Chief marketing officers (CMOs) have faced an uphill battle delivering premium customer experiences while driving business in the last year. Not only do they have to keep up with the rapid pace of innovation and change, they also have to measure the impact their marketing efforts have on customer experience and acquisition. Only 29% of global marketing leaders said they were satisfied with their ability to measure marketing ROI and attribution last year.
For the metrics they seek, CMOs are turning to personalised data to uncover new opportunities for customer growth and acquisition. These insights can help capture the attention of C-suite peers and reaffirm marketing’s position as the leader in customer experience.
As we move into 2021, CMOs should keep the following points in mind to maximise customer engagement and drive marketing performance.
In our most recent State of Marketing Report, 84% of customers said the experience a company provides is just as important as the product itself. Marketers have to focus not only on the product or service, but also the end-to-end customer journey. As the business landscape becomes increasingly digital, marketing leaders must rethink the customer experience and how they measure its effectiveness.
Luckily, CMOs are up to the challenge. Seventy-nine percent of them said they lead customer experience initiatives across their organisation. This means more marketing leaders are looking at the entire customer lifecycle to understand how marketing can drive better business results.
“Over the past decade, performance measurement has gotten increasingly sophisticated, especially with the advent of digital marketing,” said Rodney Hutton, CMO of Ethan Allen. “Now, it starts a lot sooner in the journey. It involves understanding intent and being able to influence intent early in the purchase cycle.”
“Forty-eight percent of marketers now also track lifetime customer value, a stronger measure to gauge if they’re effectively engaging customers and providing the experiences they expect.”
Understanding how to use personalised data throughout the customer journey is key to smarter decision making. While customer satisfaction remains the most-tracked customer service key performance indicator (KPI), it only measures results at the end of the interaction.
Forty-eight percent of marketers now also track lifetime customer value, a stronger measure to gauge if they’re effectively engaging customers and providing the experiences they expect. By including lifetime customer value as a metric, marketing leaders can measure performance and effectiveness at every step.
Marketing leaders also need to consider not only how customers are engaging with their business, but where they are engaging.
2020’s rapid shift online gave customers a wide variety of digital channels to choose from. According to our third State of the Connected Customer Report, 71% of customers have used multiple channels to start and complete a transaction.
“The consumer has an expectation of choice. The consumer decides which medium they want to communicate through and what content they want to receive.”
“The consumer has an expectation of choice,” Hutton said. “The consumer decides which medium they want to communicate through and what content they want to receive.”
For marketers, a need for innovation around personalised data is a must to drive business success.
“[Businesses must evolve] beyond the age of personalisation and enter an age of personal commerce, where consumers co-curate their experiences with brands to reflect their preferences at any given moment,” said Sherene Hilal, senior vice president of product marketing and business operations at Bluecore.
To curate these personalised experiences, marketers need access to personalised data for insight into individual customer engagement. Businesses can use information such as the content a customer has engaged with and which products they’ve purchased to help the customer decide what they should do next.
“This is not just a matter of brands meeting consumers where they are; it’s about brands telling them what they want, when they want it,” Hilal said.
Marketers must now track customer engagement across multiple channels to get the most accurate customer view. This valuable information gives CMOs and marketing leaders the personalised data they need to optimise their efforts across channels to deliver a customised experience.
Of course, none of this can happen if your data is disconnected. It has never been more important to put data at the forefront of your marketing efforts and start using insights to make smarter decisions about your customers.
“Go beyond traditional thinking that the ‘customer is always right,'” said Managing Director at Accenture Salesforce Business Surya Kiran. “Instead, consider that the customer is always ready — for new products, services, and experiences. The question (then) is, are you ready to provide them?”
An integrated platform allows companies to engage with their customers in new ways. A single source of truth brings your teams together, ensuring marketing, sales, and service have a complete 360-degree view of the customer. As a result, you can deliver a fully personalised and seamless experience.
“[Businesses must evolve] beyond the age of personalisation and enter an age of personal commerce, where consumers co-curate their experiences with brands to reflect their preferences.”
Connected data doesn’t just benefit you internally, either. Nearly 54% of customers we surveyed said they feel like they’re interacting with siloed departments rather than a unified business. A disjointed experience can leave customers dissatisfied and less likely to return.
“It is extremely powerful to collect the data that allows you to read the tea leaves and interpret the purchase intent,” said Hutton. “You’re then able to subtly push the consumer over the edge in favor of your product.”
How is your business using personalised data to create innovative customer experiences? Connect your data to capture a holistic picture of your customers to boost marketing performance. As digital transformation continues at breakneck speed, adaptation and personalisation are key to success.