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Commercial feature

Capitalising on the radical engagement from brand loyalty and customer referrals

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Mar­keters have new oppor­tu­ni­ties to deliv­er long-term, loy­al con­sumer rela­tion­ships through the excel­lent cus­tomer expe­ri­ence baked into refer­ral mar­ket­ing


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Brit­tany Golob
05 Dec 2021

Mar­keters have an unend­ing panoply of tools at their dis­pos­al when it comes to get­ting their brands in front of cus­tomers. But, the chal­lenge they still face is in trans­lat­ing views and sales into long-term, mean­ing­ful rela­tion­ships with brand advo­cates.

At a recent round­table, spon­sored by ‘Refer­ral Engi­neer­ing’ com­pa­ny Men­tion Me, C‑suite mar­keters from Boots, Cur­rys, Just Eat and Made dis­cussed their strate­gies around loy­al­ty and refer­rals as vehi­cles for deliv­er­ing acqui­si­tion, engage­ment and a trans­formed cus­tomer expe­ri­ence.

While brand remains at the heart of mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy, atten­dees agreed, dig­i­tal and data have pre­sent­ed new oppor­tu­ni­ties for mar­keters. “We have to flex brands in a dif­fer­ent way now,” says Men­tion Me’s mar­ket­ing direc­tor Mark Choueke. “We’ve come through an era where it was all about broad­cast mes­sag­ing to an era where every­body was focused on cus­tomer expe­ri­ence. Now, cus­tomer expe­ri­ence is mov­ing to cus­tomer par­tic­i­pa­tion.” Allow­ing cus­tomers to par­tic­i­pate with brands facil­i­tates a stronger rela­tion­ship as peo­ple begin to iden­ti­fy with the brands they like and refer, he says.

To achieve that, though, com­pa­nies have to ensure they remain rel­e­vant to mod­ern con­sumers’ lives. Pete Markey, CMO of Boots, says cor­po­rate cul­ture, com­mu­ni­ca­tions, prod­ucts and ser­vices, and the chan­nels used all play a role in unit­ing brands with con­sumers. “With the exam­ple of Boots, when you walk into a store, when you go online, when you use the app, they should all equal­ly be scream­ing, ‘This is what we’re about,’” he says.

That sense of authen­tic­i­ty is true of dig­i­tal-native and of 150 year-plus her­itage brands, alike. Made COO Nico­la Thomp­son adds: “Authen­tic­i­ty has to be built into every sin­gle part of the ser­vice propo­si­tion. You can’t just pro­duce a beau­ti­ful ad cam­paign for fur­ni­ture and then not deliv­er against the qual­i­ty, the speed and the price peo­ple expect.” To do this, Made has a strong sense of its own brand, but also puts a huge amount of ener­gy into under­stand­ing its audi­ence.

In the pan­dem­ic, it had to lis­ten to the needs of not only cus­tomers, but employ­ees. In-store staff, Thomp­son says, did not want to go on fur­lough, rather they want­ed to put their skills to use in sup­port of the busi­ness. Made deliv­ered a dig­i­tal appoint­ment ser­vice that enabled sales staff to meet with peo­ple vir­tu­al­ly. This deep­ened the cus­tomer expe­ri­ence, but also enriched the rela­tion­ship between the brand and its advo­cates, as cus­tomers invit­ed Made into their homes through the screen.

Peo­ple are talk­ing about our brands any­way, that’s going on all the time. The chal­lenge is mak­ing sure that we’re deliv­er­ing those cus­tomer expe­ri­ences that enable them to have that pos­i­tive con­ver­sa­tion

Dan Rubel, brand & mar­ket­ing direc­tor at Cur­rys, agrees: “Our col­leagues are one of the things that make us spe­cial. Often you’ll see the big brand cam­paigns talk­ing about our real-life human experts.” He says bring­ing the mes­sage back to the in-store expe­ri­ence, through the tech­ni­cal exper­tise of staff, can help Cur­rys dif­fer­en­ti­ate itself and build its brand authen­ti­cal­ly.

Par­tic­i­pa­to­ry engage­ment is facil­i­tat­ing more per­son­al, deep­er rela­tion­ships between brands and cus­tomers, there­by pro­vid­ing a rich­er land­scape for refer­rals to grow. Great brand expe­ri­ences typ­i­cal­ly lead to dis­cus­sions with fam­i­ly mem­bers, friends or col­leagues in which con­sumers become brand advo­cates, Choueke says. “You lit­er­al­ly shout loud­ly and iden­ti­fy your­self with a brand and say, ‘I’m will­ing to put my rep­u­ta­tion on the line to share this with you.’ After that, the beau­ty is that you post-ratio­nal­ly love that brand even more because you just heard your­self say you did.”

Facil­i­tat­ing this, how­ev­er, is not just about chang­ing mar­ket­ing strate­gies. The change also has to come from with­in. At Made, for one, Thomp­son also over­sees sup­ply and pro­cure­ment and oper­a­tions. Boots is start­ing its own in-house media agency. At Cur­rys, the cus­tomer expe­ri­ence func­tion is part of the mar­ket­ing team. Inte­grat­ing dif­fer­ent ele­ments of a busi­ness’ oper­a­tions with mar­ket­ing allows the mar­keter to bet­ter under­stand the com­pa­ny and bet­ter posi­tion it to cus­tomers and poten­tial cus­tomers.

