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By Alex Quin

While discounts and promotions can provide a temporary boost in sales, their long-term sustainability is questionable. Not only do they decrease revenue, but they also don’t necessarily foster genuine brand loyalty.

As a seasoned professional in the digital marketing industry, I’ve had the opportunity to collaborate with a variety of clients, helping them to strengthen their brand loyalty initiatives. In this article, I aim to offer valuable insights and strategies on how to nurture authentic brand loyalty in the highly competitive modern marketplace. After a decade of experience in my agency, I’ve learned the importance of marketing not only for the first sale but also the second, third, fourth and beyond.

Understanding Brand Loyalty

Brand loyalty is more than repeat purchases; it signifies a deep-rooted emotional connection between a customer and brand. This bond goes beyond transactional behaviours, reflecting a genuine preference for a brand over its competitors, often driving consumers to advocate passionately for it.

Research has shown that an increase in customer loyalty by just 7% can increase customer lifetime value by more than 85%. Again, the core of this loyalty is emotional connection. Consumers today align with brands mirroring their values, whether environmental, social or ethical, making values-based loyalty essential for meaningful connections.

Why Discounts Aren’t Enough

Discounts can grab immediate attention in a crowded marketplace, but they come with inherent limitations. First, they tend to attract price-sensitive shoppers, who may not return once standard pricing resumes. Additionally, frequent discounts can diminish the perceived value of a brand, causing consumers to question its quality. Discounts not only risk eroding profit margins but can also set an expectation of continual price reductions, leading to unpredictable sales and revenue.

Ingredients For Lasting Brand Loyalty

Exceptional Customer Experience

By providing top-notch customer service, brands can differentiate themselves in a saturated market. Every interaction, whether online or offline, should leave a lasting positive impression. An exceptional customer experience means meeting customers’ needs even before they realize they have them. It’s about making every touchpoint seamless and memorable. Take Amazon, for example. Its easy-breezy return policy is like a breath of fresh air for customer satisfaction.

A smooth, engaging customer experience is not just about meeting expectations; it’s blowing them out of the water. That’s the secret sauce to turning customers into raving fans and brand advocates. Keep it informative and real, and always back it up with the facts.

Personalization and Customization

Personalization and customization are at the forefront of modern consumer expectations. A prime example is Spotify’s “Wrapped” feature, which delivers annual personalized music summaries to users based on their individual listening habits.

This approach from a generic, one-size-fits-all strategy to one that adapts to and reflects the unique preferences and behaviours of each user creates a deeper, more intimate connection with users. Such personalized experiences not only resonate more strongly but also foster greater brand loyalty as consumers feel seen and understood by the brand.

By leveraging the power of personalization and customization, brands like Spotify are able to meet their audience’s specific needs more effectively, thereby enhancing the overall user experience.

Storytelling and Brand Identity

A compelling brand story can humanize a business and create an emotional bond with its audience. By sharing the journey, values and mission of your brand, you’re inviting consumers to be part of a larger narrative. This goes beyond mere purchasing and moves into the realm of authentic engagement and genuine connection.

Community Engagement

Community engagement is about more than social media interactions. Building a brand community where customers can interact, share experiences, and even voice concerns is invaluable.

Engaged communities foster trust and provide brands with honest feedback, ultimately driving brand development and innovation. Furthermore, a tight-knit community can lead to increased brand advocacy and organic growth.

Transparency and Authenticity

Consumers are more informed than ever, and they appreciate transparency and authenticity from brands. Whether it’s being open about sourcing practices, admitting to mistakes, or sharing company values, honesty resonates. Authentic brands build trust through transparency, and trust is foundational for lasting loyalty.

The Key To Long-Term Success

Loyalty can be divided into two primary types: transactional and emotional. Transactional loyalty comes from routine, habit or incentives like discounts. While this type of loyalty can drive repeat purchases, it’s often conditional and can easily shift when a better offer comes along.

