business all those years ago – delivering value to our clients and their customers. The challenges that we face now are predominantly the same as when we first started; identify the audience you want to engage, understand the competition’s offer to that audience, the media through which you are likely to engage them, craft a message and call to action that is likely to provoke the desired action or reaction, deploy and measure. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 3 Different sectors, similar challenges One thing that characterises Precedent’s client base is the similarities between the organisations that we work for. They are all large, complex, multi-faceted, multi-product institutions with a wide range of stakeholders who invariably hold disparate views on the communication objectives of any given project. Nowadays the situation is different. There are multiple channels of communication, many of which reside outside of the direct control or influence of the organisation. How do organisations decide on the tactics required to engage their audiences, what are the arguments, and what is the right message? Historically, this was not a problem. It was a pre-digital world and projects tended to be discrete or formulaic. By this I mean they were either commissioned by an individual stakeholder and aimed at a specific customer (think newsletter or promotional literature) or they followed a traditional construction (think annual report or university prospectus). This report doesn’t provide all the answers, but hopefully it will help you to make informed decisions around the viability and optimum direction of future digital projects. Hopefully it will enable you to recognise when immediate action is required in order to remain competitive, as well as to realise when to say ‘No’ to an initiative and explore other options. In both cases it was the design quality and accompanying messaging that determined their success along with the rigour of the associated PR effort. Some of our clients include: 4 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 The digital threats “The rise of the tech-savvy, connected consumer across all facets of society changes the expectations consumers have of companies, regardless of their business.” Curt Garner Chief Information Officer – Starbucks Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 5 Digital threats are all around us. Leaner, more agile operators are developing digitally efficient alternatives to traditional services. Fundamentally, the new players in any market are picking off the services that most obviously lend themselves to online delivery, cutting into the traditional service offering of the more established players: • Universities feel threatened by online course providers. • Charities find that single issue, or similar issue charities can quickly eat into their traditional donor base. • • • Membership organisations are continually fretting over the value that they can add to their membership base over and above the offer of like-minded and generally free communities. Few people would naturally go to their day-to-day bank if they wanted to open a savings account or secure a short-term loan when there are numerous sources of financial advice and applications are freely available online. And everyone – none more so than the travel industry – is threatened by the propensity of comparison and review websites. These play a major part (and are often the starting point and in some instances the end point) in the consumer’s decision making process. Threats and their modus operandi Universities’ – Khan Academy ‘A not-for-profit with the goal of changing education for the better by providing a free world-class education for anyone anywhere.’ кк www.khanacademy.org Travel & Leisure – TripAdvisor ‘The world’s largest travel site with 260million unique monthly visitors and sites operating in 34 countries.’ кк www.tripadvisor.com Finance – Money Supermarket ‘Our size means we are able to offer our customers exclusive, market-leading deals, including some they can’t even get direct from providers.’ кк www.moneysuper market.com Membership – Linkedin ‘When you join LinkedIn, you get access to people, jobs, news, updates, and insights that help you be great at what you do.’ кк www.linkedin.com Charities – Alive and Giving ‘We are an innovative charity comparison and fundraising website that promotes considered charitable giving. AliveandGiving. com allows you to search for, compare, and donate to registered charities of your choice.’ кк www.aliveandgiving.com 6 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 What you can control, what you can’t control and what you can influence “The internet is among the few things humans have built that they don’t truly understand. It is the largest experiment involving anarchy in history. As global connectivity continues its unprecedented advance, many old institutions and hierarchies will have to adapt or risk becoming obsolete. The struggles we see today in many businesses are examples of the dramatic shift for society that lies ahead and we’ve barely left the starting blocks.” Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen The New Digital Age, 2013 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 7 Large organisations have similar customer groups that they need to engage in actions and reactions. In a traditional two dimensional sphere of influence it is relatively simple to create a channel, control the message and provoke engagement. PEOPLE PROFESSIONALS PROPOSITION PEERS PUBLIC Key Controllable Action / Reaction 8 Not so long ago your sphere of influence was two dimensional, revolving around your website and associated social channels. As long as you had a good understanding of your customers and their requirements it was relatively easy to push out your message with appropriate calls to action, sit back and wait. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 The new three dimensional sphere of influence is of the audience’s own making and relies on their interpretation of your proposition. Many actions and reactions will occur outside of your control. PEOPLE PROFESSIONALS PROPOSITION PEERS PUBLIC Key Controllable Action / Reaction Uncontrollable Action / Reaction The new three dimensional sphere of influence is less controllable and is often of the customers’ own making. You may have no control over it at all and instead it may rest in the hands of independent review and comparison sites. Their expectations are higher than ever before and the way they view your proposition may not always be how you had intended. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 9 Tactics and strategies “Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” Sun Tzu The Art of War 10 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 The majority of organisations believe that their approach to digital is strategic, but a strategy alone will not deliver actions and reactions from their customers. In our report ‘Daring to be Digital’ we challenged organisations to decide whether their approach to digital projects is either reactive, strategic, or transformational. Truly transformational projects transcend ‘digital’ and require organisations that are culturally attuned to the disruption required to put digitally enabled change at the heart of what they do. This approach is not for everyone, but it is possible to introduce elements of transformation into the strategic mix without being totally disruptive. Irrespective, CEOs are no longer convinced with arguments for digital project funding based solely on notions of increased efficiency or possible competitive advantage. The imperative today is to generate actions and reactions that deliver to the business. Digitally reactive Digitally strategic BUSINESS STRATEGY BUSINESS STRATEGY MARKETING STRATEGY DIGITAL PROJECTS DIGITAL PROJECTS MARKETING STRATEGY Marketing centric Reactive Digital initiatives are reactive to either a market condition or a perceived benefit. They are loosely aligned to a corporate objective and expected to deliver efficiencies. Strategic The digitally strategic have a holistic view of their digital landscape, which manifests itself across channels; it includes and responds to elements of the corporate plan. Transformational The digitally transformational interrogate their business strategy in order to identify the digital opportunities that it proffers. This means that a digital strategy per se ceases to exist, as it is fundamental to the corporate strategy. Digitally transformational BUSINESS STRATEGY DIGITAL PROJECT Business wide impact Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 11 Organisations frequently seek advice around five key areas of digital potential, areas that they believe they can control and that will add value. However, delivering more digital ‘stuff’ is not necessarily going to provoke the actions and reactions that demonstrate real return to the business. The ‘digital future’ The diagram on the next page represents the discrete digital initiatives, (essentially strategies) that potential clients often ask us to address in the course of discussions around their business requirements. The discussions are generally related to a digital objective, aligned to a broader strategic objective. To an extent this is true, since discrete initiatives in any of these areas can help organisations to achieve their objectives. However, for the organisation of the near future, digital as a stand-alone operational area will cease to exist and each of these areas will merely be a part of business as usual. Each area is of course valid and is a part of the rich contemporary digital mix, however too often they are seen as isolated panaceas that can meet the needs of all of the organisation’s audiences and help the organisation to become more digitally enabled. ‘Digital strategies’ will just be ‘business strategies’ and initiatives in each of the areas below will be considered tactical in pursuit of an action or reaction from a particular audience group. 