Build­ing a team that can bet­ter reach con­sumers will help com­pa­nies build loy­al fol­low­ings. “It’s cre­at­ing those moments that are tru­ly share­able,” says Just Eat’s mar­ket­ing direc­tor Matt Bush­by. “That gives us some­thing real­ly mean­ing­ful that our cus­tomers can say about us.” But even beyond shar­ing and loy­al­ty, engag­ing with the cus­tomer can help brands deliv­er new cam­paigns and prod­ucts based on data and research. Dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, Just Eat noticed that more peo­ple were order­ing break­fast than they had in the past. The com­pa­ny ramped up its break­fast offer, bring­ing new restau­rants on board and com­mu­ni­cat­ing the change, result­ing in a break­fast trade up by 200% in a year.

By improv­ing loy­al­ty and build­ing pow­er­ful refer­ral pro­grammes, com­pa­nies can glean a huge amount of first-par­ty data – the gold stan­dard – and in turn, bet­ter under­stand cus­tomers’ needs. Markey says: “Your brand can quick­ly move from being rel­e­vant to less rel­e­vant. The need to con­tin­u­al­ly engage has cre­at­ed this cycle where we have to be, if we weren’t already, [con­nect­ing with cus­tomers] as cus­to­di­ans of our brands, to cre­ate that longer term con­nec­tion and to dri­ve val­ue.” He adds that these oppor­tu­ni­ties weren’t always open to mar­keters, but dig­i­tal trans­for­ma­tion has enabled com­pa­nies to become more sophis­ti­cat­ed with their use and analy­sis of con­sumer data.

Rubel agrees that loy­al­ty is essen­tial to craft­ing a bet­ter cus­tomer expe­ri­ence. He says: “I don’t think there’s any­thing new in brand advo­ca­cy being impor­tant con­cep­tu­al­ly. But the tac­tics we use to cre­ate it have dialled up. The key piece for loy­al­ty schemes is val­ue; cre­at­ing real val­ue for cus­tomers, that’s some­thing spe­cial.” That, he says, leads to the cre­ation of “sticky rela­tion­ships with cus­tomers.”

You lit­er­al­ly shout loud­ly and iden­ti­fy your­self with a brand and say, ‘I’m will­ing to put my rep­u­ta­tion on the line to share this with you.’ After that, the beau­ty is that you post-ratio­nal­ly love that brand even more because you just heard your­self say you did.

And now, the oppor­tu­ni­ty to reap the rewards of cus­tomer loy­al­ty and refer­rals is gold­en. Once an intan­gi­ble, refer­rals and advo­ca­cy are now mea­sur­able.

“There is no bet­ter rec­om­men­da­tion that comes for a brand than from some­body you trust,” Thomp­son says. “I think the chal­lenge is mak­ing sure that you can engi­neer that in a way that is just as gen­uine as when it hap­pens in a pure­ly organ­ic way.” She points to data and tech­nol­o­gy as a means to this end, but also the dif­fer­ence that can be made by sim­ply deliv­er­ing on the cus­tomer promise.

Oth­ers agree that expe­ri­ence is cru­cial to cre­at­ing a brand advo­cate and engen­der­ing those all-impor­tant refer­rals. Bush­by says: “Peo­ple are talk­ing about our brands any­way, that’s going on all the time. Those con­ver­sa­tions are organ­ic and they’re always hap­pen­ing. The chal­lenge is mak­ing sure that we’re deliv­er­ing those cus­tomer expe­ri­ences that enable them to have that pos­i­tive con­ver­sa­tion. With­out those pos­i­tive expe­ri­ences cus­tomers have with our brand, none of this works.”

It’s a loy­al­ty loop. Refer­ral dri­ves acqui­si­tion. Cus­tomers are acquired, then engaged, cre­at­ing loy­al­ty; mem­o­rable expe­ri­ences are deliv­ered and cus­tomers become advo­cates, then ref­er­ees. Achiev­ing this means pri­ori­tis­ing data and insights, but so mar­keters must also lis­ten to their employ­ees and imple­ment their cre­ativ­i­ty to achieve excel­lent cus­tomer expe­ri­ences.

To under­stand how Refer­ral Engi­neer­ing® equips ambi­tious ecom­merce brands to dri­ve, track and opti­mise advo­ca­cy and pro­pel cus­tomer acqui­si­tion, vis­it mention-me.com/sundaytimes


Marketers have new opportunities to deliver long-term, loyal consumer relationships through the excellent customer experience baked into referral marketing

Marketers have an unending panoply of tools at their disposal when it comes to getting their brands in front of customers. But, the challenge they still face is in translating views and sales into long-term, meaningful relationships with brand advocates.

At a recent roundtable, sponsored by ‘Referral Engineering’ company Mention Me, C-suite marketers from Boots, Currys, Just Eat and Made discussed their strategies around loyalty and referrals as vehicles for delivering acquisition, engagement and a transformed customer experience.

While brand remains at the heart of marketing strategy, attendees agreed, digital and data have presented new opportunities for marketers. “We have to flex brands in a different way now,” says Mention Me’s marketing director Mark Choueke. “We’ve come through an era where it was all about broadcast messaging to an era where everybody was focused on customer experience. Now, customer experience is moving to customer participation.” Allowing customers to participate with brands facilitates a stronger relationship as people begin to identify with the brands they like and refer, he says.

Commercial featureCXFuture of Retail 2021RetailRoundtable

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