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Jeff Hasen

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Now What?

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In 2015, I wrote The Art of Mobile Persuasion, a book about the relationships that people have with their mobile devices.

It’s safe to describe them then and now as intimate, engrossing and integral.

The central questions in The Art of Mobile Persuasion were whether brands have opportunities to get in on that action or is three a crowd?

Since then, some businesses have muffed the chance, taking an approach that has been deemed as invasive, impersonal, and/or offering no value. But others large and small have knocked gently, ingratiated themselves, brought something that was welcomed, and seen resulting increases in awareness, loyalty and sales.

To the former group, what were you thinking?

To the latter, we’re good now, right?

Well, no.

Why? The playing field has changed.

Our nurtured customers and prospects are now being wooed by other means.

Though voice interfaces.

And wearables.

Smart appliances, even toilets.

And OTT (over the top) devices.

Virtual and mixed reality software and hardware.

And the list goes on. There’s every reason to believe that the pulls for attention will grow this year, next year, and every year after that.

Of course, this brings with it all sorts of complications.

·      Where will we find our customers and prospects?

·      Where we do want to lead them and what must they find when they get there?

·      How does all of this innovation affect the customer journey?

·      If personalization is the so-called North Star, how do we deliver this on the screens and interfaces of today – and the ones surely coming behind those?

And how does the relationship that your brand has steadily built with customers via the mobile phone survive, evolve, and thrive when eyes and ears are drawn to even more places?

In my new book The Art of Digital Persuasion, the conversation broadens to today’s interfaces, devices, behaviors and technologies.

I again have had the pleasure and privilege of visiting with some of the sharpest marketers and other business leaders that one can identify. I sought out real-world experience, perspective, and advice to give us the knowledge, skills and confidence that we all need to do our jobs -- and, in many cases, to reimagine our current outdated positions given these upended times.

I share what leaders from Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Twitter, ESPN, and others are doing and thinking to address the core question of the new book:

Now what?

The book is now available on Amazon. https://amzn.to/2G4CrCu

 I hope that you’ll give it a look and take the time to learn from these experts just as I have.

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion, The Art Of Digital Persuasion, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Twitter, ESPN.

April 8, 2019 by Jeff Hasen.
  • April 8, 2019
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Running With Mobile But Crawling With Personalization

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If you want hype or smoke and mirrors, you can easily find 100 people who will tell you a tale about the mobile wallet’s role in eliminating cash (it hasn’t) or the ways that beacons have saved retail’s brick and mortar locations (they haven’t).

But if you want to know what really is happening – or isn’t – in marketing, you check in with Noah Elkin, now a research director at Gartner. I met Elkin more than 10 years ago when he was Chief Evangelist at eMarketer. His book, Mobile Marketing: An Hour A Day is a great read, even six years after its publication.

What caught my eye recently was Elkin’s positive assessment https://blogs.gartner.com/noah-elkin/mobile-marketing-means-serious-business/ of where we are with mobile marketing.

“A big theme in Gartner’s recent Multichannel Marketing Effectiveness Survey is the emergence of mobile as a dominant channel for multichannel marketers," he wrote. "Now, for those who have been watching mobile’s share of ad revenues and digital time spent climb steadily upward, the notion of mobile’s dominance may seem old hat. It clearly enjoys that status for the audiences marketers are trying to reach.

“But marketers often have struggled to effectively incorporate mobile into their marketing strategies. We’ve seen that most multichannel marketers, for example, don’t see a need to go beyond creating mobile extensions of existing desktop-based engagement techniques (e.g., the website, advertising, search and email) — a finding consistent with the marketers who’ve used Gartner’s “Marketing Maturity Assessment” tool and rated mobile marketing their least mature capability.”

But lots changed in 2017, according to Elkin.

“This is one of those rare occasions where we can legitimately say, 'What a difference a year makes,'” he said. “In 2016, marketers told us that on average, they were using 3.5 mobile techniques (out of a total of 13 we asked them about) and had another two in the pilot stage. Fast-forward to 2017, and marketers now have 4.3 tactics live on average, and are piloting 3.1, representing a combined increase of 33 percent.”

To go deeper, I dialed up Elkin for a The Art of Mobile Persuasion podcast interview. In part 1 (episode 24 - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/art-mobile-persuasion-podcast/id1156481550?mt=2), we talk about the increase in maturity, but also the distance that we still have to go to deliver on the one-to-one communication that so many hype.

“You see marketers taking something of a crawl, walk, run approach,” he told me. “There is this promise that if you are fully invested in personalization, it promises great things from a business results perspective. But most marketers really are starting with one channel. You’re starting with basic e-mail personalization, for example. I have a lot of calls with our marketing clients about just taking those baby steps about how to do better customer segmentation. That’s a long way from being able to personalize across the entire customer experience.

“There are cost implications. There are complexity implications.  The technology is there but one thing we see not just with personalization technology but with marketing technology in general is that marketers buy it with intent to fully deploy it, but there is lag between when they adopt it to when they fully utilize all the capabilities of the tools that they have.”

To believe that drastic improvement is coming is, in Elkin’s view, a bit too optimistic.

“The way marketing technology weaves itself into organizations tends to be more incremental than rapid,” he said in the interview.  “We see marketers in to the 2 range (the developing phase) in the marketing maturity model and they want to get to a 4 (the advanced phase) (out of 5). Marketers really want to move up that maturity curve but the challenging part is how do you change processes, how do you bring on board new technology while you are still running your business day to day?

“That’s where some of that energy around maturing areas of marketing can fall down because it’s hard to be working on those parallel paths. How do you do these changes that have significant implications for how your marketing department is run and how it is structured, the technology it uses, the skills that you require while you are still doing the day to day and still being measured on where you are expected to deliver.”

Hear more of Elkin’s insights in part 1 and in a second part posting later in January.

Tagged with Noah Elkin, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, podcast, Gartner.

January 9, 2018 by Jeff Hasen.
  • January 9, 2018
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Delivering Lessons From The Holiday Shopping Season

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Conventional wisdom would say a retailer shouldn’t risk cannibalizing holiday sales as well as not give consumers an opportunity to wait until the last minute because they might be enticed to buy elsewhere.

In 2018’s first understatement of the year, Amazon is anything but conventional.

The company actually elongated holiday selling efforts, beginning in September and stretching literally to the final hour before Christmas.

Sure, big revenue days were Black Friday and Cyber Monday, but Amazon catered to all, including those who turned the page on Labor Day with shopping and those who procrastinated or purposely waiting until Dec. 24 with delivery options that were as historic as unconventional.

It even prospered in year two of Prime Day in December -- 30 hours of deals for members of its Prime program  — and saw the biggest sales day ever in company history.

Most noteworthy was the activity generated by rapid delivery.

According to Amazon, which for the first time offered same-day or next day delivery in 8,000 markets, the last Prime Now order in time for Christmas was delivered in 58 minutes at 11:58 p.m. on Christmas Eve in Baltimore, MD. The order included those must-haves, at least for someone -- the Kid Galaxy Amphibious RC Car Morphibians Shark Remote Control Toy, the Crayola Oil Pastels Art Tools, 28 ct., and the VTech Click and Count Remote.

“Same day and next day delivery is starting to replace store visits,” retail expert Ryan Craver told me in an interview on The Art of Mobile Persuasion podcast that posted this week (episode 23 here - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/art-mobile-persuasion-podcast/id1156481550?mt=2).

“The big reason why we are seeing a bit of inflection point, if you think back, we didn’t have that many markets where it was available. Obviously now word of mouth plus the press has people try it for the first time and they fall in love with it.

“The second thing is the amount of product that is now available for same day delivery. Everyone knows about Amazon but there is a big behemouth called Google who offers something like Google Express that provide access to everything that Walmart, Target, and Costco sell with same day delivery.”

Craver, a key voice in my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book www.artofmobilepersuasion.com, says price plus availability makes consumers think that delivery is the way to go.

“It’s actually a decent price,” he told me “It’s a marginal fee now. You’ve got 1099 employees delivery for $5 a pop and a tip if you hit a certain price point. That is a pretty compelling consumer experience that is tough to match and it’s going to continue to grow and grow and grow.”

Customers' use of Amazon's one-day, same-day, and two-hour delivery doubled this holiday, according to the company.

As to mobile’s role in purchasing, Amazon said that mobile purchasing increased 70 percent in 2017.

Mickey Mericle, vice president, Marketing and Customer Insights at Adobe, said that “shopping and buying on smartphones is becoming the new norm and can be attributed to continued optimizations in the retail experience on mobile devices and platforms.”

Adobe reported that 75 percent of millennials expected to shop via their smartphone.