12 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 Stand alone strategies will not provoke customers into actions and reactions, tactics need to be employed. In conversations with clients, the need for strategies often initiates our exchanges. Strategy can often be a misnomer as the objective that the client is aiming for can usually be accommodated more readily and less expensively by a more selective appreciation of the tactics required to deliver it. What people ask for... CONTENT STRATEGY MOBILE STRATEGY CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE STRATEGY PERSONALISATION STRATEGY SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGY A plan for the migration of existing content to new systems, along with a publication and governance model. A plan to ensure that the organisation’s website is viewable on all mobile devices, with an app release plan. A plan to deliver an optimised, enriching, brand reinforcing customer experience across all channels, devices and borders both on and offline. A plan to deliver personalised content to potential and existing customers, along with the capture of large amounts of data. A plan for the use, maintenance and population of content across all popular social channels, covering all primary audiences. What people often need... DIGITAL ASSETS DEVICE CONTEXT ONLINE SERVICES CUSTOMISATION EXPERIENCES COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Tactics that ensure customers are delivered content that is relevant, consumable and in line with the brand promise. Tactics that ensure that on access, customers are delivered useful and usable content. Or an app that delivers added value to the customer and the business. A rationalisation of online service touch points and a facilitated and intuitive route to fulfilment. Tactics that ensure customers can find what they want and more, and move to relevant levels of granularity. Tactics to engage their primary audiences in dialogue of mutual value in an environment they want to use. ALL TACTICS SHOULD BE DECIDED UPON IN RELATION TO THE ORGANISATION’S ABILITY TO DELIVER TO THEM AND A BROAD BUSINESS OBJECTIVE FOR A PARTICULAR AUDIENCE. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 13 A customer engagement strategy brings together the five tactical areas into a cohesive appreciation of the actions and reactions the organisation is attempting to drive from a particular customer in relation to a business objective. For each key customer type, organisations should have an engagement strategy which aligns to a business objective. The level of sophistication employed in each of the areas illustrated will depend on the value of the target customer to the organisation and the importance of the area in which you are engaging them. The diagram (right) shows individual actions and reactions for each area, and these could be similar or the same across the piece, however each will have a desired tactical outcome that contributes to the overall objective. 14 Tactics should be measured, reviewed and refined regularly across each area in order to evolve the customer proposition and optimise the chances of reaching the objective. Ultimately, the success of an organisation will be determined by its willingness to learn from its successes and failures. At best this will involve a cross-cutting customer engagement strategy, underpinned by a series of discrete tactics focused on driving actions and reactions. If the strategy is sound it should remain the same; it’s the tactics that are variable. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 Digital assets rest at the heart of any successful engagement strategy. Understanding how different asset types relate to the action and reaction you are attempting to drive is critical. BUSINESS OBJECTIVE CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT STRATEGY DIGITAL ASSETS DEVICE CONTEXT ONLINE SERVICES CUSTOMISATION EXPERIENCES COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Assets meet the contextual needs of the customer Assets aid or persuade the customer Assets meets the individual needs of the customer Assets reinforce the purpose of the community ACTION OR REACTION • Support needs, or tasks – utility • Increased conversion • Habit forming (indispensible) • Fewer offline/ online enquiries • • Key tasks performed on multiple devices Advocacy – recommended to others • Greater satisfaction • Advocacy • Assets viewed (particularly more specialist information) • More willingness to share data/ information • Reciprocal information exchange • Advocacy • Positive conversation – high activity levels • Connection with other digital properties • User generated assets uploaded • Assets shared • Advocacy TACTICAL OUTCOMES MEASURE, REVIEW, REFINE, EVOLVE TACTICS Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 15 Knowing your customers “A customer is the most important visitor on our premises. He is not dependent on us. We are dependent on him. He is not an interruption in our work. He is the purpose of it. He is not an outsider in our business. He is part of it. We are not doing him a favour by serving him. He is doing us a favour by giving us an opportunity to do so.” 16 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 A customer engagement strategy is the first step to providing an exemplary customer experience. Companies like Apple and Amazon have changed the game when it comes to creating immersive, persuasive and desirable customer experiences. The problem for other companies is that they (and many like them) have raised the expectations of customers for everyone else. Attempting to emulate the ‘Apple Experience’ would require a customer experience strategy that few companies are yet ready for. So what is the alternative? The simple answer is a customer engagement strategy that is informed by a thorough understanding of the customer the organisation is targeting. Personas, scenarios and user stories With the proliferation of digital channels, the options for engaging with your customers are wide and varied. Add to this the offline touch points where your customers might interact with you and the question of where to start defining an engagement strategy is daunting. However, the complexity of your strategy should only be limited by the amount of resources you can allot to its development and your knowledge of your customers. In essence, your strategy is scalable since at its most minimal it can be limited to ensuring that you engage your most important audience, on the top two most popular channels, with the single most important product or service you offer. At its most complicated your strategy might target any number of discrete groups or individuals across multiple channels, with numerous offers. Either way, your initial evaluation should be informed by a simple set of questions, the answers to which should provide you with stories and narratives that link you with your customers. Initial internal questions with regards to the implementation of any digital engagement initiative • Who is the customer? • What do they want? • What do you want to tell them? • What do you want them to do? • How will you deliver and measure engagement within the constraints of your available resources? External customer input Answers to the questions above will provide you with the basis to develop useful scenarios and user stories that can be used to plan and test your engagement strategy. However, the real value can be gained by communicating with real customers and asking them how they currently engage with you and how they would prefer to engage with you. Quantitative and qualitative research in the form of workshops, surveys and interviews with real customers can add the detail and test your assumptions. Doing this will allow you to develop an understanding of your customers’ behaviours, desires and habits along with their motivations – what they do and why they do it. Add to this an understanding of their preferred channels and the context in which they use them and for each customer you will be able to develop: • Personas – the ‘essence’ of a target customer. Who they typically are and why they engage with you. • Scenarios – a real life goal-driven description of likely actions and reactions between target customers and you, including motivations and expectations. • User stories – as a... (target customer description), I want to... (do something), so that I could... (benefit by). Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 17 Visualising your customer’s engagement with you helps everyone involved see how things should work and identifies the mutual benefits it will deliver. “Hello, my name is Alan. I am from Shanghai, China. I enjoy gaming, table tennis and I have been collecting miniature robots since I was 8 – I have quite a collection!” This is an abridged version of one of the personas, scenarios and user stories we developed for Monash university. The storyboard on the next page describes the online and offline journey of a potential international student and the actions and reactions taken by all parties, none of which are conducted within the direct influence of Monash. The full journey takes into account and is dependent on: Digital Assets: Initially the courses on offer at Monash, and subsequently video and supporting information of interest. Device Context: The devices used on the journey – Tablet, Smartphone and Laptop. Online service: Delivery of course information via email and automated login to application area. Customisation Experiences: The courses he is interested in and a personalised view of the Monash website. 18 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 PEOPLE PROFESSIONALS PROPOSITION PEERS PUBLIC The storyboard takes into account the interactions between three of the audience groups common to multi-faceted organisations. In this case: People – the target potential international student Peers – friends and family Professional – the international agent. