Benefits of direct digital marketing
Asian consumers are increasingly experience marketing in a multichannel way. They research and purchase products online, receive e-newsletters and offers from their favourite brands, and use text messaging almost as often as they talk on the phone. With plenty of good data on each of these communication channels, marketers need a better way to interact with consumers in a more relevant and meaningful way.
Direct digital marketing – digital marketing that addresses a specific consumer through an email address, a mobile phone number, or a web browser cookie – is the method marketers are using to improve customer engagement. This increasingly popular approach, when done well, makes the job of the marketer much easier while simultaneously boosting key brand-customer relationship metrics (e.g., loyalty and sales) in ways a single-channel strategy simply cannot.
Direct digital marketing takes advantage of the data investment many marketers have already made. They are able to dramatically increase the relevance of their marketing communications by combining data from multiple channels into one marketing data database – a foundational element of direct digital marketing.
Statistics show that the more relevant a message is, the more likely the consumer will act on that message. Likewise, the more data a marketer has at his disposal, the more relevant a campaign can be, and in turn, the better it performs.
While improvements in campaign performance and relevance are obvious benefits for marketers, the less visible – but equally important – benefit of direct digital marketing is its ability to enhance process automation. Marketers spend too much time manually tweaking tactics when that time could be better spent on developing new strategies.
While benefits to the marketer are clear, they become even more valuable when consumers respond. Here are three real-world examples of how marketers in any industry can use direct digital marketing tactics to positively impact their customer relationships:
Delivery status notifications
White goods retailers are an example of businesses that sometimes suffer tenuous relationships with their customers (our honorable friends at Fortress please take note).
When customers place an item for home delivery, they often have to rearrange their schedules to ensure they are available to receive the purchases. Customers expect timely delivery, but that is not always the case.
If a delivery is delayed, customers usually have to waste valuable time dialling a customer service hotline to learn a simple piece of information – the status of their delivery. It is possible to avoid forcing customers into an inconvenient situation by allowing them to text a short code and receive the delivery status of their goods. The text service is easy and inexpensive to set-up.
Service installation appointment reminders
Fixed-line telcos and internet service providers have a notoriously unstable relationship with their customers and therefore actively seek opportunities to improve customer relationships. When new customers purchase services, they make an installation appointment and some even receive an email reminder for the appointment several days before it is scheduled to occur.
Although this is a great attempt at to communicate with the customer, the email reminders sometimes arrives too far in advance of the actual appointment and fail to maximise the positive impact being made. Extending installation reminders to cover the mobile channel by sending the customer a text message an day and then hours before an appointment is a more beneficial service through a more precise and personal channel. The improved timing of the message, and flexibility of the mobile channel, changes how the customer perceives the brand, boosting loyalty.
Real-time customer service improvement
While email, and especially mobile, are extremely useful for engaging consumers with direct digital marketing, on site targeting is also a valuable asset. Captured survey information – or any type of direct feedback from the consumer – can be used to understand when customers are dissatisfied and in real time, improve their experience on a website.
Customer service call centers are infamous for forcing new products onto highly dissatisfied customers who are least likely to respond positively. Trying to sell to customers something who are already dissatisfied with a difficult website experience can be just as bad.
On site targeting (through the use of a “cookie”) can tailor the site experience to a specific consumer based on behavior, such as click pattern or keyword searches. Define specific areas on a site, or during the checkout process, and use targeted, personalised, dynamic content to answer commonly asked questions, or include information that can transform a dissatisfied customer into a loyal advocate.
In the modern, ever-innovating world of marketing, it is possible to simultaneously use relevance to better engage consumers and significantly improve the marketing process. Direct digital marketing enables marketers to take full advantage of the multichannel environment consumers already operate in to form stronger and more profitable relationships.










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