Still, Craver reminded us that there is more to do with mobile, noting that many web sites and apps don’t allow for purchase.

“There are only a few retailers who have figured out that final path to purchase,” he said.

Of course, Amazon is one of those few. And it won’t stand still. Drone delivery awaits.

(Hear Craver’s insights on the podcast this week and in a 2018 look ahead posting later this month.)

 

Tagged with Ryan Craver, Amazon, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, podcast.

January 2, 2018 by Jeff Hasen.
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The Art of Mobile Insistence?

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Could my next book be The Art of Mobile Insistence?

While short of a trend, it’s noteworthy that an increasing number of businesses are refusing to accept cash. As reported in the New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/25/nyregion/no-cash-money-cashless-credit-debit-card.html, payments are only accepted via app or credit card.

This policy won’t get noticed by the many who haven’t paid for anything with dollars and cents for years.

But others, as the Times said, are displeased.

“Every day I have an argument with somebody about it,” said a cashier at the Dos Toros on 40th Street in Manhattan.

The volume of mobile payments in the restaurant industry grew 75 percent in 2017, according to Fodor. http://www.nrn.com/operations/restaurant-mobile-payments-hit-tipping-point-2017. “As much as 10 percent of all fast-food sales may be made via mobile in just a few years.”

A cashless policy affects the so-called unbanked, those who do not have a bank account or credit card. That number in the U.S. has been estimated at 7 percent.

I’ve long said that choice is the killer app. Businesses that eschew that path risk losing customers and good will. 

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

December 28, 2017 by Jeff Hasen.
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Nothing Personal

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For more than 300 days in 2017, signals were sent every time you and I and everyone else clicked or tapped.

We told marketers of our extraordinary interest in some things and our indifference in others.

Businesses knew – or should’ve known – every dollar that we spent with them with granular information that gave them daypart, offer acted upon, and purchase pattern, among other particulars.

Then the holiday shopping season came and for the most part we were treated by businesses as equals. The channels and screens were different from our youth, but the marketing was unquestionably mass as if we were still enthralled by the Ed Sullivan Show.

Nothing personal.

As I wrote in The Art of Mobile Persuasion, “I’ve never, ever had a meatball sandwich from your quick-service restaurant. You, Mr. or Ms. marketer, know, or should know, from my purchase history that my diet is vegetarian. Why am I still getting those damn meatball ads?”

If you wonder if it matters, 64 percent of consumers want personalized offers from retail brands, Salesforce says.

According to McKinsey, personalization can reduce acquisition costs by as much as 50 percent, lift revenues by 5-15 percent and increase marketing spend efficiency by 10-30 percent.

The stakes are high when you factor in loyalty programs. Consumers expect you to show them that you know them.

Yet in the often-cited Bond Brand Loyalty survey http://info.bondbrandloyalty.com/2017-loyalty-report, we learned that only 22 percent feel very satisfied with the level of personalization they experience with a loyalty program. Incredibly, that is down from 28 percent in 2015.

No one said that this personalization stuff is easy. As Gartner analyst Noah Elkin told me in an interview for an upcoming podcast episode, it is a crawl, walk, run process for most marketers who at best are implementing it in one channel.

The most egregious disconnect for me in the holiday season was after my wife and I were met with a dirty sock, used robe, and rumpled and unclean sheets upon check-in at the Magnolia Hotel in Denver.

Despite voicing our displeasure to three employees, our e-mailed bill the next morning came with this opening -- We hope you have enjoyed your stay with us.

To be sure, some brands noticeably stood out with personalization efforts (colleagues and others did an admirable job online and in mobile apps, for instance).

The most memorable one, again in the travel industry, came when the Kimpton Hotel Wilshire reached out to my wife to ask her if she would like to send along a photo of a loved one, pet or happy memory so it could be framed and set on the nightstand before she arrived.

In 2018, nothing personal just ain’t good enough.

If you are up for it, let’s take this improvement road together.

I’ll offer insights, actionable lessons, case studies and interviews in this space, on my The Art of Mobile Persuasion podcast https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/art-mobile-persuasion-podcast/id1156481550?mt=2, and @jeffhasen on Twitter. Expect a lot of it.

Your part of the deal? You’ll read, listen, engage, and maybe even catch my attention – and more of my business and loyalty – with a personalized ad, email or promoted tweet that speaks to me.

Thanks for being here. Happy New Year.

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion, personalization, Noah Elkin, Nothing personal.

December 24, 2017 by Jeff Hasen.
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What Do Mobile Users Really Want From Brands?

Hype, myth and hyperbole live alongside reality in the mobile sphere, making it difficult for marketers to know where to turn. One of my favorites is the belief that mobile payments will be universally adopted ASAP. Some people suggest cash will be gone by Tuesday, which, of course, is nonsense. Just look at history — not only have mobile users been slow to use their devices for banking, but other customers still prefer to interact with tellers. Though you may think they’re in the minority, banks still offer in-person options because the demand is significant.

Do mobile owners actually want anything to do with brands and businesses while their heads are buried in their devices? Judging by the large increase in mobile users downloading ad-blocking software lately, you might discern that the answer is no. However, when you consider the entire population of mobile users, you’ll find your instinct is wrong — there’s still value in mobile marketing, and here’s the proof:

Facebook’s total revenue in Q1 of 2016 grew to $5.38 billion from $3.54 billion in Q4 2015, with ad revenue increasing 57 percent to $5.2 billion. Mobile ad revenue accounted for about 82 percent of total ad revenue, compared with about 73 percent a year earlier. Brands were spending more because the advertising was working.

Then came news that mobile advertising drives $26.52 in incremental sales per thousand impressions for consumer packaged goods brands, topping digital video, TV and cross-media, according to a new report from Nielsen Catalina Solutions. The authors said that with mobile having the lowest frequency across all media, marketers could buy more and still expect strong returns.

Want additional proof? Just under 60 percent of mobile users said they would have a more positive opinion about a retailer if they were provided with coupons and offers that could be saved on their smartphone, per the 2016 Mobile Consumer Report released by Vibes.

And then there’s this one — more than half of millennials would use their phones to leverage restaurant or bar loyalty programs, according to QSR Magazine.

Finally, according to comScore, listeners don’t mind hearing ads during podcasts — and they actually act on them. In a study of US respondents ages 18 to 49, two-thirds of listeners have acted on ads they heard in a podcast either by researching a product or service or by actually purchasing something they heard about in an episode. Of course, many of those listens happen through a mobile device.

Lest you think I’m full of hype, let’s examine the latest ad-blocking statistics and their ramifications.

Ad blocking in the US is expected to grow by double digits this year and next, according to eMarketer. In 2016, 69.8 million people in the US will use some sort of ad blocker, representing an increase of 34.4 percent since 2015. The following year, that number will increase another 24 percent, topping out at 86.6 million people.

Currently, ad blocking is more common on desktops and laptops than on smartphones. However, the number of people using ad blockers on their smartphones will rise 62.3 percent this year, and the number of PC-based ad-blocking users will increase 30.1 percent, according to the source.

So what gives? In “The Art of Mobile Persuasion,” I dive into the personal relationship consumers have with their phones and dissect whether there’s a place for advertising and marketing or whether three is a crowd. Through reviewing thousands of mobile campaigns and interviews with more than a dozen of the world’s leading mobile marketers, the only conclusion to draw was that many mobile users — but not all — are willing and even eager to engage with businesses when they receive value in exchange.

The large and growing number of people blocking ads is due to mobile users being bothered by bad experiences, being fed up with communications from brands that are neither relevant nor contextual, and choosing to keep their relatively small screens uncluttered.

“Crappy ad experiences are behind the uptick in ad-blocking tools, and Google, along with the advertising and publishing industries, is obliged to come up with a fix,” said Sridhar Ramaswamy, Google’s senior vice president of Ads and Commerce.

However, the mistake comes when marketers believe the door is closed. By providing better and more personal interactions, brands and businesses can block not just the stream of smartphone owners downloading software, but the hype that does a disservice to a channel that has proven its worth time and again.

(first appeared at http://mobilebusinessinsights.com/2016/07/what-do-mobile-users-really-want-from-brands/)

 

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion, mobile payments, ad blocker.

July 14, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Ramifications of Bad Mobile Experiences

The rising expectations of mobile users have been well-documented and covered extensively in my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book. Now comes word that one third of mobile consumers would never purchase from brands that fail to deliver.

Alternatively, Sitecore reported, when a good mobile experience is achieved, 76% report that it has an influence on their loyalty to a brand.

Nearly one third of all mobile searches on Google are related to location.

Location-related mobile searches are growing 50% faster than mobile searches in general.

According to Nissan UK data, 6% of mobile ad clicks result in a trip to a dealership.