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 19 Tactics, tactics, tactics “Tactics mean doing what you can with what you have.” Saul Alinsky American community organiser and author of ‘Rules for Radicals’ 20 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 25 tactics to drive actions and reactions that you could start using tomorrow While every organisation should take the time to step back and think about their strategic vision, this should not stop constant innovation. Lots of small changes and incremental tactics can lead to big impacts. Understanding your overall objectives and customer engagement strategy is essential, so picking two or three tactics that fit your understanding of your target customer and pursuing them mercilessly, learning, evolving and optimising as you go can produce the quality engagement that results in the delivery of mutual value. Simply put, most organisations do not have the available resources to serve all their customers, all of the time, on all of their channels and technologies of choice. With this in mind the following section offers 25 tactics that you might like to consider beginning to implement in the very near future. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 21 Digital assets – Designed to attract, service and retain customers Tori on creating digital assets Digital assets come in many shapes and sizes. When an organisation embarks on creating assets, it’s important to consider how they will add value to the business and the customer as well as enhance the brand. In the planning stages, remember to consider the lifespan of an asset and how it can be used in flexible ways. Good assets are powerful and versatile and are always underpinned by a tactical mission. They can be used in many ways to attract, persuade, service, reinforce, inspire, strengthen and deepen customer relationships. They should be easy to understand and engaging, ranging from answering basic things like “How can I…?” to providing experiences that entertain and inspire. Many people think of an asset as the written word. ‘short form’ and ‘long form’ are familiar buzz-words for different types of written content. The length of any piece of written content is always defined by the context in which it sits and the audience you are targeting. For the most part, keep text short and punchy and make your point quickly. This can always be supported with longer form copy that unpacks the detail behind any given thought or idea. Make sure you can flexibly adapt content so that it can be re-used across channels and devices, including print, web, mobile and social. COPE (Create Once, Publish Everywhere) is a useful acronym to keep in mind. If you can’t ‘COPE’ institution-wide it could relate to your tactics for a specifically targeted customer journey. Wherever and whenever your customers engage with any of your digital assets, this needs to signal the start of a consistent and rewarding journey that leads towards an action or reaction. 22 Tori Winn Global Creative Director “ Too often organisations fall into a kind of default mode where they only think content is the written word. This notion is a legacy thing that’s still hanging around from the more traditional days of marketing and communication. Don’t get me wrong, I love the written word and know the power of it when you get it right, but it’s so important to remember that today’s digital environment is vibrant and alive; it gives organisations the opportunity to deliver their messages in unique and inspiring ways. Good content will always elevate and enhance a brand’s reach therefore we have to use the digital environment to spark new ways of communicating.” Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 5 digital asset tactics you could try tomorrow DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 1 Cull your content Oxfam radically redeveloped its site through an extensive exercise of clarifying their objectives and then focusing on them. While this project could hardly be described as minor, the basic principles that informed it could be applied tactically by anyone. Establish a clear vision by which all content is assessed. In Oxfam’s case: only action-oriented content allowed, no editorial for its own sake. The result for Oxfam was to reduce 25,000 web pages down to just 400 curated pages, making their effectiveness easy to measure, and refinement and associated learning simple. кк www.oxfam.org Oxfam realised that 92% of its website visits were to just 9% of their 25,000 page sites. The new site is simple and action oriented. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 23 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 2 Curate assets If you curate the right content your customers will find it. Petplan insurance clearly understands its customers and their love of animals. The variety of boards (46) and pins (4k+)on its Pinterest page is impressive. None of the content overtly sells the company’s services – rather it either educates, empathises with, or simply amuses its customers. The French Premier uses a curation tool called Scoop.it to bring together all of the social activity of its ministries in one place on a daily basis. As a consolidation of government activity and a quick reference for those who follow French politics, it offers an excellent resource. Petplan offers a plethora of pet-related sources on its Pinterest page, all of which are aimed at connecting with ‘fellow pet lovers’. кк www.gouvernement.fr/gouvernement/ en-direct-des-ministeres кк www.scoop.it кк www.pinterest.com/petplan 24 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 3 Teach people something If there is an element of your organisation or its offer that is interesting yet difficult to explain, then you have an opportunity to glean immediate competitive advantage by simplifying its concepts, or making it entertaining to learn about. The RSPCA in Australia asked us to produce a campaign micro-site to highlight the plight of battery hens . The attractive graphical approach to the site is both compelling in its arguments and educational in its content. Financial institutions in particular have the problem of making complex investment options understandable to those whose money they seek to invest. Simple creative solutions can increase awareness and the number of people investing with you. In the 12 months following launch, the site was accessed by over 32,000 unique visitors. Since then, Coles and Woolworths, the two biggest supermarket chains in Australia, decided to move towards phasing out caged hens from their in-house brand. The online investment portfolio providers Nutmeg offer simple yet effective graphics which help people to understand the difference between low and high risk investments. кк www.nutmeg.com кк www.hensdeservebetter.org.au/the-story.html Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 25 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 4 Use video Next to Google, YouTube is the second largest search engine. And there is evidence that search engines give video a higher ‘value’ and make them easier to find. Add this to the upward trend in sharing video, particularly on mobile phones, and the reasons for using it are compelling. Some things to bear in mind: • Don’t be afraid of low production values, particularly if timeliness is important – think topical, or cultural events. But be sure that audio is clear. • Short and concise is better than long and rambling. Get to the point quickly and sound human. • Upload videos to YouTube and ensure that they are relevantly tagged. Descriptions should be engaging – YouTube sees itself as an entertainment channel after all. кк www.bbc.com The BBC understands how to use video. A relatively low production video is described in three paragraphs, superseded by an eye-catching quote, which is ideal for sharing and grabbing attention on social channels. 26 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 5 Make your data engaging The effectiveness of converting complex data or simple knowledge into infographics is well reported, it is something that all organisations should consider when in possession of potentially interesting data sets that could be presented in a more consumable format. As part of a long programme of progressive digital transformation, the Water Corporation in Australia asked us to come up with a way of presenting the realtime data that it collected about water usage and reserves in Western Australia. The dynamic graphics allow people to view the information in a meaningful way and are aimed at encouraging customers to save water. All organisations that engage in social media have large amounts of data and information about what is engaging their customers online. The Daily Mail has rather cleverly used this information to produce a visually appealing section of its website, which shows the topics that are trending and where. This is not only an interesting way of presenting news and comment to its readers, but is also a good barometer for the paper on what engages its readers most. кк www.dailymail.co.uk/stats кк www.watercorporation.com.au Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 27 Device context – Where customers are and what they are using Sean on devices and their context Clearly you cannot control when, where and how your customers access your content, but you can control how your content is presented. If your digital presence isn’t mobile optimised, you need to very quickly ask yourself what disadvantages and risks – particularly reputational – you are exposing yourself to. Realistically in this day and age you should ask what the context of the asset delivery is likely to be to your customers? Will they be looking at your assets on the sofa, on the train, in a meeting or on the road? Understanding the context allows you to understand which devices your customers might access your assets from, and consequently the most appropriate ones to deliver. Finally you should ask to what extent you can gain advantage, or indeed mutual value, by being specific about your asset delivery to devices other than, but also including, the desktop/laptop. Tactically your options are numerous, ranging from the simplest mobile website to the most device specific personalised app or website catering to the needs of an individual. Irrespective of the route you take, your decision should be based on potential return, focused on your primary targets and rooted in a sound knowledge of your customers’ behaviour. 