How to achieve excellence in joined-up marketing

While everyone’s running around trying to work out how to join up their online with their offline marketing I just want to see marketing which works.

Marketers have lost their way. If you really want to achieve excellence in joined-up marketing it’s probably not what you think.

[Special mention has to go to my compadres Paul Armstrong & Shannon Boudjema who help me in joined-up thinking and will be debating these ideas later in the month at Social Collective 2010.]

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Don’t join online with offline marketing

The secret to joined-up marketing isn’t to connect online and offline marketing, but to join marketing with the business’ objectives as a whole.

Somewhere along the line, and despite the constant navel-gazing about online marketing, we’ve forgotten that the whole point of marketing is to make the business money [or, in the case of not-for-profits, ensure uptake of info or services].

Excellence in marketing isn’t about a joined-up strategy, it’s about marketing which works. Marketing ROI is not a metric, it’s a business result.

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Joining online with offline marketing: back to basics

The key to joining the channels is to first go back to Marketing 101 basics: who is your customer?

And I don’t mean the lazy “our product could sell to everyone! Teens! Grandparents! Men! Women! All over the globe!“. That’s all well and good but the secret to success of brands like Apple is you know EXACTLY who the iPad is aimed for, right? When Starbucks first opened you know EXACTLY the sort of clientele they wanted to attract (and it wasn’t the mothers with buggies and/or crazy people wanting to use the toilet types you see today).

The biggest brands narrow focus and go after a certain customer. This doesn’t prevent other people from buying their products or services, it just helps them market to a core consumer. Offline marketing isn’t dead, ‘spray and pray’ is.

When you know who your customer is, it’s easy to create a marketing strategy. Online and offline become irrelevant, you’ve just got to market to them in places they hang out.

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Joining online with offline marketing: changing channels

Now I’m just guessing but for the majority of businesses out there, they will have customers who spend time online. Fact. It’s up to YOU to profile your audience and then market to them where they will be most likely to see it.

Does offline marketing work? Sure, it’s a no brainer that if your customer listens to the radio, then radio is a valid marketing channel for your business. Likewise TV, giant billboards, painting the sides of buses, and hiring out-of-work actors to give away chocolate bars outside tube stations, works.

Unfortunately, the reality is that marketers are forgetting how much media consumption has shifted to online channels. Desperate to integrate a little online into their marketing strategy, businesses allocate the bulk of their marketing budget to [often more expensive] offline marketing channels and then dump a small proportion of their budget on online marketing – to “test if it works”.

This seems to ignore the facts, for example social networking alone now accounts for nearly a quarter of all time spent on the Internet, and these figures can only grow. If your customer is aged 15 – 24 then for the love of god, throw the traditional marketing plan out the window, they’re not reading newspapers!

Joined-up marketing should take the budget as a whole and allocate spend to the channels most likely to target your customer, irrelevant of whether they’re online or offline.

As for testing if it works, I find it a hell of a lot easier to track if someone clicked through from a Facebook page to buy something on my website than follow someone home after handing them a free chocolate bar. [Disclaimer: I have never knowingly followed someone home after giving them a free chocolate bar.]

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Measuring the excellence of your joined-up marketing

So you’ve profiled your customer, you’ve picked your marketing channels, you’ve allocated your budget cleverly across online and offline, what do you tell the boss?

Well, what is the boss telling YOU – is the business making money? It astounds me the lack of business critical data marketers use to inform their marketing decisions.

Is the product selling? If so, to whom (and was it who you thought your customer was)? Where are people buying from? Is anyone tracking any of this stuff in the business?

Many bosses will be happy with what I call ‘Ego Marketing’ i.e. “Check out this super awesome full page wrap around which will be in the hands of every commuter for the whole of today.” But most will settle for making money.

If your marketing strategy is doing that, then you’ve achieved excellence in joined-up marketing. Relax, put your feet up, enjoy that free chocolate bar the attractive young actress outside the tube gave you this morning.

This post is part of the #JUMPchallenge, a blogging competition designed to raise awareness of how to join up online and offline marketing, launched to support Econsultancy’s JUMP event.

[Images: apdk, Nina Matthews Photography, striatic, Horia Varlan]

Predicting future trends

In times of economic uncertainty, having your finger on the consumer pulse becomes even more important to ensure you’ll be making/selling/marketing the products and services consumers will be buying in the future.

Step up The Future Laboratory which has extended their popular Future Reports and Trend Briefings into a one-stop portal called the LifeStyle:News:Global network.

LSNglobal.com is  your virtual team reporting back on whats hot and happening across a range of  sectors all over the world. Reports can cover anything from new consumer tribes (e.g. “Bleisure” seekers bluring the boundaries of business and leisure, demanding convergence from  mobile devices to  travel) to Parisian home living.

I joined the portal after participating as a speaker at one of their events on The Future of Social Media and am constantly sifting through it for inspiration. Membership is a good investment for businesses wanting to ensure they’re future-proofed, from my perspective particularly useful when it comes to the evershifting technology landscape.

I’d like to see the reports evolve to harness up-to-the-minute digital trend insights technology in the future.

How online media influences

[vimeo vimeo.com/2759273]

Check out this useful video from RealWire (formerly webitpr, I love the new name). Perfect intro to Social Media and word-of-mouth, I’ll be including in training sessions for newbies definitely. 

Free marketing and PR resources online

Sharing is caring

Sharing is caring

Something I like about working  in this industry is that PR & Marketing agencies, who traditionally are a tad competitive and protective about IP, suddenly get great at sharing knowledge when it comes to social media.

The concept Wikinomics explains the business benefits of mass collaboration and if you’re one of the agencies still not open to the idea of sharing anything at all, then read it.  Here’s a round-up of some of my favourite resources on the web. In the spirit of sharing what’s your favourites?

  • Nixon McInnes eBooks: Currently  7 chapters in their series “A marketers guide to Social Media”
  • iCrossing eBooks: 2006′s “What is Social Media” is still relevant for newbies and they recently added “Brands in Networks”
  • e-consultancy: Not an agency but my ultimate go-to destination for useful information
  • TED: Again, not an agency, but worth mentioning. The inspiring talks covering technology, entertainment and design are of interest for anyone in business or education

I’d also like to include a couple of my clients who have created some useful resources themselves.

FRUKT, the music and branding experts, recently began a series of talks called the ‘FRUKT Sessions’. The slidecasts from their 2nd event are here and I’d love to hear your feedback.

Don’t forget Attentio’s free blog topic trend tool, Trendpedia, and they now have a series of whitepapers about social media and industry specific trends.

2008 digital trends

crystalOk, so it’s quite late in the year to be saying “check out these predictions” but I came across e-consultancy’s list of trends to watch out for this year and thought it was a great round-up of what people are saying right now.

Here’s the full list “Ten digital trends to watch out for in 2008“ 

And the ten are:

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