Nearly 1 in 4 people abandon mobile apps after only one use: Localytics.

Only 24% of mobile app users worldwide return to an app the day after they first use it: Appboy.

Another from Localytics: 62% of users will use an app less than 11 times.

Over 419 million individuals block ads on their smartphones, per PageFair. The number represents 22% of all individuals who own a smartphone worldwide.

Email is the most popular function of smartphone users (78%), followed by web browsing (73%), Facebook (70%) and looking at maps and directions (63%): IDC and Facebook.

Just 52% of small businesses had a mobile-optimized website in February 2016: Yodle, and Research Now.

More than one-third of US internet users said they first find out about small businesses when researching online, according to a survey by Vistaprint.

Nearly six in 10 mobile gamers watch an ad 10 times a week, via TapResearch.

Mobile sales growth exceeded desktop growth by nearly 10x last holiday season: comScore.

81% couldn’t go a day without their mobile device: O2.

Eight in 10 Twitter users are on mobile.

Four out of five 18 to 24-year-olds (81%) say that using mobile banking is helping them to actually save money: per Halifax’s Generation Save report. A further 65% of these young people say mobile banking makes them more likely to move money into savings accounts.

Tagged with Sitecore, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Google, comScore, Facebook.

June 5, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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"There Are Too Many Apps and Too Many Bad To Mediocre Experiences"

Forbes asked me how brands can be relevant, engaging, and useful on mobile.

Here’s what I told author John Koetsier:

Koetsier: We see some brands building massive engagement on mobile, like Starbucks. But many brands aren’t sure where to start. Where should they begin?

Hasen: Everything and nothing has changed with mobile. We still need to sell stuff. It’s the how that is different. The common thread we see with successful mobile marketers is that they are pragmatic and using the channel to attain business objectives and to address pain like churn.

Successful mobile marketers are also open-minded, collaborative, good listeners and risk takers. Those who fail often are selfish, impulsive, illogical, timid and inattentive.

The relationship with the mobile device is so personal that brands need to enhance the experience. Otherwise, three is a crowd.

Koetsier: 75% of people who download an app don’t become long-term engaged users, and that’s probably higher for brand apps. What’s the key problem here?

Hasen: Several factors.

There are too many apps, too many mediocre to bad experiences, and consumers have no patience to see if you will provide value. It needs to begin from the get-go: help the stressed parent with recipes, show them that the train is on time, give them reason to believe that you are out for their personal best interests.

Koetsier: Many brand apps are not daily drivers … they’re not like Facebook that you open multiple times a day. Instead, you use them weekly or monthly as you interact with your airline, for instance. How can you maintain a connection in those times?

Hasen: For some apps, their value is in the knowledge that they will be there for you when and if you need them.

Of course, these days push notifications are the rage. In some instances, like when someone has entered a mall and has opted in to receive pushes, you can send them a notification that reminds them and incents them to open the app.

Another way to engage is by providing offers, special content or the like and promoting it in other interactions with the app users.

Koetsier: Push messaging is huge and there’s a lot of good things brands can do it with. Should push messages be sent only in response to users’ queries or preferences or requests?

Hasen: Push messages shouldn’t even be talked about until you’ve provided some value to the user.

A major mistake seen often is a brand asking for permission before gaining the trust of the consumer. Even when done correctly, brands should treat the relationship as precious and not believe that they can enter someone’s house, put their feet on the furniture, eat all the chips, drink the beer, and stay all night.

Koetsier: Once users are in the app, how should brands use in-app messaging? What’s it best at?

Hasen: When used to its fullest, in-app messaging produces even more value to the user and is personal and within context.

An airline should ask me to rate its app after it gives me an upgrade to first class, not after my flight was canceled. That’s why it is so important to use tools like mobile marketing automation to have a healthy, rich view of a consumer to know his or her likes, dislikes and interactions with you.

Koetsier: How should brands cohort or segment users? What should they be looking for?

Hasen: You and I might shop at the same store but have very different buying patterns. I may need an offer every three months for you to monetize me to the fullest. You may return on your own and never need a prod or a buy-one-get-one.

Group audiences through identified traits that make communications feel like a one-to-one experience – and drive business outcomes.

Koetsier: Is a brand app even useful at all if it’s not tied to the company’s back-end systems for customer and order management, and maybe support/service?

Hasen: There are lots of uses for apps (and also more than a few misuses).

Often the most successful apps engage the loyal customer with even more value as delivered through such things as exclusive content, access to sales and merchandise earlier, and to engage and become part of a user’s life. Nike is the perennial leader at this.

Koetsier: How important is it for a brand to have its own mobile app?

Hasen: Ah, the question that still gets asked after all these years.

It’s about a businesses’ individual customer insights. Does its audience carry smartphones? Are they apt to engage more deeply than what they could do on the mobile web? Can the business make its app stand out among a crowded space or should it tie into a more popular app as many retailers do today. In general, the mobile web is the foundational piece, then an app is layered on if it could enhance the experience.

Mobile users will punish a brand for a crappy experience and reward one that delivers.

Koetsier: Any great stories about brands driving high engagement on mobile that you want to share?

Hasen: The most successful mobile marketers are the ones who are pragmatic. Take the case of a large wireless carrier that uses personalized mobile video to reduce churn.

One way is through a custom welcome video that is the very first point of communication with a new customer.  Sent to mobile devices, this personalized welcome video acknowledges and thanks the subscriber for his or her business and summarizes the details of the account and what to expect when the first bill arrives.

As a result, the carrier has seen:

·      Significant reduction in churn (customers leaving in the first 30 days), saving what it says is tens of millions of dollars

·      A decrease in calls to customer support

·      The highest recall of any other touch with the customer (over 50 percent measured at 90 days post-video delivery)

·      Significant increase in revenue (ARPU or average revenue per user and lifetime value)

The piece appears here - http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkoetsier/2016/05/10/brands-and-apps-how-to-be-relevant-engaging-and-useful-on-mobile/#47d6d17713d4

 

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May 10, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Why Are Brands Still Falling Short On Mobile Personalization Efforts?

Personalization was supposed to be the tonic that brought brands closer to immersed mobile users, but as the midpoint of 2016 draws closer, vegetarians are still getting meatball sandwich offers. Customers have little reason to believe businesses understand them, not to mention have the interest or means to reach out to them on an individual basis. What gives?

“We have to realize how complex [mobile personalization] is,” Sean Lyons, US president of advertising agency R/GA, explained in “The Art of Mobile Persuasion.”

“Think about how well you know your close friends and how preferences adapt and change over time,” he said. “Could you predict with great certainty what they may want at a certain moment? Maybe only your closest friends.”

Lyons went on to explain that the personalization consumers crave is a big ask.

“We have really high expectations for the capability to personalize communications, but it’s a very complicated thing,” he noted. “It’s a mix of both a trail of data but also the feeling that I have right now, my mood, that we’re not factoring in. There are going to be a lot more mistakes made and personalization with the wrong people targeted. That’s part of the evolution of it.”

Though it may seem like more companies are failing than adapting, there are brands that have driven business results by creating mobile personalization through one-on-one interactions mobile users find valuable.

For example, one major wireless carrier understands the importance of personalized service and continuously works to decrease churn and increase customer satisfaction. One way it does this is through a personalized welcome video, powered by technology firm Vehicle. The video is the first point of communication with new customers. It thanks subscribers for their business, summarizes the account details and outlines what to expect when the first bill arrives.

As a result of these personalized mobile videos, the carrier has seen:

·      A significant reduction in customers leaving in the first 30 days of service, saving millions of dollars

·      A decrease in calls to customer support

·      A significant increase in average revenue per user and lifetime value

Elsewhere, Toyota targeted Facebook users with personal video advertisements for its new RAV, according to Mobile Marketer. The automaker worked with an agency to create more than 100 interchangeable clips and deliver personal experiences based on data around the viewer’s personal interests.

Although these personalization wins are significant, the failures are often more memorable. For example, imagine this situation: In an attempt to deliver on mobile personalization, an optometrist’s office starts sending appointment text reminders at 4 a.m. a full 13 days before the appointment to patients who haven’t opted in. Not only would this be a violation of regulations and potentially cost the sender thousands of dollars per text, it’s a memorably bad idea to intrude with a text at such a personal hour. Ideally, businesses will employ more common sense as mobile takes hold.

Some consumers want the best of personalization and want it now, but Lyons explained that engaged consumers are more apt to understand the issues in getting to one-on-one marketing.

“People are going to be way more accepting of those mistakes if you are getting a truly remarkable service from the brand,” he said. “Differentiating what your products and services are is still paramount. That will lead the way and gives brands a lot more leeway in how they tailor their communications.”