28 Sean Gardiner Managing Director Asia Pacific “ The right question to ask is not always ‘what device a user is viewing a website with?’ but rather ‘why is the user accessing the website?’ Using adaptive design principles, we can learn so much more about what the user is trying to achieve, not just from the device but from the time of day, when they accessed the site last, the last task they completed, location and much more as we begin to understand how to crunch through lots of personalised data. Based on this we can then deliver tailored content to enable the user to complete their task. Context – not content – is king these days.” Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 5 tactics to deliver contextual assets DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 1 At least do the basics Imagine the disappointment for someone who has become aware of your brand at a time when they can’t access your website and in that fleeting moment later in the day when they have five minutes to take a quick look at you on their mobile the experience is less than satisfactory. Although a responsive rather than mobile site the simplicity of the solution we designed for the Smith & Williamson family office (seen here on mobile) highlights the importance of understanding the content your customer needs when first accessing your site on a mobile device. There is really no excuse for not at least doing the basics. Offer your customers basic service information such as your location, contact details and core services ahead of offering a link to your actual website with an accompanying apology for the fact that it isn’t mobile-friendly. A simple stat that explains why you cannot afford to have a site that isn’t mobile-friendly. Graphic courtesy of Search Engine Watch. кк www.searchenginewatch.com кк www.sandwfamilyoffice.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 29 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 2 Be responsive to your customers Econsultancy recently released statistics on 14 companies that had dramatically increased their conversion rates as a result of making their websites responsive. The stats are compelling . In the article the writer, Chris Lake, makes the following observations: • I have yet to hear about a decline in conversion rates following the roll-out of a responsive site. In fact, I only ever hear amazing things. • So, if you’re making a business case and need some examples then here are a bunch of companies that have benefited from significant uplift in the key metrics following the implementation of responsive design. It is unlikely that anyone would search for the kind of products that LoveHoney offers on the train to work, or at work itself. This is very much a sofa, or bedside situation. However the point is clear – understand when and where your customers are likely to access information and accommodate them in order to increase conversions. кк www.econsultancy.com/blog/64362-m-s launches-new-website-focuses-on-curation clustering-and-content кк www.lovehoney.co.uk 30 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 3 Take a laid back approach – make it interesting We don’t all want to be reading work-related documents, or actively purchasing products in our leisure time, particularly after a ‘hard day at the office’. However, this doesn’t mean that we are not still interested in the topics we talk about at work, if they are presented in a consumable fashion when we are in ‘lean back’ rather than ‘lean forward’ mode. The evidence is that tablets are no longer the preserve of early-adopters and that along with smart phones they are the lean back device of choice. It is therefore worth considering the content that you could present to your customers and the manner in which it is presented. Can you give your content a magazine-like quality, or just make it more attractive to consume? Ensuring an on-brand delivery across numerous properties is a consistent problem for global companies like Henderson. Our solution was to deliver a unique, cross-device and modular pattern library for the international investment firm which consists of a set of guidelines and components that includes over 400 UI elements, icons, navigation systems, buttons and forms that are used as the interface to Henderson’s underlying linked data platform. A key feature of the new M&S website home page is a horizontally scrolling panel (ideal for nonchalant flicking on a tablet) that delivers editorial content on a daily basis. Nominally known a ‘Storytailing’ this approach delivers interesting content ahead of aiming to sell products. кк www.henderson.com кк www.marksandspencer.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 31 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 4 Think about practicalities The phrase ‘mobile first’ describes an approach to website development which at its simplest ensures that organisations take the time to understand the minimum content needed to deliver critical information and services to its users on mobile phones, this content can then be added to incrementally as the screen real estate of the devices customers use increases. Not all organisations have the capacity or resource to adopt this approach immediately, particularly as it is likely that they already have a desktop solution and integrated delivery systems. However the arguments for delivering mobile solutions are compelling, so a minimal tactical approach is to identify your most valuable and context critical service and develop a mobile site that will deliver it. Tesco Travel Insurance had a successful desktop website, but it was recognised that many people buy insurance at the last minute and in some cases on the way to the airport. With this in mind we designed a web app that was easy to use by someone on the move and in a hurry. This meant paring down the content and delivering clear messaging and calls to action. Critically the site automatically saves information at each step of the application process to avoid internet dropouts deleting a part-completed application. Completed applications on mobile devices now exceed the number of applications on the desktop website, and data collected has confirmed that the mobile site is very popular with travellers purchasing insurance on the day, or the day before departure. 32 The images above show our development process for the Tesco Travel Insurance app, from sketches through to wireframes and the final app. Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Public Peers 5 Apps that add value While in the near future the most popular approach to ‘going mobile’ is likely to be to create a responsive website, the value of apps cannot be underestimated. However, unless the idea for an app is so innovative that it is likely to garner widespread take-up, the best tactical approach to app production is to concentrate on delivering an enhanced customer experience to a particular audience with a specific requirement. Your aim should always be to add value to your customers. Essentially this is a customer service exercise, not a marketing ploy. So unless an app can leverage the inbuilt technologies of a mobile device to add utility, or enhance an experience, a multi-device friendly website is probably more appropriate. St Andrews Links had a vision ‘to be seen as the most innovative, creative and recognisable golf brand in the world.’ As part of a much broader transformation agenda we created a mobile app that linked the digital to reality. Golf aside, St Andrews is a world class destination, so while the app provides golfers with weather updates, course hints and scorecards etc it also enhances an experience for them and their travel companions that starts well before their visit, facilitates their off course activities and continues well after they have returned home. In the first week of launch there were 2,500 downloads of the mobile app. When Perth’s newest live entertainment, music and sports venue opened, it meant that all visitors to the Arena were unfamiliar with both the location and layout of the building. We produced an app that enhanced the offline and online customer journey from buying tickets, arriving at the Arena, enjoying the event, going out afterwards and then travelling home. Features include event search, category browsing, details, bookings, journey planning using Google Transit, suggestions for alternative parking if the Arena’s is full, the ability to find your seat, social check-in to find your friends and interactive voting. Above: St Andrews Links mobile app Left: Perth Arena app Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 33 Online service – It’s not all about direct funnels James on providing online service While sales funnels are of the utmost importance and need to be established and monitored regularly, the plain fact is that it can take more than SEO, link building, integrated social channels and clever marketing to get your customers into the funnel in the first place. Or at least you need to understand the journey your customers are taking to arrive at the ‘top of your funnel’ if you want to increase conversions. Ultimately the best way to increase conversions is to improve the UX of your website, which is about