From one-to-many to one-to-one marketing
What are the options to make use of the one-to-one marketing model to deliver targeted messages
It was way back in 1999 that Peppers & Rogers asked: Is your company ready for One to One Marketing?
What are the options today for one to one to encourage greater interaction with your online contacts? Has the promise of 1 to 1 been delivered?
In this interview, Grant Leboff of the Sticky Marketing Club together with Dave Chaffey, editor of Smart Insights and author of Digital Marketing: Strategy, Implementation and Practice, discuss some tricks and tools to help businesses deliver really targeted messages. Watch the interview for an introduction to how to master targeted messages:
Busy office with lots of noise? No worries, rather than watching the video, you can always scan the transcript:
Grant Leboff: Dave, one of the things that changes in digital is this whole idea of the way that you message; who receives that message and how it is interacted with. So perhaps you can talk a little bit more about that?
Dave Chaffey: I think its one of the big opportunities of digital, that once someone is interacting with you on your website or in social media, or email, you can deliver those really personalised, targeted messages.
I think that with a lot of aspects of digital, people aren’t making use of them. So just some examples of what you can do: On the website, of course, you can deliver personalised panels and containers but really they are often used mainly in retailers. So we have all seen the Amazon personal recommendations, but you can be a business to business organisation and if someone is looking for a particular bit of content, you can recommend the next piece of content or encourage someone to sign up. So that’s on the website.
Then you’ve also got re-marketing, whereas, if someone has visited a particular part of the website, you can use Google to deliver a message elsewhere on the web to encourage someone to return. That’s being used more and more, that’s ‘ad words remarketing’, so I would recommend that.
And then, with email as well, personalised messages work well. A good example of what you can do there to start quickly is; I think for most people, when someone signs up for a newsletter or subscribes to get a download, they will send out a welcome email and it might just be ‘thank you for subscribing’. But the smart way to do it is to put some dynamic content in there which works out the type of person and deliver relevant messages. So, for Smart Insights, if we recognise that someone is say, a digital marketing manager, as against an agency owner, they’ll get a different email recommending that relevant personal content.
Grant Leboff: So one area is obviously the personalisation of the content. What about in terms of reach? Once you start getting into social platforms and the opportunities there with conversations and other things like that, how do you see that working the business?
Dave Chaffey: I think with social media there are lots of advertising programs available now and of course Facebook is going to be the primary for most consumer businesses and even business to business as well. So you should look at your options for expanding your audience through Facebook, so with Look Alike Audiences, for example, you can upload details of the profile of your current customers and then send more tailored ads to build / find more similar people. Then there’s the remarketing on Facebook as well, so it’s worth considering. I’d have to say that the volumes that you are likely to get from Facebook or if you’re in business to business, LinkedIn; can be quite low because there’s a lots of competition for attention and people, as they are using social media, they are not necessarily going to click on the links, so it’s worth looking at but don’t expect the world.
Grant Leboff: And how would a business go about starting to utilise some of these tools, do you think?
Dave Chaffey: I think you’ve got to look at where your audience is and prioritise, because they are often not cheap – the social network ads. So with LinkedIn for example, you could be paying 2-3 £/$/€’s, for an individual click. Although that’s the obvious place to start for B2B, it may be on Twitter or Facebook you will have a lower cost per click. So it’s this balance of where your audience is and the return on investment that you’ll get. So I’d say, start by testing the main three or four networks – the ones I’ve mentioned there and then once you see what’s working build on that.
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