This may be true, but brands are still leaving money on the table. According to App Developer Magazine, 6 in 10 consumers do not feel their mobile experience expectations are being completely met. Brands need to work smart and invest wisely to make the most of their mobile development budgets and deliver the top-notch marketing experiences their customers crave.

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(article first appeared here - http://mobilebusinessinsights.com/2016/05/why-are-brands-still-falling-short-on-mobile-personalization-efforts/)

Tagged with IBM, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Sean Lyons.

May 7, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Short-Sightedness of a 4 a.m. Text Message

The easiest way to betray trust on mobile? Follow the lead of my eye doctor’s office and send a text message at 4 a.m. to remind someone about an appointment 13 days later. Is it that hard to see the stupidity in that intrusion?

For every $1 spent on a mobile device, $30 of retail sales are influenced by mobile, per Forrester.

65% of Spotify's global streams are now on mobile devices. This covers 70 million users and 30 million subscribers.

More than 40% of the top-selling smartphone apps have no privacy policy, per Forbes.

This is the longest stretch since 2007 where I haven't felt compelled to visit an Apple Store to engage with a new product. How about you?

83% of consumers prefer a talk with a person rather than digital interaction for customer service issues: Accenture.

Marketers need to move from “measuring and marketing to devices, to marketing and measuring people,” according to ESPN’s David Coletti. I devote a section of my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book to ESPN’s moves toward even more personalization.

Apple Pay is coming to mobile websites later this year, according to several reports.

Starbucks says that it is within "30 to 45 days" of releasing a Windows mobile app.

Google has added ride-sharing tab to Maps for iOS.

We might have to start a drinking game every time we hear the term mobile moments. It is the new The Year of Mobile repeated-by-all phrase.

I asked my 22-year-old niece if she knows anyone who owns an Apple Watch. "Only some parents. No one my age," was her response.

Juniper Research predicts app advertising will top $44 billion by 2020, up from $13 billion last year.

CBS plans to sell one of its radio division. Several of the stations ran pioneering mobile campaigns that tapped into listener loyalty.

Tagged with CBS, Forrester, Spotify, Microsoft, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

March 27, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Some Will Be “First” At SXSW, But How Much Does That Matter?

Be it the Internet of Things, the smart home, virtual reality or something else, change is coming.

The next big stage is this week’s SXSW Interactive, where check-in pioneer Foursquare (which has since morphed) and Oculus Rift, a virtual reality gaming headset, were introduced.

It’s also where Meerkat won the day in 2015 only to be forced to change its business model less than a year later when it was overtaken by Twitter/Periscope and Facebook Live.

Apple co-founder Steve Jobs said that innovation separates leaders from followers. Serial entrepreneur Jason Calacanis says, “You have to have a big vision and take very small steps to get there.”

The pace is in dispute, but the need to advance technologies and find new ways to engage with the near always-on user is universal.

But how? And what shape does that take?

“If you (as a marketer) have a real specific need for doing it and you think it's going to solve a problem, being an early adopter (of technology) is great,” longtime marketer Jonathan Stephen told me in an interview for my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book (www.artofmobilepersuasion.com). “You are quick to fail and quick to being successful. There are others out there who think this can be an enhancement to an experience and maybe those are the ones who don't necessarily jump on the early bandwagon but they continue to see as the technology improves itself, that they will adapt over time and a lot of the kinks will have been worked out. Best practice would have been created and they would have followed those guidelines.

“It really depends on the position that you're in. If you've got the capital to do that kind of investment, by all means I always think that being an early adopter is fantastic but you have to be prepared to fail. You're not going to get it right the first time (all the time). No one ever has.”

Sometimes being second, third or later has its advantages.

WhatsApp, built by former Yahoo employees as a text-messaging alternative, is a cross-platform mobile messaging app that allows users to exchange messages without having to pay for SMS. In 2014, Facebook purchased the company and access to more than 600 million active users for $19 billion.

“I always use the phrase, ‘I may not be early to the party but I always like to make an entrance,’” Stephen said. “Sometimes there are technologies out there and I wasn't the first to get to it but I definitely want to make sure that I get noticed when I launched that technology. It takes a lot of thought. It takes a lot of strategy in terms of what is behind it. It takes a lot of humility to take a step back and realize where you will be successful and where you want there to go.

“There will be a lot of successes and a lot of failures. You learn that over time. But more than anything it goes all the way back to that business strategy.”

Others who I talked to for the book view things in similar ways.

Curtis Kopf has seen – and been part of innovation – in large enterprises including Microsoft, Amazon and Alaska Airlines.

At Amazon, he was part of a hand-picked 14-person team in the U.S., Europe and Asia that scaled and extended “Search Inside the Book,” a discovery tool that searches and displays the full contents of hundreds of thousands of books from domestic and international publishers.

“Every company wrestles with this,” Kopf told me when speaking of innovation.  “We all come from different places whether you are an airline, a bank, or Amazon.com.  I've experienced the spectrum of companies based on their business model and who they are have different comfort levels and appetites.

“Amazon.com is going to be a company that makes really big bets -- things that may not materialize for five years or seven years, even ten years. Other companies won't view the world that way.”

Everyone, Kopf said, has a place.

“There's definitely a continuum of innovation and then there are obviously companies out there that are category creators,” he said. “Clearly a lot of the companies that we think of innovators weren't first. Obviously Google wasn't the first search engine (in fact, 20 were launched earlier, according to Wikipedia). They just did it in a new and better way. Apple definitely wasn't the first to do a smartphone. They just did it in a new and better way.

“Innovation is talked about so much that it is almost become meaningless. Every company on the planet says that they are innovative. It's part of their mission statement. Obviously as consumers we all interact with these brands and the truth is that they are not all innovative.”

 “Being first is great. There are times that being first could be really important. If you can get it an advantage that you can sustain, there's some buzz and credit that you get from customers by introducing something first. But I don't think innovation in and of itself means being first. It could be taking something that someone else started and doing it in a new way.”

What should we expect to see in Austin this week and what should be our SXSW takeaways?

 “South By (Southwest) has an interesting mix of what are perceived to be cutting edge talks or technologies that are really pretty basic,” Sean Bartlett, a former senior Lowe’s executive who is now Worldwide Industry Lead for Retail at Apple, told me.

“There is also the technology itself which is interesting. And then, what I think is most important, with respect to what I've taken away from South By in the few times that I've been there, is more cultural and how you think about things.

“One of the things that I took from a panel a couple of years ago that has actually become a guiding principle of the team is this notion of commitment to craftsmanship. I saw a panel of well-known startup CEOs talking about their products. One of the things that really hit home was how they talked about craftsmanship and quality of the product and the overall experience. It’s a true cultural takeaway that you can bring back and put in effect immediately. You come back from the show and on a Monday you can really start to drive that message home. That's one that always sticks out when I think about that particular show.”

Tagged with SXSW, Jonathan Stephen, Curtis Kopf, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

March 6, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Three Damning Words For Marketers Proceeding With Yesterday’s Thinking

Hard words rather than hardware are what marketers should chiefly remember from the recently concluded Mobile World Congress.

Sandwiched in Barcelona between the new phones, wearables, and virtual reality gear was straight talk from Martin Sorrell, chief executive of advertising group WPP.

Speaking of what he called a “mobile revolution”, Sorrell admonished marketers for yesterday’s thinking.

"We haven't adapted," Sorrell said from figuratively and literally a global stage. "When people talk about creativity in our industry, they're talking about Don Draper. They're not talking about the new definitions. Believe it or not, people inside media agencies are creative. Software engineers are creative ... It's the definition of it -- we haven't contextualized it correctly yet.”

Sorrell’s comments mirror those that I shared from Hank Wasiak in my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book (http://artofmobilepersuasion.com).

Wasiak, the former vice chairman of McCann Erickson and now partner in The Concept Farm, told me:

“I challenge you to walk into an agency, say that you are going to do a campaign and say ‘give me your ideas in about 3 hours’.  Not one is going to optimize around the mobile experience.  I'll give you $1,000 if you find one. (Instead) they still say ‘here's a great commercial.’

“They look at mobile as more of a delivery device for their creative work.  It is supposed to be something where they can creatively integrate their ideas. Mobile is just a big turnaround for them and then they don't get it yet.”

In Barcelona, Sorrell credited smaller entities with some success in getting closer to the customer via the wireless device.

"The essential problem is that big companies are not thinking about mobile in the right way," Sorrell said. “They're thinking of it as an extension of digital, just a way to reach consumers. They're not thinking of it in a way that changes their businesses or adds values in a way they weren't able to do previously."