removing points of friction along the fulfilment route, but it is also about anticipating needs, surprising your customers with a fantastic piece of information and making it simple for them to buy-in to you. Of course this is about providing an exemplary customer experience*, but a holistic customer experience strategy can require institutional change in processes and personnel, something that most institutions are only just beginning to grapple with. Tactically you should be thinking that helping people is all part of the service, the more you can assist them in their journey to an action or reaction the better your likely return. James Downes Digital Experience Director, UK “ If you don’t take a step back, think of the bigger picture, and map that out, you’re likely to fall into the trap of incrementalism: asking for what you have now, but a bit better. That leaves you wide open to the competition You can’t mark your own homework. Worse, you’re not normal – you’re the world expert in your organisation. So you’ve got to bring in people from outside to test it, normal people, who are not saturated in the vision, goals and culture of your business. Design isn’t just a bullet-pointed, fact-based process. It’s emotional and psychological. Emotions tell people what they like and don’t like without having to think about it. Their emotional response to you will pull them towards you, or push them away.” * Forthcoming Report Please keep an eye out later in the year for our forthcoming report on Customer Service and the Customer Experience, which will offer tips, advice and steps towards producing a truly holistic customer experience strategy, encompassing both on and offline behaviours and institutional transformation. 34 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 5 tactics to improve your online services DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 1 Watch your customers Its an old tactic, but still a very effective one – get a small group of one of your target customer segments into your office and ask them to perform a task on your website. Along the way, ask them to describe what they are doing , the reasons for their decision making and what information they would like to see at the various stages of the process. If eight out of ten customers encounter the same problem then it is certain that you need to do something about it. Circle Housing Group provide social and private housing and care. It needed to provide its customers with support, information and the ability to report problems. Key to the design that we delivered was consideration for the user experience. There was a particular focus on users who struggle reading complex sites for a variety of reasons (such as interrupted education, special needs, or English not being their primary language). In order to understand the requirements of this group we engaged them in a day of interactive wireframe testing, that ironed out the friction points of our initial concepts and allowed us to adjust accordingly. Customer service was first and foremost in our website designs, with simple navigation and focused content to allow customers to find and act on what they need. кк www.circle.org.uk Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 35 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 2 Facilitate their decisions Every organisation should understand their offer to their customers, but do your customers understand the way that you talk about it to them and its variations? Helping people to make the right choice is essential in terms of customer satisfaction and ultimately your reputation. Take the time to talk to your customers and understand how they would describe your services so that you can anticipate their needs and present your offer to them in a language they will understand. Your tactics should be to identify subtle variations in tone and motivations that will allow you to alter the information you provide in support of a fulfilment process. Or as in the examples below, identify a simple mechanism that will facilitate them in choosing between your services. Knowing that changing their membership model after over 100 years would require expert communication and explanation of the new model the British Dental Association employed us to design the interface that would present their new membership options. A key component in this was a facility for members to understand the model that was most suitable for their requirements. We are glad to say that currently no members have felt the need to contact the BDA by telephone to seek assistance in their online membership renewal process. The National Australian Bank (NAB) uses plain and simple language throughout its site to describe its services and products. As with most banks, the array of credit cards on offer is bewildering, however they make the selection process easy by presenting three simple questions. кк www.nab.com.au/personal/credit-cards/ credit-card-finder кк www.bda.org 36 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 3 Encourage questions A ‘contact us’ link at the bottom of a website home page linking to a generic enquiry form really doesn’t cut it with customers in today’s digital environment and we would hope that few of you still adopt this approach. Encouraging your customers to ask questions can benefit an organisation in numerous ways, so why not put a big link on your home page that encourages your site’s visitors to ask about your services so that you can: • Identify pain points on your site. • Create a dynamic and responsive FAQ’s section that will forestall popular telephone and email enquiries. • Allow you to gauge the current sentiment around your brand. • Identify opportunities to improve your offer, or to offer new services. • Counter any common misconceptions about you and your services. It is up to you how you choose to receive and reply to these questions. You could use the old enquiry form method, a forum format, or establish a social channel such as Twitter, or an intelligent FAQs database. Your decision will depend on available resource, your moderation method and the response time that you must commit to with enquirers. McDonalds in Canada has created a website specifically for its customers to ask questions about its offer. Customers are asked to submit a question and authenticate themselves via their Facebook, or Twitter ID. Answers are provided in real time by a team of moderators who maintain an ever more sophisticated database of answers and deep understanding of the sentiment attached to the brand. кк www.yourquestions.mcdonalds.ca Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 37 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 4 Got an enquiry desk? Hook them up Live chat is an increasingly important method of servicing customers online. According to eDigital’s Customer Service Benchmark which surveyed 2,000 consumers, it has the highest satisfaction levels for any customer service channel, with 73%, compared to 61% for email and 44% for phone, so why not adopt it? There are numerous options available that can be relatively inexpensive to implement either in the cloud, or locally. The question of course is one of human resource to manage the online sessions. However, a simple analysis of the number of enquiries generated via your website and their relative cost to respond to might easily provide the business case. The manner in which you choose to use it will need consideration. Do you use it proactively as soon as someone arrives on your site, or do you just react to visitors who are clearly ‘dithering down the funnel’? The sofa retailer DFS uses a sophisticated live help powered by vee 24 . Visitors can choose between text chat or video chat during which the visitor can see the operator, but not the other way round. кк www.vee24.com 38 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 5 Become omni-channel – or audit your channels Your customers will increasingly expect to be able to interact with you using their channel of choice, whether they are making an enquiry, a complaint, or indeed attempting to take up your services, or purchase a product. The time has not quite arrived when you will be able to service all of the interactions you are likely to generate via every channel. However, this does not mean that you can ignore them. Take the time to audit ALL of your outward facing communication channels and ensure that: • You are explicit about their purpose • You offer links to all channels from all others • Those who are responsible for the channels are aware of the limitations regarding their interactions with customers and what they need to do in the event of an enquiry, or comment that falls outside of their remit. If you are generating numerous enquiries on a particular aspect of customer service on a particular channel, then the opportunity is there to open a version of the channel with the purpose of dealing with them. Utility companies stake a large part of their reputations on the quality of their service. Yorkshire Water offers a multi-channel experience to its customers, including: • A twitter news and information feed • A twitter customer help feed • A generally focused Facebook • A YouTube channel with informational videos that are integrated into its website • A live chat facility that appears on the website contact us page • A comprehensive contact page on its website, with links to all the other channels кк www.yorkshirewater.