Emotional loyalty is deeply rooted in feelings and sentiments. It’s the difference between buying a product because it’s on sale and buying it because you truly believe in its quality, the brand’s mission, or the values it represents. This kind of loyalty is enduring and far less susceptible to external market fluctuations.

While transactional loyalty might deliver quick wins, emotional loyalty promises sustained success. When customers feel emotionally connected to a brand, they not only purchase more but also advocate for the brand, leading to organic growth via word-of-mouth recommendations—the best kind of advertising a business can have.

These groups of customers are also more forgiving of mistakes, provided the brand remains authentic in its response. Essentially, emotionally loyal customers are the backbone of a brand’s stability in the ever-evolving market landscape.

Maintaining Loyalty In Changing Times

The market is ever-changing, driven by evolving consumer preferences, technological advancements and socio-cultural shifts. To maintain and grow brand loyalty, businesses must:

• Adapt to evolving consumer needs. Regularly gather feedback and use it to inform product or service improvements. This iterative process ensures the brand remains relevant to its core audience.

• Innovate. Brands that stagnate can quickly become irrelevant. By continually innovating, you can stay at the forefront of your industry and keep your audience engaged.

• Stay true to core values. While tactics might need to adapt, the brand’s core values should remain constant as consistency in values offers a rock of stability that loyal customers will cling to.

Conclusion

Building brand loyalty in today’s competitive market requires more than just enticing price tags. By focusing on cultivating emotional loyalty, brands can forge deep, meaningful connections with their audience. This not only drives repeat purchases but fosters a community of advocates. By understanding the distinction between transactional and emotional loyalty, brands can tailor their strategies to achieve lasting success.

Feature Image Credit: getty

By Alex Quin

Alex Quin is CMO of award-winning Digital Marketing firm UADV. He is a full-stack marketing expert, global keynote speaker & podcast host. Read Alex Quin’s full executive profile here.

Follow me on Twitter or LinkedIn. Check out my website.

Sourced from Forbes

By Daniel Todaro

The concept of building brand loyalty used to be relatively straightforward. Effective marketing and delivery of a positive customer experience would create a positive association for a brand. The lifetime value of that relationship could then be hugely profitable, with consumers unlikely to switch.

However, we now live in a world of choice and information overload. An increasingly digital landscape, dominated by tech giants who hold many of the cards. In this new world, run by algorithms and AI, traditional long-held attachments are being unwound. As we culturally shift in shopping habits, people are more likely to remember what they bought from Instagram or Amazon but not the actual name of the brand. Does this mean brand loyalty is dead or at the very least waning?

Brand communication – from top-down to influencer-led

In the old world, brand marketers would use above-the-line platforms to create a strong identity and desire for a product. The brand direction was determined in a very top-down fashion, often based on the instinct of the CMO. A ‘needs’ state was identified and answered and an advertising campaign was launched highlighting the brand’s unique qualities.

In today’s world, we have shifted to digital and younger generations will see campaigns on Tik Tok and Instagram where the product is being advocated by a brand ambassador or a paid-for ad placed on social. In this new era, the control of the brand’s identity has been repackaged, personalized, and filtered through the lens of influencers. Having never heard of the brand, the influencer’s recommendation can be enough to create a consumer of a brand.

In fact, large segments of audiences will have never even seen an advert on TV or in a newspaper because they don’t touch a newspaper or they don’t switch on a TV. Or the brand has not included it as part of its media planning. According to recent research by Nielson, only 10% of Gen Z rank watching TV as their most popular entertainment activity. In fact, across the 18-34 bracket, live TV viewership dropped by 23% year on year.

The changing nature of brand loyalty

So, this digitally dominant world has created an entirely different mindset when it comes to brand loyalty. For socially digital natives, brand loyalty is about what it offers to them in value. A brand like Paul Smith will have a huge amount of brand equity among Gen X or baby boomers for its quality, tailoring, or painstakingly built partnerships and marketing campaigns. However, this will mean nothing for younger generations living in the moment and wanting to know what a brand can deliver here and now.