 “Probably the mobile revolution has not registered yet with companies, although it might have registered more ironically with the long tail then it has with larger companies. But it still has not penetrated companies to the degree it should have.”

Earlier, Wasiak told me that the era demands “a totally new and dynamic marketing landscape”.

“There's a difference between engaging with a human being and having a human experience,” Wasiak said in The Art of Mobile Persuasion. “Any company, brand or retailer should make believe that they are having a FaceTime call with them. It's the next best thing to being there. You're on FaceTime. I called, you've accepted. You see me, you know what I want. You know the situation that I'm in. I can tell by the tone of your voice and the look on your face how you feel. If you can try to draw those pictures in your mind through data, it’s better to get that attitude that I'm having a FaceTime call. This just isn't a digital connection.

“Smartphone-enabled consumers have kicked open the doors to a totally new and dynamic marketing landscape. This is first time in my 50-year marketing lifetime that we have the opportunity to be in service to the consumer virtually any time or any place in their daily lives. An awesome opportunity that comes with a huge responsibility.”

And, to date, with harsh assessments from industry pioneers.

(first published on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2016/02/27/three-damning-words-for-marketers-proceeding-with-yesterday’s-thinking/)

Tagged with Martin Sorrell, Hank Wasiak, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Mobile World Congress.

February 28, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Serving A Consumer Who Actually Wants To Be Targeted

The idea of targeting and retargeting is not new. What’s changing is the potential for cross-device targeting. We now have the capability to take the search done for an Armani necktie on a PC and use it as a trigger to send a mobile user a related communication at a later point.

But should we?

Few are as equipped to answer that question as Google’s Jason Spero, who literally has written The Mobile Playbook that is relied on by so many marketers.

“If you admire someone's shoes or their tie, in the mobile and the digital world when you didn't have connectivity at that moment, you would file it away in your head or make a note to yourself,'” Spero said in an interview for my book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

“As human beings, we've always had impulses, fears, hopes. What happens when you see that tie, you have connectivity. You can act on it in a way that you couldn't in previous eras. The idea of persistent connectivity makes it possible for you to act on all those impulses. You may not act on all of them. It's probably a bad thing if you act on them all because you are probably buying stuff that you don't need and tweeting out stuff that people don't want to read. But the idea of connectivity means that you can.”

“The consumer knows that he or she is connected and empowered in all these ways,” Spero explained. “The consumer's expectation is they want an easy way to buy an Armani tie if they decide to. And that's a combination of the Macy's app and Google search and maybe image search in time. Lots of different things will fuel that. But all are powered by the idea that you have a broadband connection with you constantly.

“The consumer also knows that their device has a sense of geospacial relations. You as a consumer know that with your device at any point, with a couple of exceptions, it can tell you what's around you to help you solve problems. You can go out and get the world's information with your connection or you can map the physical world around you.  You know the nearest place to get a hamburger. Or which subway will get you to the Upper East Side. Or what the check-in time is at your hotel. All these things are now available to you: the digital world and the physical world at your service.”

And with that, Spero said, comes a need for marketers to look at the world differently.

“If you start to talk about it as a commercial journey, we used to in the digital world sort of be satisfied if you will with engaging the consumer throughout her digital journey,” he told me. “But because we just said that the consumer journey is in and out of the physical worlds, presumably across many different devices, the digital experience now has to evolve.”

Ryan Craver, former Senior Vice President, Strategy, of Hudson’s Bay, told me in a The Art of Mobile Persuasion interview that he believes that targeting and retargeting is all about catering to the consumer.

Said Craver, who brought innovation into Lord & Taylor among other efforts: “If you are shopping Armani on your mobile phone, or searching for it on your mobile phone, or on your desktop computer the night before, and then you bring yourself into retailer: as long as you've been asked up front, ‘Are you willing to share your location, are you willing to share past browsing behavior?’ and then the marketer provides the customer something as part of the ad—perhaps a discount or exclusive content or something else--I think people are slowly but surely coming around to understanding that that is the way in which marketing is going to be served. It is also something that you need to pay attention to in terms of how often you send it, and how frequently you come after them.”

Another example of what Craver thought about when he started using beacons to know that opted-in users are in the brick and mortar location: “We thought a lot about cart abandonment online and how frequently we need to do something similar in stores. Certain online stores on cart abandonment, like Amazon, will hit you up the day after, hit you up seven days after, and hit you up maybe two weeks after. There are other stores, like Urban Outfitters, that will even hit you up six months later.”

So Craver and his team set business rules.

“For us as a retailer, when you come in for that Armani, if we hit you once and then we hit you two visits later, we thought that might be a bit alienating and reaching too far back,” he said. “But if it's immediate, meaning it was within the last couple of days, I think it's worthwhile. I think people are becoming desensitized to Big Brother and to this creepiness factor.”

And, surprising to some, people don’t mind being targeting. In fact, under the right circumstances, they might even welcome it.

(article first appeared on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2016/01/18/serving-a-consumer-who-actually-wants-to-be-retargeted/)

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Jason Spero, Google, Ryan Craver, Lord & Taylor.

January 22, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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Was CES 2016 An "Exercise In Wishful Thinking"?

More than 170,000 attended CES last week, yet the only one that matters was nowhere to be found among more than 2.5 million square feet of packed aisles and shiny objects.

The consumer doesn’t qualify for entry to the businessperson-only show. And while we would hope that all products – from robots to drones to smart appliances and more – were built based on solid end-user insights, that notion is as likely as 95 percent of what was shown becoming runaway hits.

The most astute comment of the week came from David Pogue, longtime consumer electronics pundit, who said, “CES is not a store; it's an exercise in wishful thinking.”

So what wins?

“The consumer is going to decide,” Sean Lyons, U.S. President of R/GA, told me in an interview for my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book (www.artofmobilepersuasion.com). “I think a lot of these early thoughts about how things will be used are wrong often. And it's not because people aren't intelligent. It's because we haven't really found what the behaviors are yet.”

Said Target CMO Jeff Jones on Facebook:

“The consumer will win with choice for sure…but as of now, people will have to choose a “platform” or an “ecosystem” that they buy into for all of their products. We’ve been here many times…Beta vs VHS, iOS vs Android, Mac vs PC, etc.”

Here are more of my thoughts on what I found in Las Vegas:

Samsung has advanced the concept of a refrigerator with the introduction of the

"Family Hub" unit that enables users to gauge supply and order from a screen in the door that also offers up recipes. There is even a corresponding smartphone app that gives owners in a supermarket or elsewhere a real-time view of what’s on the shelves and what is absent. But the expected $5,000 price tag puts all but the top one-percent or so out in the cold.

Drones and Virtual Reality caught the eye of many show goers. What grabbed my attention was the prediction by the International Robotics Federation of 35 million units of “service robots” to be sold in the next three years.

“Robots are going to be as popular as cars, machines and airplanes,” predicted Alibaba Group Chairman Jack Ma.

Rather than more employing a robot to clean a floor, for instance, the growth is expected to be driven in large part by the introduction of products to provide assistance for the elderly and handicapped.

According to a story published by the Consumer Technology Association, a recent Georgia Institute of Technology study found that a “surprising number” of seniors (aged 63 to 93 years) would prefer to have a robotic assistant for household tasks rather than a human helper.

As expected, there were lots of exercise trackers. But how many not only gauge movement and rates, but provide context on what the numbers mean? None that I saw.

Speaking of trackers, there seemingly every kind of tracker imaginable, but not one that can tell the Browns where Johnny Manziel is - and whether he is in beard and wig.

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(article first published on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2016/01/11/with-the-consumer-absent-much-of-ces2016-was-exercise-in-wishful-thinking/)

Tagged with CES, CES2016, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Target, David Pogue.

January 11, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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One Undeniable Truth In Two-Million Square Feet of CES 2016

Be it the Internet of Things, the smart home, virtual reality or something else, change is coming.

A year ago, I walked the Las Vegas Convention Center with 150,000 of my closest friends attending the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show. Televisions were impressive, but incremental in benefit to the viewer. Automobiles were not just tricked out with sound, but with connectivity like never before. Smart home hardware was plentiful.

Whether they were solving consumer problems – alerting us that there is a leak under our sink or that our beer supply in the fridge is low – is another question.

I’m heading back to the desert this week to see where innovation has taken us since last year’s show.

Previews of the 2016 show point to the increased availability of smart products, including light bulbs, automobiles, appliances, regulators like the Nest thermostat, and an increasingly present wearable category.

The Consumer Electronics Association says that the wearable tech industry is projected to grow 64 percent over the next three years, reaching $25 billion in 2019 when more than 245 million devices are expected to ship.

The build-out of the wearable market will be in the spotlight on the CES 2016 show floor where the Wearables Marketplace and related lifestyle exhibit areas have more than tripled in size since 2015.