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 39 Customisation experiences – Not always personalisation Dan on customisation Customers don’t tend to invest their time customising their experiences on websites. Generally speaking, they want to find what they need as quickly as possible, which ultimately comes down to understanding the customer journey and general UX best practice. In general, anything that customises an experience needs to be as simple as possible – keep it to one or two clicks – rather than something customers need to register to use. Or if you need some information from them, ask for the least amount possible. Of course there are exceptions. If someone is deeply researching something, such as looking for a job or a holiday, they may choose different ways of filtering and sorting lots of data to narrow down a search, and then save the criteria for later, or when registering for email alerts. The only way to know for sure is to find out what’s motivating your customers and what they actually need, then respond appropriately. Maybe a polemic view is…. which customer suffers as a result of diluting priorities by trying to be everything to everyone? And if there was only one audience which would you choose? Dan Baker Digital Experience Director, Asia Pacific “ Clients usually ask for ‘personalisation’ and often confuse it with ‘customisation’ so I want to challenge them . Do they really have personalised content (like Amazon has tens of thousands of products and only I, personally, have my particular mix that I’ve bought from them). Or merely customised content (like most membership organisations, that have particular content that relates to particular groups?” Everybody is not a good answer! 40 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 5 tactics to offer a customised experience DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 1 Get into the mind of your customers Understanding your customers and their motivations is of course a research exercise that should result in a set of personas, user stories and an improved UX for your website and broader web presence. This is not something that you can do tomorrow, but it is likely that adding a single link on the home page of your website is not such a onerous task. The question is what should this link to? There are a myriad of obvious options such as a link to timely, or promotional content. But why not think more creatively and spend some time collating, or curating a bunch of content that appeals to a specific, maybe under-represented customer group? Or think of the motivations of your customers at a particular time of day and post a link to a relevant digital asset. Or if your site relies on a search facility, why not offer an alternative view of the results based on a sympathetic appreciation of what your customers might be looking for? Hipmunk is a flight and hotel booking site, very similar to many others. It will trawl the web for you in order to find the cheapest flights and present them to you in a list that can be sorted by departure date, price, duration of the flight etc. One interesting and differentiating factor of the site’s search facility however is the ability to sort flights into an ‘Agony’ rating. This takes into account the relative agony of taking the flights displayed based on the length of flying time and the number of flights required to reach the destination matched against the actual price. Hipmunk knows that its customers are looking for cheap flights, but it also knows that there is a limit as to how much someone is prepared to suffer in order to secure a cheap trip. кк www.hipmunk.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 41 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 2 Make it easy Every time a customer gives up on an interaction or information enquiry on your website, an opportunity is lost to collect information, convert a prospect or move them along your funnel. In a matter of weeks the Office of the Public Guardian managed to take a 14 page power of attorney application form and transform it into a four page process which is now a prototype web service undergoing user testing . The key to avoiding this situation is to hide the complexity and detail of your processes and present the customer with a simple answer to complex questions. Done properly, the process will appear personalised and deliver an exemplary online experience. Simple services are central to the Government’s digital strategy and its excellent blog (www.gds.blog.gov.uk) features numerous best practice examples. Understanding whether you are entitled to maternity pay involved answering a complex set of interdependent questions. However, by adopting an agile approach that saw a content designer and developer working together to research the logic of the subject, it took the Government’s digital services just hours to build a method of delivering the answer to expectant mothers in five simple steps. кк www.justice.gov.uk/about/opg Sometimes trying to develop a tool via which your customers can view and use your data intuitively can be restricting for all involved. The HMRC recognised that people and businesses needed to access their tax services their own way on their software of choice. The solution was to open up the service as a set of APIs that have allowed third-party developers to produce far more effective and sophisticated tools for the payroll industry than HMRC could possibly have developed itself. кк www.bit.ly/1oFlPyu кк www.gov.uk/calculate-your-maternity-pay 42 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 3 If you want something, give something One of the basic laws of social psychology is the reciprocity principle. We all know it – it says that we are more likely to do something for someone if they have already done something for us. In essence, this is an unwritten personal contract between two people. This is important as people are much more likely to engage with you if they feel that they have entered into an agreement with a person. So the question is, what can you give away in order to engage with your audiences, and what would you expect in return? There are numerous commercial examples, some of which are highlighted below, but your aim should be to offer value to your potential customers in the first instance, in order to gain the leverage to incrementally learn about them. Done properly you should quickly be able to customise your offer to them and maybe even personalise your offer completely. Econsultancy has positioned itself as the de facto thought leaders in the UK digital marketing space. Their reports can be invaluable to organisations considering a particular digital initiative. There are four aspects to its subscription model encouraging take up of its services: 1. It regularly offers full reports for free via email, but on an undisclosed time-limited basis . 2. Summary report information is always provided as a clear indication of the content that a purchaser can expect. 3. The price differential between purchasing one report and accessing all of its resources is remarkably small. 4. For larger organisations, the corporate subscription inevitably appears to represent value for money. LinkedIn is unavoidable for any current professional , and whilst it can be of consistent value in disseminating individual’s thoughts, presentations and career progression to a widely connected group, the network constantly sparks one’s interest by offering upgrades to its services, which appear to add further value. кк www.econsultancy.com кк www.linkedin.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 43 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 4 Have a customisation plan Sometimes customisation has little to do with individuals. It is about the issue of the moment, a campaign, an event, a circumstance that requires immediate attention, or just the time of the year. We developed a website design for The Wildlife Trusts that allows them to simply change the emphasis of their home page to react to the prevailing weather conditions both nationally and regionally. While we would hope that you all have plans to review your homepage content to reflect current marketing activities, do you have a plan if a ‘disaster’ should befall your establishment? Or could you totally change your home page in support of a particular event, initiative or just to reflect the likely context of your customers’ visit? Consider the following tactics: • Redirect all visitors to your Twitter feed on a particular day to generate debate on a pressing issue. • Dedicate your home page to a live stream of your annual conference, or an important debate. • Change the focus of your homepage from news to editorial in the evening so that your customers can reflect on the issues that are affecting you and them. • What you would do if your website became unable to cope with the traffic it generated, or a natural disaster prevented you from providing your normal services? кк www.wildlifetrusts.org кк www.circle.org.uk As a result of severe weather conditions, visitors to the Circle website were recently informed that normal levels of service might be affected. 