3. Last year, I worked for a pretty modest advertising agency
called Boondoggle in Amsterdam and Leuven.
For Nike, Rabobank, KLM and several other cool brands.
4. Read this manual.
Seriously.
Read it.
This year, for a company that is committed to obtain world
domination (whatever that means), InSites Consulting.
Marketing research agency turned consulting agency.
5. Why? Because advertising is the slow lane towards world
domination. And I fell in love with this girl.
I moved from Amsterdam to Ghent and work from Rotterdam, London and Ghent.
6. Honestly, sentences like the world has changed,
power has shifted to the consumer, increase your
share of conversation, consumers trust each other
most, shifting power from marketers to consumers,
marketers are no longer in control, social media
strategy and learn to lose control make me puke in
my mouth a bit.
While it is really really simple.
11. Not a thing changed.
(this is the listen-to-your-grandma part)
12. Who have you always trusted? Your peers.
This is my friend Jourik. I trust him with everything that has to do with Brussels,
food and women.
13. Customer retention has always been cheaper than
acquisition.
It’s cheaper to keep your current customers happy than recruit new ones.
14. Happy customers have always driven retention and
advocacy. Take Zappos and their service philosophy.
A small story about free shipping. Oh, and read Delivering Happiness.
15. Happiness has always been about managing
expectations. Under-promise. Over-deliver.
Do more than customers expect, but don’t over-do it.
16. A new technology every day. In the end, stories stick.
Kay Mook gained the Antwerp Zoo 300K extra visitors and almost became
product of the year 2009. More at http://polle.me/ccjSNL
18. Technology made things easier and opened up new
possibilities and niches, like TS2AS.org.
Technology made things easier. Gave us reach. Made it easy to compare.
19. People started to be connected always, everywhere.
People started to be connected everywhere.
20. It was never easier to find everything about everything.
Google, Wikipedia and even Twitter and Facebook.
21. People started to out-converse brands.
Brands realized they had facilitate instead of shout.
22. Employees started to talk.
People are more authentic, more passionate and have lower overhead cost. Period.
23. Company culture became increasingly important.
There are so many icecream brands, but the difference is in their company culture.
24. People got fed-up with bad customer service and are
striking back.
And not with some crappy message on their blog, but with brute force.
25. The best advertising started to have nothing to do with
advertising: Commit acts, not ads.
Albert Heijn actually helps people.
26. The best advertising started to have nothing to do with
advertising: Commit acts, not ads.
Nike actually changes the way people run.
27. With change became new and different ways to earn
money.
Gym-Pact let’s people pay when they DON’t turn up in their gym.
28. With change came new competitors.
Wakoopa once was a geek tool, now a very promising marketing research tool.
29. For many companies, this is pretty radical change.
Not a change that was about social media alone
A real change.
30. Old New
More advertising Acts, not ads
Suboptimal fit New relevance
Creative idea Smart idea
Undergoing conversation Leading conversation
Traditional brands Humanized brands
Consumer as customer Consumer as co-creator
Technical benefits Emotional benefits
Acquisition Retention
31. Acts not ads.
Great example: the small acts of fun that were planned by Volkswagen to prove
that putting a little fun in people’s lives will change behavior.
38. Retention and advocacy.
The best advertising campaign I have seen in years: a small leaflet I got from
Eduardo, the owner of a pretty simple B&B in Florence.
39. And a last one: Create things worth sharing.
Think about small things worth talking about.
40. It’s really simple:
Act human.
Build upon the things you’re
already doing.
Think conversations.
And on top of that: here’s some structure
to help you out.
41. Observe Facilitate Join
The three pillars of conversation management.
42. Start with observing and listening.
There are simple tools to observe what consumers are doing. Via
search.twitter.com or more advanced tools. But what about customer emails?
43. Facilitate.
Ben & Jerry’s crowdsources their marketing plan and icecream flavors via an
online platform with brand fans.
Photo by jason.dsilva
45. Use pilot projects to learn and change.
Telenet launched a beta product to let consumer help them eventually create a
better product. Think in intrinsic, learning and change KPI’s.
46. Be maniacal about measuring and tweaking.
Measure views, clicks, but even more important: your return on investment.
Extremely simple, but effective: the Net Promoter Score.
47. You can forget most of the things
I said in this introduction.
But please, remember these 3 things.
48. 1) Conversations drive business.
Companies that connect with
their consumers perform better.
So start the conversation.
49. 2) To drive conversations, exceed
expectations and create stuff
worth sharing.
Don’t plan only for life time money
value, but for life time conversation
value.
50. 3) Start with observing, but start
with simple ways to drive
conversations.
Start monitoring, start with pilots and
learn while doing.
51. I hope I was worth sharing.
Send me an email at
polle@insites.eu or find me on
twitter at @polledemaagt.
Find the presentation at
http://polle.me/fontys11