What, if anything, wins?

“The consumer is going to decide,” Sean Lyons, U.S. President of R/GA of Havas, told me in an interview for my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book (www.artofmobilepersuasion.com). “I think a lot of these early thoughts about how things will be used are wrong often. And it's not because people aren't intelligent. It's because we haven't really found what the behaviors are yet.

“Just think about how long it took for something like the video phone call which was introduced in the ‘60s to actually come into use. Even now, we're Skyping (and only using a voice capability). Other people might be doing FaceTime. But it's not main method of communication. What's envisioned is often not what happens. To me that's the fun part, especially for brands. Once you realize that you are not going to be expected to have the answer, and you just kind of feel your way through it, the better that you will be. That's going to allow you to not have the pressure of solving the problem and actually observing.”

How important is the show?

CES 2016 will feature more than 3,600 exhibitors and an impressive list of potential buyers.

In 2015, 82 percent of the Fortune 500 and 83 percent of the top retailers attended what is the largest conference in Las Vegas. Reports this year indicate that level of participation will continue this time around.

One certainty is that there will be an overabundance of hype. Adoption of even the “winning” technologies happens over a period of time.

“The reality is these things don't happen cleanly,” Curtis Kopf, Vice President of Customer Experience for Premera Blue Cross, said to me in an interview for The Art of Mobile Persuasion. “It's not like all of a sudden smartphones are here and everyone has them on day one. It's messy. Emerging technology exists for a long time with existing technologies.”

(article first published on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2016/01/02/one-undeniable-truth-in-two-million-square-feet-of-ces-2016/)

Tagged with CES, Curtis Kopf, Sean Lyons, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

January 3, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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5 Ways That Brick and Mortar Businesses Need To Evolve To Cater To Mobile Users

The make-or-break holiday shopping season is upon us, spurring retailers to determine where they want to speak to would-be customers, how often, and with what messages.

If only the would-be shoppers were open to listening.

Sure, a meaningful segment of consumers are still reachable via mass mediums like television and print, and others do their purchasing on a desktop and brands and retailers get to them with ads and targeting. However, more and more live in a world of self-sufficiency, powered by a mobile device that provides everything from product information to the ability to read reviews. Mobile devices even enable a customer to “showroom” and find something offered by a competitor just as he or she is spending time in one retailer’s aisle.

How important is it for businesses to reexamine their definition of differentiated customer service to cater to the ever-increasing “self-sufficient” mobile shopper?

Very.

According to a report released by the Consumer Electronics Association, more 58 percent of shoppers who use mobile devices indicated that they prefer to look up information on their devices while shopping, rather than talk to store employees. This was especially true among men and shoppers aged 25-44.

Nearly two-thirds (62 percent) of mobile shoppers perceived the information they gather via their mobile device as more beneficial than the information available in-store via product displays or sales literature.

What is a retailer to do?

Through conversations with mobile and business pioneers interviewed for my new book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion (www.artofmobilepersuasion.com), there are five ways that brick-and-mortar businesses can evolve their operations to meet the challenges of the 2015 holiday selling season and beyond.

1. Embrace the mobile era rather than curse its very existence

If you are Lowe’s, a FORTUNE 100 home improvement company and Southeastern septuagenarian, you practice what you preach and “Never Stop Improving.”

Sean Bartlett, Director of Digital Experience, Product, & Omni-channel Integration at Lowe's, led an initiative by the chain to put 42,000 iPhones into the hands of sales associates as a way to help customers get a more satisfying experience from its iPhone app.

That was no small endeavor. Lowe’s serves approximately 15 million customers a week in the United States, Canada and Mexico. With annual sales exceeding $50 billion, Lowe’s has more than 1,830 home improvement and hardware stores and 260,000 employees.

The intent was to create a virtuous circle by enabling sales people to help their customers.

Lowe’s mission of innovation continued with the introduction of “product locator” mobile technology to make shopping easier. Lowe’s customers can find over 100 million precise, in-store product locations and store services via customized, interactive maps displayed on their smartphones.

“That's obviously a big nod to the in-store experience and making it more efficient,” Bartlett said. “Our stores are generally in the 100,000 square foot range with a couple of dozen aisles that are fairly long so to the extent that we can get people to the product that they want, we're going to push for it.”

2. Personalize the experience

My sister-in-law and I both shop in REI, but we couldn’t be more different.

An ideal hike for me is a walk to a pretty, quiet area that has a running stream and birds singing. The distance is secondary and could be so short that I can still eyeball my car in the parking lot.

My sister-in-law is a former triathlete and still is more active than 95 percent of people half her age. She hikes for full days.

I want REI to provide the basics so I don’t get mosquito bites or an itty-bitty blister. My sister-in-law wants to know how and where the hiking shoes were made, and whether they will withstand heavy use.

In-app, in-store and through messaging from REI that we may both opt-in to receive, each of us expect to be treated as individuals, not as part of some homogenized customer database.

3.  Rethink very the concept of customer service

In such retail establishments like REI, the human touch will always be emphasized. The company’s famed Green Vests know more about varieties of kayaks, climbing walls, and the like than one could possible imagine. And that has been a differentiator. Now REI looks at mobile devices as a complementary customer service tool.

Said Jeff Klonowski, REI’s ‎Director, Digital Retail - Mobile & Business Development. “When you look at the loyal users, say someone who has the retailer's app, in our case REI, based on preferences and what the customer has opted in to receive, and say we create some sort of in-store mode which a lot of retailers are looking at for their mobile app to work when someone is in the physical retail store, based on what the customer has opted in for that may be relevant based on that behavior.

“Then you are saying, ‘OK, you popped into the REI app in store. Here's a feature set. And by the way, you did look at this item, here's where it's at in the physical store. Do you want more information or can we lead you to it?’”

4.  Stay on the right side of the privacy line

Different types of information elicit different levels of sensitivity among Americans, according to a report by the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project.

Social security numbers are universally considered to be the most sensitive piece of personal information, followed by health information and content of phone conversations.

Media tastes and purchasing habits are among the least sensitive categories of data.

Still, there is a creepiness factor at play when an advertiser or retailer reaches out to someone with information that the recipient views as invasive.

There was large disagreement among those I interviewed about where the line is. Some thought reaching out to someone in store the day after that person viewed an item online is fair game. Others thought it becomes creepy if the outreach spans too much time.

The prevailing opinion was for businesses to practice a policy that falls well short of the invasion line.

5.  Rework the definition of fulfillment

Amazon has led the product delivery evolution, bringing such options as same-day delivery to only raise the expectations of many consumers.

The wise brick and mortar retailers will provide choice, even going so far as facilitating curbside pickup and alerts to opted-in mobile users when an item like a bicycle is built and is ready to go to its new home.

Conclusion

Smartphones make customers smarter. We’re not going back in time. The winning retailers will find ways to use the mobile device as a tool for better engagement that will drive loyalty and sales. Those who aren’t as successful will be as slow as I am in the latter half of my “strenuous” hikes.

Tagged with Lowe's, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, REI.

November 20, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
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Serving The Self-Sufficient Mobile User

These days, it seems like the consumer has as many choices as you will find in an 11-story department store. That is, if you can still locate such an expansive retail location.

In one important way, the modern-day consumer is like those who have come before. In good economic times, we fill our closets with more shoes, shirts and jeans—whether we need them or not—and everyone from the customer to the business is happy. In the rougher patches, such as the recession that lasted from 2007 to 2009, sales drop and silence descends on retail sites: you could hear a pin drop in near-empty brick-and-mortar stores and malls.

Of course, e-commerce upended many brick-and-mortar business models. Only the strong and forward-looking survived. And now mobile devices have brought new consumer capabilities and expectations. Product reviews are a click away. Show-rooming is the norm: a consumer puts his or her hands on a product in a brick-and-mortar store, only to make a purchase—likely from a competitor, at a lower cost, that includes free shipping—on a handheld device.

That last move—the ordering on a mobile phone without the help of a clerk or the touch of a salesperson—is indicative of a significant shift toward consumer self-sufficiency. Many mobile users want nothing more than to do it all themselves. According to a report released by the Consumer Electronics Association, more 58 percent of shoppers who use mobile devices indicated that they prefer to look up information on their devices while shopping, rather than talk to store employees. This was especially true among men. And shoppers aged 25-44.

Nearly two-thirds (62 percent) of mobile shoppers perceived the information they gather via their mobile device as more beneficial than the information available in-store via product displays or sales literature – or sales people.

What is a retailer to do?