44 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Peers 5 Connect the physical with the digital All organisations have offices, groups, experts and events located across the country, however in the clamour to get the broader message to the widest possible audience websites often omit to put their customers in touch with local resources. Allowing customers to do this can offer them a more customised and personal view of your organisation which is likely to drive engagement. Taken further, the view you offer of your regionalised operations can be administered by your customers ‘on the ground’ allowing them to customise their activities to reflect local conditions and activities. The MS Society asked us to create a website for them that would hammer home the message that the society is there to fight alongside those who are affected by MS. However, a key component of this was to put people in touch with local support. With this in mind local MS Society branches are represented and can post regular updates on news and fundraising, giving them a level of autonomy. Users are now grouped by type, age, geographical location and so on and are given the opportunity to personalise their account homepage and request RSS feeds on specific topics. This not only ensures they only see information that’s interesting to them, but also gives the MS Society the information needed to deliver more targeted communications. кк www.mssociety.org.uk Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 45 Community engagement – On their terms only Lindsay on community engagement Often organisations feel obliged to build rival communities in order to control the conversation and forward their own ambitions. You need to evaluate whether you may be better served by contributing intelligently to other communities as a means of drawing attention to channels that you do control. On occasion, communities do not exist, or are inadequate for the needs of your customers. Similarly communities can be used for a variety of activities, including campaigning, brand loyalty, customer support and/or peer support, experience sharing or even gossip... Specialist audiences are often searching for like-minded individuals with whom to engage. More generalist communities (particularly the bigger social networks) often do not serve the needs of these groups, who may in fact be of high value to your organisation. If value can be delivered to the organisation and the customer then consider a bespoke community solution. Engaging your audiences on any community platform contains an element of risk, as you cannot control what is said. It is important to mitigate this risk ahead of any initiative by agreeing what the platform is attempting to achieve and the procedures that will kick into action in any given circumstance. Key questions include: • How you will respond to controversial topics? • Do your staff know how to protect themselves and you in the social environment? • Will you pre-moderate, or post-moderate conversations? • Do you have policies on transparency, data protection and privacy, along with general terms and conditions? Lindsay Herbert Head of Digital “ An aim that gets thrown around boardrooms too often these days is ‘we need to build a community.’ Instead of engaging with potential customers where they already exist online, brands are creating communities of their own as a tick-box solution to match objectives in their strategic plans. It’s time to go back to basics: build the community ONLY if it doesn’t exist already, and when you do engage, make it about topics that match both your interests and theirs.” Done correctly you will be able to positively influence what people think about your organisation in general, broaden its reach and ultimately drive actions and reactions. 46 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 5 tactics to engage your community DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 1 Adopt an attitude – be human The common problem here is that marketers want to market while social isn’t really like that – it’s about serving current customers’ needs and building awareness. Few brands really make a real social connection unless they are pretty small and disruptive. In order to adopt an online attitude, brands need to understand what it is that differentiates them in their marketplace and play to that strength. In reality this is a more colloquial adaptation of the brand message that sets you apart from your competitors and recognises and responds to the pervading sentiment about your brand across social channels. If you consider how you personally interact on social channels it is generally informal and uses language that is rarely heard in the boardroom. This means that a contemporary update of your brand’s tone of voice and related training for those who will represent it will yield exponential increases in engagement if pitched correctly. Tesco Mobile is not the most ‘well known’ or ‘trendy’ brand in mobile service providers. So when their team recognised that many of their customers were taking to Twitter to voice complaints and general dissatisfaction with the brand, Tesco decided to fight fire with fire by adopting an attitude akin to those who were voicing their opinions online, creating what can only be described as ‘friendly banter.’ The result for Tesco was a sizable growth in the number of Twitter followers. кк www.twitter.com/tescomobile/with_replies Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 47 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 2 Find your champions It is a well documented fact that marketers often think of social channels as a new advertising space and despite their best efforts, their posts, tweets and attempted interactions are identified as marketing-speak by those they seek to engage and subsequently ignored. However, every organisation has within it, individuals who not only understand the ethos of the institution, but critically, they understand social media and the audiences that use it. In many cases these individuals are not working in the marketing department – they could be almost anywhere in the organisation and it is your job to identify and train them. Often training does not have to be deep immersion into the company vision and values, since if they have the required enthusiasm for the organisation and its offer, training can be rudimentary, revolving around privacy issues and the definition of what to do in specific circumstances. A couple of years ago Cardiff University tasked us with developing a digital campaign that would create twoway engagement with prospective students to turn leads into applicants. A key element of the multi-channel campaign was the recruitment of a group of students known as ‘Cardiff Insiders’, who opened up their Facebook pages to prospective students to give them an idea of life on campus, answering questions and sharing experiences. Having trained the students in privacy issues and given them a broad lead on the kind of posts they should deliver they were set free on their peers, the insiders built real relationships with prospective students and provided them with realistic insight into student life at the university. The campaign was a remarkable success and the ‘insiders’ concept has been maintained by Cardiff as a key element of its student recruitment website. кк www.cardiff.ac.uk/for/prospective/undergraduate/thrive.html 48 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE Professionals Public 3 Connect your community The chances are that if you look around the social sphere you will encounter places where your customers are already connecting with each other. It is for you to decide how best you might get involved within these places and the value that you could add by intervening. Sometimes the answer should be to do very little, and just monitor the conversation, intervening only if you can assist or guide the customers to authoritative resources. However, a period of monitoring can reveal opportunities to connect a series of smaller niche communities together where the values expressed within the communities resonate with your own, or you notice a sympathetic thread through which you can unite them under your brand. The global nature of the internet means that this tactic can work to quickly build a large community where seemingly isolated groups of like-minded people are discussing issues without the capacity to reach other similarly isolated groups. I Had Cancer is a community of people who are or have been affected by cancer. Members can search by type of cancer, age, gender, location, year of diagnosis and type of user so that they can easily find others who have experienced their specific situation. кк www.ihadcancer.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 49 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE Professionals Public 4 Let your best blog Culturally many organisations are nervous of allowing their experts to demonstrate their sector knowledge. This attitude can derive from a fear of losing control, a sense that experts must have more profitable work to do than blog, or even a reticence to give too much away. Whatever the reasons there is no better way to influence debate and expand awareness than to allow your most insightful staff to share their knowledge and advanced thinking. As with your social champions, it is likely that you already have people within your organisation who are blogging, or who would like the opportunity to express their opinions. With the correct policies and caveats in place they should be allowed to express their views in a manner that shows a human face and passion for their subject area that is not necessary confined by the ‘corporate line’. Bond Vigilantes is a group of expert bond investment advisers, part of M&G Investments. Their blog is authoritative and in places quirky, and not devoid of attitude. The blog appears to be well followed by those interested in professional bond investment (the group that the blog establishes that it is for) and the community are actively involved as illustrated by James Carville’s introduction to the blog where he says that ‘In one week alone I was accused of both being an apologist for the US Tea Party, and a member of a Marxist sleeper cell’. кк www.bondvigilantes.com 50 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE People Professionals Public Peers 5 Set rules & automate – IFTTT IFTTT stands for ‘If this then that’. This is a simple tactic that ensures that you take full advantage of the digital assets that your customers are generating across the digital landscape. Simply put, IFTTT is a set of rules that ensures you become aware of and can subsequently utilise or automatically distribute all mentions of your organisation across your digital landscape. A simple example would be to automatically retweet tweets that mention you or use hashtags, or at least store these tweets for retweet consideration. Rules can be adopted to cover numerous scenarios across all social channels and cloud technologies. The IFTTT website contains hundreds of examples of how these rules, or as it calls them ‘recipes’ can ensure that you get the maximum