For younger consumers, if it is a relevant brand, it will be popular for them. If it’s not, they are just not interested. Quality has given way to relevance or price consciousness. Indeed there has been a huge rise in interest among younger audiences in mobile phone brands that offer a lot of the same features as iPhones but for a fraction of the price, like Xiaomi built with an Android skin. The tease here is the freedom an Android device offers a user who doesn’t want to be part of or associated with ‘that crowd’.

For digital natives, there is a checklist of what is really important for them when they spend their money. In recent research, price promotion was rated as crucial for this audience, but ethics are also vital. How long is a product going to last and what are they going to use it for? Does it meet my needs and values?

The life cycle of brands

In this new age, the life cycle of brands is also shorter, almost sonic. Brands can spring up quickly to consciousness but equally, their success can be shorter-lived. This has been evidenced by the spate of high-street retail brands that have disappeared.

Glossier is a D2C brand that sprung up in relatively short order. They have quickly scaled up the ladder of investment based on perceived digital growth that would continue endlessly. The direct-to-consumer beauty brand has raised an astonishing $80 million in Series E funding and reversed the traditional model.

They have latterly embraced physical retail with a pop-up store in Covent Garden, London,  and the swift ascent to being a much-loved brand is highlighted by the queues of people outside. However, they recently had to lay off staff as the growth they have experienced has not been maintained. Could the bubble burst as quickly as it was created?

How do brands build loyalty today?

It is certainly difficult for brands to build loyalty in the modern world because they are having to think about a very different culturally younger generation and manage a more traditionally minded older audience.

To square up this circle, value and values are two unifying themes that can be focused on, although realized in different ways. As consumers, we are all more interested in the purpose of brands and this is a clear differentiator. Brands today, particularly consumer goods products, have to think not only about how they make a product but also how they produce it. According to a study by Cone/Porter Novelli, 77% of consumers say they have stronger emotional bonds to purpose-driven companies.

Also, what added value are brands able to offer beyond the immediate product or service? How are they innovating to remain relevant? An excellent example of this is the Google Pixel 6 device, which enables users to remove photobombers and unwanted objects so that they “disappear like magic” using a “magic eraser”. Also, Portraits on Pixel represent the nuances of different skin tones for all people beautifully and authentically, to take true, accurate portraits. It’s innovations like these that create an immediate way for brands to build loyalty in the modern era.

Canny partnerships unite different audiences

Additionally, partnerships can be a great way of uniting seemingly disparate groups around common themes. CK1 Palace was a great example of this. A new collaboration between Calvin Klein and Palace Skateboards was launched with a tongue-in-cheek film celebrating cities that came to define these two labels. For streetwear brand Palace, it was London and its lively skate scene, with grainy film textures creating some retro cool.

Also included are high-contrast, black-and-white style studio shots, synonymous with Calvin Klein. The combination of nostalgia and modern relevance was a canny move that other brands would do well to replicate. Calvin Klein has opened new stores and you will see members of Gen Z proudly walking around Carnaby Street in London with a Calvin Klein shopping bag. This shows an effective strategy by a heritage brand to remain relevant and build loyalty with different audiences.

Towards a new approach

Creating brand loyalty today is far more difficult in a digital, social media-dominated world of increasing fickleness. Heritage brands are in trouble with a younger generation who has no interest in timeless qualities built up over many years. But brands can succeed if they adopt a new playbook. This needs to focus on the values and value of their product and on leveraging partnerships to remain relevant.

According to author Maurice Franks, “Loyalty cannot be blueprinted. It cannot be produced on an assembly line. In fact, it cannot be manufactured at all, for its origin is the human heart.”

Feature Image Source: Keagan Henman

By Daniel Todaro

Daniel formed Gekko in April 2002 and, over a decade on, it has grown to become one of the UK’s leading retail, field marketing, and experiential agencies providing results-driven solutions to technology and leisure brands. Whilst FMCG has been the traditional domain of the field marketing and impulse purchases, Gekko has carved out an impressive niche in a sector dominated by considered purchases. Through understanding great customer experience to motivate distinct shopper tribes, Gekko converts shoppers into customers of global consumer electronics brands. Daniel is a regular industry commentator in his capacity and experience as a business leader, tech champion and in brand marketing.