“There's never going to be one answer for all. Each one of the retailers, and the experiences that they want to deliver, and the types of customers that they have coming through the door, vary greatly,” Ryan Craver, former Senior Vice President, Strategy, of parent company Hudson’s Bay, told me in an interview for my new book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion -- artofmobilepersuasion.com.

“If you take a Lord & Taylor or Macy's, under the Hudson's Bay Company umbrella, customers are coming in the door because they know of promotions. They want to come in very quickly. They know exactly what they are looking for. They tend, though not all of them, to expect less of a customer service model and more of a self-sufficient model.”

But then there are the luxury brands, like Nordstrom and others.

“You go to the higher end—the Bergdorf Goodmans of the world and the Saks of the world—those have some promotional customers, but the majority of their customers have an expectation of a high level of service, a personal shopper level of service, where they are engaging with a person,” Craver said. “A personal shopper is providing them with feedback on what they are trying on and offering additional suggestive selling.

“The stores that have a customer who is coming in very quickly and looking for self -sufficient service—they will be the ones that adapt quickly to the new approaches. The Saks of the world—they won't rely on it in the same way, but they will need to provide something.”

If you are Lowe’s, a Fortune 100 home improvement company, and a Southeastern septuagenarian, you practice what you preach: “Never Stop Improving.”

Sean Bartlett, former Director of Digital Experience, Product, & Omni-channel Integration at Lowe's, led an initiative by the chain to put 42,000 iPhones into the hands of sales associates as a way to help customers get a more satisfying experience from the brand’s iPhone app.

The intent: to create a virtuous circle by enabling sales people to help their customers, who had already made mobile a big part of their daily routine.

And to make the self-sufficient mobile user get value from the humans in the store. Some took him up on the proposition. Others still prefer the no-talk way of shopping.

(article first appeared on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2015/11/10/serving-the-self-sufficient-mobile-user/)

Tagged with Lowe's, Lord & Taylor, Ryan Craver, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

November 13, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 13, 2015
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Are We In the Mobile Immaturity Phase?

By every yardstick, including smartphones purchased, megabytes of data used, and sales generated, mobile is making historic advancements. A study by Flurry said that smartphone adoption has been 10 times as fast as the consumer reception to the personal computer.

During the 2014 holiday shopping season, wireless devices were the conduit to meaningful dollars for retailers and other businesses. In fact, smartphones and tablets accounted for more than a third of online sales on Christmas Day as well as 57 percent of all online traffic.

Sales made from Amazon’s smartphone app doubled year over year. An impossible-to-ignore 60 percent of Amazon customers shopped on a mobile device.

Still, we were left with the impression that, while marketers were in the game, they weren’t all in.

I wrote extensively about the state of mobile marketing in my new The Art of Mobile Persuasion book. I’ll share several insights from my interviews, but first let me point to a new Forrester Research report that says that mobile maturity is rare among marketers.

An alarming (my word, not Forrester’s) 44 percent are still shrinking desktop experiences for smaller screens, 42 percent put mobile first, and only 14 percent are truly transforming the customer experience.

“The best mobile experiences provide their users with immediate value from the moment they download and open the application,” Deanna Laufer, analyst at Forrester Research and lead author on the report called The Best of Mobile User Experience 2015. “These leaders prioritize relevant functionality and perform reliably throughout the experience.

“The laggards? They hassle customers with unnecessary content and disappoint – or crash – in moments of need.”

 Forrester’s attributes of leading mobile experiences include delivering clear value, optimizing efficiency and simplifying presentation.

The research company recommends that marketers serious about improving their mobile experience develop a strategic focus, maintain dedicated mobile resources, keep design and development teams small and schedule regular product releases.

Most marketers still do not understand how mobile fits into the customer journey across devices and channels, according to Forrester.

When customers encounter a poor mobile app, 47 percent will use a different app with similar functionality, 35 percent will delete it and 15 percent will not use it.

 “The majority of smartphone and tablet owners – 68 percent –have attempted to make a purchase on their device,” Ms. Laufer said. “But two-thirds have failed to complete a transaction because of obstacles encountered during checkout.

“No wonder conversion rates on smartphones linger below 1 percent,” she said. “Although retailers report that their site conversion rates are only a few points higher at 2.7 percent, that difference equates to an extra $80 billion for retailers in 2015.”

Google’s Jason Spero has a more half-full view.

“I see acceleration,” Spero, Google’s Vice President of Performance Media, told me in an interview for The Art of Mobile Persuasion. “Here’s how I would tell you this. I’m thinking of the names in my narratives. In 2011, my narrative was called ‘Why Mobile?’ In 2012, my overarching starting place was ‘It’s Not Too Late To Be Early.’ In 2013, the narrative was ‘Moving From Why To How.’ People getting out of why the heck should I do this to what the heck do I do?

“In 2014, I don’t know that I had a name for it. But I started to see marketers feeling urgency. If I were to name it, I would say, ‘Growing Urgency or Broad Urgency.’ In 2015, I think we’re reaching an understanding of all the different actions that people are taking on these devices.”

And that, Spero said, is finally getting brands mobilized in a serious way.

“Marketers everywhere are waking up and feeling urgency around the understanding that for some of their consumers, this is the only place that they engage in, especially younger people and in developing markets,” Spero told me.

“For many of their consumers, the consumer is choosing to do much of the engage- ment on the mobile device.

“If I were to name 2015, I’d say it’s “We’ve Achieved Urgency’ around delivering on consumers’ mobile expectations.”

Del Monte’s Mac Tillman, Director, Media Strategy and Planning, believes that the new age of mobile and digital calls for smarts, good instincts and better measurement.

“We know mobile is important in the pre-shop experience, in the store, and in the post-shop experience,” Tillman told me. “We also know that if you don’t get it right, what was supposed to be a solution becomes an annoyance. ‘You’re getting in the way of me and my objective.’ You need to understand what the consumer wants from you.

“For instance, Del Monte has what we call the Healthy Explorer. They look to cook. What defines them is experimental cooking. On mobile, they are looking for recipes. They know the ingredients of chili that they’ve made in the past, but we can offer them a great chili recipe where they can take it up a notch with a can of corn to add texture and sweetness. Then you can deliver an offer. If you provide an offer out of context, it’s transactional just like the person who is giving out coupons in the front of the store.”

But mobile measurement limitations have been a barrier for some.

“You can measure advertising, consumer purchases, Sunday FSIs (free standing inserts),” Tillman said. “Digital doesn’t have a long history of analytics. We struggle in the red zone—from the 20-yard line to the goal line. We’re doing different things in different platforms.

“In the new emerging media, if it feels right and lines up with the brands and the company, and you can keep the risk low, you can get out and learn,” he said. “Brands need to have ideas as well as products.

“All of us are trying to figure it out—how to be part of a consumer’s life and not to be intrusive. That’s the biggest challenge we face. There’s complexity in marketing because it’s driven by many channels. We need more content—you can’t just use a 30-second commercial everywhere. On mobile, you have to think if a consumer wants a 15-second commercial even for a product that they like.

“But managing increased complexities has made us better marketers.”

Better? Perhaps. Mature? Not so fast.

(article first appeared here - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2015/10/25/are-we-in-the-mobile-immaturity-phase/)

Tagged with Forrester, Jason Spero, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

October 25, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 25, 2015
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Blocking Out The Hype Around Ad Blockers

The end of mobile advertising is at hand, driven by device owners falling over themselves to be first to download and run ad blocking products and by the makers of these products who have ridden in to save us from brand message infestation.

Except history tells us that consumers will do nothing of the kind and the software makers who are coming in donning superhero getups have the same ambitions that the brands have – namely making money.

The issue, of course, has come to a head and to our Twitter feeds with the introduction of iOS9. Apple incorporated an ad blocking feature into the Safari web browser, the most widely used mobile browser in the world, with 42 percent of the market share.

To understand just how many will seek out an ad blocking product and do the required homework to know what is protection and what is bluster, I’ll point to the lack of action most consumer users took more than 10 years ago when worms and viruses reared their slimy heads.

Three years after the Love Letter worm infected millions of computers within a few hours, and the Code Red virus and Nimda worm followed with more destruction, Slammer crashed the Internet in 15 minutes in large part because we largely didn’t notice or yawned at such intrusions. Most importantly most didn’t proactively project themselves with Internet security software.

The problem only got better when Microsoft, Apple and others did the protecting for us.

This brings us to those positioning themselves as the savers of the day, the ad blocking companies that appeared in time for the iOS9 introduction.

Slate reported that Adblock Plus, one of the more prominent would-be superheroes, was shown to actually allow companies to pay to have their advertisements slip through its filters.

The free app reportedly began letting 70 companies with about 700 ads evade its blockers.