coverage from your customers’ mentions of you. In the example featured, the recipe ensures that if you are tagged in a photo on Facebook then this photo is automatically saved to Dropbox. This could be a fantastic way to moderate and re-use appropriate User Generated Content. Establishing rules and automating those that do not need moderation will ensure far greater exposure of you and your brand across the myriad of social channels and can be set up for all eventualities. кк www.ifttt.com Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 51 COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT CUSTOMISED EXPERIENCE ONLINE SERVICES DEVICE CONTEXT DIGITAL ASSETS The 25 tactics to use ‘tomorrow’ 52 TACTIC DESCRIPTION RESOURCE Cull your content Review content in line with objectives, remove content that isn’t action-oriented Review content in line with objectives, remove content that isn’t action-oriented Curate assets Use online platforms to present collections of assets Low – can be semi-automated Teach people something Create simple assets to explain complicated concepts Initially high but good longevity Use video Create video assets Low to high depending on production value Make data engaging Use data sources to create visually appealing assets Infographics - high potentially short shelf life. Dynamic sources – very high but good longevity Do the basics Offer very basic information on a mobile-friendly website Relatively low Be responsive Create responsive website High, likely to require specialists A laid back interesting approach Reconfigure assets to suit the mobile environment High, likely to need editorial maintenance Be practical Produce a mobile site with real utility based on core service High, with potential longevity Apps for value Produce an app to enhance customer experience High, with potential longevity Watch customers Basic user testing of customer journeys Relatively low Facilitate decisions Simplify offer and language, produce step-by-step tool Medium, but good longevity Encourage questions Establish online enquiry mechanism High initially, but can become self-serving Online help Live online help High at an enterprise level. Could be lower using existing staff and off the shelf solution Channel audit Ensure channels are clear in their purpose and that they link together Low Understand mindsets Identify ways to repackage content in a way that makes sense to customers Low to high depending on level of sophistication Make it easy Simplify registration processes Low Give something Offer a taster or reduced version of your service, product, or insight Potentially low Customisation plan Plan to customise website for specific event, time of day or disaster Low to high depending on level of sophistication Connect physical with digital Facilitate customers in connecting with each other at a local level Low to high depending on available data sources Be human Establish tone of voice and attitude appropriate to customers on social channels Low to high depending on development and training needs Find champions Establish internal social team from ‘socialites’ around the organisation Low to high depending on development and training needs Connect community Identify niche communities and unite them on branded platform Low to high depending on platform and moderation requirements Expert blog Identify specialist bloggers Low Set rules Rules that govern dispersion of assets across channels Low, can be automated Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 ACTION/REACTION DEPENDENCY AUDIENCE Engagement, conversion, satisfaction People, professionals, public, peers Sharing, awareness People, professionals, public, peers Take up of services, sharing, awareness, advocacy People, peers Increased search exposure, sharing, awareness on multiple platforms People, professionals, public, peers Infographics – sharing, awareness. Dynamic sources – repeat visits, awareness. People, professionals, public, peers Reputation ‘maintained’ People, professionals, public, peers Satisfaction, conversion People, professionals, public, peers Satisfaction, engagement, conversion, advocacy People, professionals, public, peers Conversion, repeat business, advocacy People, peers Satisfaction primarily, downloads, conversion, sharing, advocacy People, public, peers Conversion, satisfaction People, peers Conversion, satisfaction, advocacy People, peers Conversion, satisfaction, advocacy People, peers Conversion, satisfaction, advocacy People, peers Sharing, conversion, advocacy, satisfaction People, professionals, public, peers Conversion, advocacy People, peers Advocacy, conversion, engagement, data sharing People, public, peers Advocacy, repeat business, conversion, data sharing People, professionals, public, peers Sharing, advocacy, satisfaction People, professionals, public, peers Conversion, advocacy, awareness People, peers Sharing, engagement, advocacy, awareness People, professionals, public, peers Engagement, sharing, awareness, conversion People, professionals, public, peers Awareness, advocacy, conversion Professionals, public Advocacy, influence, sharing, awareness Professionals, public Awareness, sharing People, professionals, public, peers Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 53 Finally “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” Winston Churchill 54 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 Think big, start small, move quickly We believe organisations must build a digital transformation engine based on disruptive leadership thinking, the powerful digital enablement of core services, and an innovative team of digital makers empowered to create uniquely simple customer-centric solutions (see below). Mark Sherwin Organisations that achieve this will be well on the way to deriving real competitive advantage from the digital revolution by Daring to be Digital and Driving Actions and Reactions Online. In the meantime there is no point standing still, since proper targeting of any of the tactics described here will begin to drive the value and return both you and your customers now expect from your digital landscape. Global Commercial Director ERS D L LEA DIGIT DIGI EN AL A ERS BL L MAK TA ERS The contemporary vision for all organisations should be to provide an exemplary, holistic customer experience that extends across all customer touch points on and offline. This will be the focus of a new Precedent report that we will be publishing in the Autumn. In the meantime one question we are increasingly asked by leaders is ‘How do I adapt my organisation to reap the benefits of digital and drive business value?’ TA I The key take away from this report should be ‘Think Big, Start Small, Move Quickly,’ which is to say that while every organisation should have a vision of where they want to be in the future, small, quickly implemented tactics can have the necessary impact to deliver value to you and your customers, and provide the impetus to move towards your future digital vision. DIGITAL DISRUPTORS DIG This report builds on the strategic themes introduced in our Daring to be Digital report, by offering specific tactics aligned to a customer engagement strategy to drive actions and reactions online. CUSTOMERS’ NEEDS CULTURE SHIFTS To read more about Mark’s Digital Transformation Engine visit: кк www.precedent.com/engine Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 55 About Precedent About the author Our services We have over 25 years of experience helping organisations transform for a digital world and our strategic research leads the digital agenda in sectors such as Education, Membership, Travel and Leisure, Third Sector and Finance. From strategy, web and mobile to brand, UX and hosting, we believe in meaningful ideas, intelligently delivered. www.precedent.com/what-we-do Our reports We have been researching and writing reports and whitepapers such as this for many years. Some of our more recent reports include: Adrian Porter • Daring to be Digital: On the road to digital transformation • Optimising Mobile • The DREAM Day Out: Digitally promoting and enhancing the attraction experience All of our research starts with some considered thinking – led by Adrian – who delves deep into our sectors and digital disciplines. Combining Precedent’s internal knowledge and expertise with external research and insight building from experts in the field, he produces the reports, whitepapers and insight pieces that gained us the accolade of No. 1 agency for strategic thinking. • Membership Organisations: Big challenges, digital answers • The Digital Campus: The online future of Higher Education Speaking regularly at Precedent’s seminars and pitches, Adrian has vast knowledge of the digital medium and its use within our key sectors and is regularly asked to speak at events in the UK and Asia Pacific regions. www.precedent.com/reports Head of Strategic Research Adrian’s research expertise stretches back to 1998 when he first began analysing and benchmarking websites. In 2003 he came to Precedent and quickly established our reputation as thought leaders. You can request your free copies via the website or by contacting us directly. Our seminars and webinars Throughout the year we hold regular seminars and webinars across Asia Pacific and the UK that delve deeper into the research, case studies and findings of our reports and whitepapers. Free to attend, you can find out what’s coming up in our events calendar by visiting our website. www.precedent.com/seminars Connect with us www.precedent.com [email protected] @precedentcomms @precedentau www.facebook.com/precedentcomms www.linkedin.com/precedent 56 Driving Actions and Reactions – Engaging your customers in the new digital world | © Precedent 2014 Get in touch Asia Pacific George Evans Commercial Director t: +61 (3) 9633 5100 e: [email protected] @precedentau UK Lara Doherty Relationship Manager t: +44 (0)20 7426 8900 e: [email protected] @precedentcomms