Sourced from Brandingmag

By  Jessica Davies

For subscriptions publishers like the Financial Times, cultivating regular reading habits with younger generations is essential to securing future paid customers. That’s why the publisher has established a long-term program to get school kids and teachers regularly reading FT content.

The program has been designed to help students contextualize their school curriculum with relevant news articles written by FT journalists. The publisher lifts the paywall with participating schools and students and students can create their own online and mobile accounts. Those that do are sent weekly email newsletters, curated by the FT’s global education editor, Andrew Jack. These feature links to stories that are relevant to their specific fields, whether it be economics, the environment or politics.

In doing so, the hope is that 16- to 19-year-old students can more easily contextualize fact-heavy text-book information by reading relevant, real-life, contemporary examples of world and businesses news.

“Historically, the FT has been perceived as [having] an older audience already in working life or advanced education,” said Jack. “But this is important in terms of thinking about our future readers, and with the wider debate around fake news and poor quality information so readily available, we feel providing high-quality information to that next generation is very important.”

The program, which began in the U.K. in 2017, has rolled out to 2,300 schools globally. While around 75 percent of those schools are in the U.K., there are around 100 involved in the U.S. and other schools are participating in countries where English is a second language, like China. This is where the FT’s development of audio text articles has come in handy because students learning English can hear how the article sounds, added Jack.

More than a million FT pages have been accessed by students and teachers in the program over the last year and 34,000 individual accounts created, according to the publisher.

“The FT, like other publishers with older readerships, worries that the next generation will not grow into reading their types of news,” said Nic Newman, senior research associate for Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. “So most of these types of initiatives are about establishing the brand and the value early on with the hope that they will continue to identify with the brand as they move into the world of work.”

To ensure students make the most of the program, the FT has cultivated relationships with the teachers. The publisher sends a weekly email newsletter to 20,000 individual teachers who have signed up. Typically, there will be five different subject fields covered in the newsletter, spanning economics, politics, global affairs and culture.

“We have built a network of teacher curators,” added Jack. “They know what is useful and what resonates; they contact me with articles they want shared.” The publisher has started adding two to three question suggestions to accompany articles sent in the newsletter as lesson-planning aids.

To appeal directly to students, the FT runs multiple-choice quizzes and three writing competitions. The quizzes test students on the biggest news stories of the year, published by the FT, across a range of subjects.

The publisher has partnered with credible institutions for the competitions, including the Bank of England, Chatham House and World Bank. The partners don’t pay, but they do offer tickets to major annual events they hold to the winners. Competition challenges have asked students to describe the future of money or to write about what their first priority would be if they were appointed United Nations secretary. The winner gets their article published on FT.com as well as the website of the partner institution.

The FT has a stable subscriptions business with 985,000 print and digital paying subscribers. But to sustain and grow that, the publisher must cultivate loyalty among younger generations, for whom the current paywall is prohibitive. “By engaging with the younger generations, introducing them to the brand from a young age, creating the habit and building up the longer-term relationship The Financial Times will look to coach the individuals through their life cycle and eventually migrate them up to being fully paid subscribers,” said Greg Harwood, director at strategy and marketing consultancy Simon-Kucher & Partners.

The FT also wants to do more to engage younger people with its video coverage in 2019, though it wouldn’t reveal details. So far it has run a short-form video competition, but wants to develop more ways to get young people viewing its video, added Jack.

“It’s vitally important for the FT to engage with new audiences at all points on the age spectrum, but particularly at the younger end,” said Jon Slade, group chief commercial officer at the FT. “We think the FT provides a really important, helpful tool to help young people navigate the world they live in, and help with their studies. And we hope in doing that we are also building the paying reader of the future.”

By  Jessica Davies

Sourced from DIGIDAY UK