Worse, The Wall Street Journal said that Eyeo GmbH, the company behind Adblock Plus, “is now reaching out to developers of other ad-blocking tools to cut deals that allow certain ads to pass ads through their filters, too.”

Whether mobile users view ads as a major problem is up for debate. Instead, many instead see brand messages as an extension of what they’ve seen on television, on the web, in print, on radio, and elsewhere.

“Back in the old days, if you looked at the early days of television, there was a very clear connection between the program that you watched and the company that sponsored that program,” Mario Schulzke, a university teacher, founder of IdeaMensch, and an advertising agency leader, told me in an interview for my new book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

“Back in the ‘50s and ‘60s, there was ‘Gillette Friday Night’ boxing night. Everybody knew that they got to see live boxing on TV because of Gillette. I think in the last 20 years in traditional media that has gotten lost. I don't watch a sports game and see a certain ad and say, ‘I'm thankful that Bud Light is buying these ads because that's why I get to watch this show for free’.”

Schulzke then takes the discussion to the web and to mobile.

“The same is true on the Internet,” he said. “The things that connect us … if you think of Apple, if you think of Google. Think about Google for a second. They've got their email -- we all have our Gmail accounts. None of us pay for Gmail. We get incredible value out of it. None of us pay for Google Calendar. Nobody pays for Facebook. Nobody pays for Twitter. Nobody pays for Instagram. Yet we get so much satisfaction and so much utility out of these tools. The reason for that is that they are going to monetize us commercially.

“I think if you understand that from a consumer perspective, then you get to make the choice whether you don't want to be on Facebook or have a Gmail account.”

Schulzke  discussed the very issue with about 30 of his University of Montana marketing students.

“Everybody thought that it was kind of creepy,” he recalled. “There was a sense of hesitation when they found out that by using your Gmail account and when you log into different services, and logging into Facebook, that you are able to be tracked.

“But then when I asked the question, ‘Would you not go on Facebook, would you give up your Gmail account?’ the answer was a resounding no. I felt like there was this feeling that it was unfair that this is happening but it's just too convenient to stay on these tools. They are free and they are great.”

What they need to be, in the view of Schulzke and other marketers I interviewed, are more transparent.

“I think what's important for companies like Facebook and Google and Apple and these very large platforms is to just educate consumers a little bit about what it is that you're doing and give people some ways to opt in and I opt out,” Schulzke told me. “And you're going to be able to opt out of everything. And most people won't be opted in to everything, either. I think that there will be a little bit of a struggle but being out there and putting out information I think that will be important and it will resolve that. Honestly, I don't think you will be creepy - I think it will be kind of assumed.”

Much as there needs to be a mindset change with those college students, adjustments need to enter the marketing department, too.

“Let's face it,” Schulzke said. “It was all about how can I disrupt you, how can I interrupt you from what you're doing, catch your attention, and somehow persuade you to take whatever action it was that I wanted you to take? I think that's changed.

“I think as marketers if we want to be successful, rather than think about how we're going to disrupt the consumer behavior, we need to think how can we add value to the consumer behavior.”

The bottom line -- if a brand provides something useful to a mobile owner in an ad, app or elsewhere, he or she is more likely to engage than shut off the business – and its ads and marketing.

(article first appeared here - http://mobileleadersalliance.com/2015/09/28/blocking-out-the-hype-around-ad-blocking/)

Tagged with ad blocker, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Mario Schulzke.

September 30, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 30, 2015
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10 Lessons From The World's Best Mobile Marketers

Pick up your mobile phone. You're staring at the 21st century love affair.

As long-time adman Hank Wasiak, the former vice chairman of McCann Erickson, puts it, people don't have a relationship with their television set or their computer, but they do with their mobile phone. The intimacy between a human and their smartphone is as intense as we've ever witnessed.

The central question for businesses active in the mobile space: Can marketing find a place in that relationship--or is three a crowd?

The data marketers see and the feedback they receive paints a clear picture of mobile users' expectations: They want to be understood, while simultaneously fighting hard to maintain their privacy. Kind of like a teenager.

So what is a brand to do? In short: be courageous. Find ways to create value, take care to be neither intrusive nor creepy, and always look to get better.

For my new book The Art of Mobile Persuasion (artofmobilepersuasion.com), I spent a year talking to some of the most courageous mobile marketers working today. The insights from Expedia, Lowe's, REI, Google, ESPN, and others provided both tips and turnoffs--and they're applicable to anyone seeking to create a better kind of consumer engagement on the device we love more than any other.

First, the turnoffs. Here are five words to describe the brands that are failing on mobile:

1. Selfish. If you're reaching out to mobile users, you had better be answering their needs and desires, not simply fulfilling your own.

Jonathan Stephen, who drove innovative mobile programs at JetBlue, points to the greed of some brands that seek to needlessly uncover such inconsequential details as how many sweeteners wireless owners put in their coffee and if they use Splenda or Truvia. Unless you are an artificial sweetener company looking to grab more market share, this information is extraneous and prying.

2. Illogical. Common sense deserves more credit than it gets.

For example, why create only an iPhone app if your customers are mostly or completely Android owners? That's just dumb. But it happens. Smart marketers rely solely on their own business's customer insights to power their programs, and to address the specific behaviors exhibited.

3. Timid. Seize the day.

Wasiak has been marketing for more than five decades. He is among the most accomplished in the field, but when he looks in the mirror, he says that he sees someone who has often moved too slowly when change was needed. The ad executive's lesson for mobile marketers? Seize the day and think bigger. "With mobile, you get not only into the pocket of a consumer, you can get into one's heart," he says.

4. Impulsive. Watching, tracking, and responding to consumer trends--these are tools of the patient, humble, and successful marketer.

If your brand is struggling, perhaps those are tools you are not using enough. Sean Lyons, global chief digital officer at the Havas agency, chides marketers who go to such conferences as South by Southwest seeking to determine which products and services will matter. The better approach? Don’t try to predict. Rather, discover and monitor. Consumers are going to decide what matters, and you need to be ready to rapidly respond as they do.

5. Inattentive. Every interaction--or inaction--can teach you something, if you're paying attention.

Google's Jason Spero calls consumer actions on mobile devices "signals," rich with information that can tell marketers a great deal if they are on the lookout for them. Spero: "We have all the signals we need to deliver a great user experience. I see more marketers that need persuading that they should be curious about those signals than I see marketers who are overusing those signals to the point of abuse or annoyance."

***

Conversely, successful business leaders like Spero offered advice on the kind of relationship-building mobile marketing that is driving their success:

1. Be Pragmatic. Mobile has changed everything about marketing--and it's changed nothing.

We still need to sell stuff. It's merely the how that is different. Identify the business results you want and design your efforts to those ends. It's easy to be distracted by the pixie dust and possibilities in the digital arena. Filter the possible through the lens of what's wise.

2. Knock Gently. Mobile users are a lot more open to interactions with brands than many marketers believe--but the efforts need to be respectful.

Just because customers invite you into their homes doesn't mean you get to put your feet on the furniture, or stay all night. This means no 3 a.m. text messages for a dollar off a burger. And no push notifications every three minutes while someone is shopping. Less is more.

3. Simplify Life. Mobile is for action.

A theme that emerged often in conversation with mobile's best thinkers: Mobile should drive action. To do that, eliminate the unwanted. Beyond his or her mom, name one person who wants to read the bio of a company's CFO on a mobile Web site. List store hours, provide directions to your location, make purchases easy--whatever action your customer needs to take. Forget the rest.

4. Prize Relationship. Just as you would with a spouse or other loved one, work daily to make the interaction even richer.

Businesses have extensive information available about many of their customers. For instance, purchase data that shows what generated a response from a mobile ad or offer can give a look into the desires of a wireless user. Wise mobile marketers interpret these signals and get even more personal with tailored outreach to individual customers that proves the brand’s value.

5. Get Better. It's called mobile, right? So keep moving.

Your efforts to reach mobile users should always be evolving. You may feel you are performing well today, but you should constantly be seeking new products or technologies that enhance the mobile experience. Maybe it's a better way to tell a traveler that his or her gate has changed. Or an easier way for someone to find and save a mobile coupon. We all need to be better tomorrow than we are today. And it’s what mobile users expect and demand.

***

The global mobile advertising market will hit two significant milestones in 2016: It will surpass $100 billion in spending (a nearly 430 percent increase from 2013), and it will account for more than 50 percent of all digital ad expenditure for the first time.

The stakes are high. And only the courageous will break through. To be among them, harness the power that's owned by those who are winning.

(article first appeared on inc.com - http://www.inc.com/jason-allen-ashlock/10-lessons-from-the-world-s-best-mobile-marketers.html)

 

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

August 23, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 23, 2015
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