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The global pandemic has boosted consumer appetite for shoppable video and accelerated the move towards an on-demand economy.

At The Drum’s Digital Transformation Festival, during a fireside chat, Stuart Heffernan, head of e-commerce at Pernod Ricard, and Nicola Spooner, vice-president of strategy for Unruly, asserted that post-pandemic consumption habits were here to stay and would fuel a shoppable content boom.

On-demand e-commerce

“This past year has been revolutionary for e-commerce,” said Heffernan. “In the space of a year, on-demand retail and players have boomed globally.”

Uber’s acquisition of the drinks delivery platform Drizly, Pernod Ricard’s recent stake in on-demand grocery platform Glovo and the rise of delivery apps in mature e-commerce markets such as the UK all suggest this trend will continue.

Heffernan also remarked: “On-demand will stick around because people get hooked on convenience and are prepared to pay a premium for it. Uber Eats’ alcohol sales have increased significantly – that’s a premium price point for standard products because it is pure speed and convenience.”

Connected TV growth

The two also spoke about the rise of ‘hometainment’ and how it dovetailed with the rise in super-fast, on-demand e-commerce.

Spooner said: “Consumers are accessing more content in an on-demand capacity than ever before. We don’t predict that slowing because now that people have trialled that kind of method of indulging in content, they’re not going to want to let it go.”

She added that while she could foresee a consolidation in subscription services, there would always be a thirst for on-demand quality content. “For brands, that brings an exciting opportunity because we’re delivering a lot of creative shoppable solutions.”

According to a recent study from Unruly, 72% of UK advertisers say connected TV (CTV) is a key part of their video advertising strategy. There is also a huge amount of optimism about the medium’s future, with all media agencies and 77% of brands saying they plan to invest more in CTV during the next 12 months.

The pandemic-induced boom of branded ‘hometainment’ experiences, such as showing how to make cocktails or advice on pairing food and wine, has readied consumers for shoppable content from brands.

Heffernan argued that this would continue to be the case even after lockdowns ends.

“Even if the pandemic has completely gone away by January next year, it will still be cold and wet and I will still be sitting at home. So, if a Jameson brand ambassador reaches me through the right media targeting, then yes, I will engage because it’s something to do on a Wednesday night.”

Unruly’s Spooner said that making branded content shoppable and serviceable by the on-demand apps consumers have grown to depend on during lockdown will induce impulse purchasing.

According to Unruly and research consultancy MTM, 90% of digital advertisers plan to increase their CTV spend in 2021.

“Shoppable content really opens the doors to impulse purchasing,” said Spooner. “If you are watching content around cooking and there is the contextual placement for Jameson’s cocktails or Viejo wines, I – as a consumer – could be inspired and take action immediately.”

From awareness to conversion

Both panellists agreed that TV is no longer about brand-building but about conversion, adding that advertisers should now augment campaigns with shoppable elements.

“There are plenty of ways to add shoppable elements to campaigns,” said Spooner. “It could be a light touch brand bar over the top of an amazing TV creative or an on-screen QR code so that consumers can scan it with their phone, which is location-enabled, and have that experience in their front room in moments.”

Ultimately, shoppable video will allow marketers to build video into every stage of their marketing plan rather than simply viewing it as an awareness boosting tool.

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Sourced from The Drum

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Is there a way for IT leaders to be proactive about AI and machine learning without ruffling and rattling an organization of people who want the miracles of AI and ML delivered tomorrow morning? The answer is yes.

How should IT leaders and professionals go about selecting and delivering the technology required to deliver the storied marvels of artificial intelligence and machine learning? AI and ML require having many moving parts in their right places, moving in the right direction, to deliver on the promise these technologies bring — ecosystems, data, platforms, and last, but not least, people.

 

Is there a way for IT leaders to be proactive about AI and ML without ruffling and rattling an organization of people who want the miracles of AI and ML delivered tomorrow morning? The answer is yes.

The authors of a recent report from MIT Sloan Management Review  and SAS advocates a relatively new methodology to successfully accomplish the delivery AI and ML to enterprises called “ModelOps.” While there a lot of “xOps” now entering our lexicon, such as MLOps or AIOps, ModelOps is more “mindset than a specific set of tools or processes, focusing on effective operationalization of all types of AI and decision models.”

That’s because in AI and ML, models are the heart of the matter, the mechanisms that dictate the assembly of the algorithms, and assure continued business value. ModelOps, which is short for :model operationalization, “focuses on model life cycle and governance; intended to expedite the journey from development to deployment — in this case, moving AI models from the data science lab to the IT organization as quickly and effectively as possible.”

In terms of operationalizing AI and ML, “a lot falls back on IT,” according to Iain Brown, head of data science for SAS, U.K. and Ireland, who is quoted in the report. “You have data scientists who are building great innovative things. But unless they can be deployed in the ecosystem or the infrastructure that exists — and typically that involves IT – – there’s no point in doing it. The data science community and AI teams should be working very closely with IT and the business, being the conduit to join the two so there’s a clear idea and definition of the problem that’s being faced, a clear route to production. Without that, you’re going to have disjointed processes and issues with value generation.”

ModelOps is a way to help IT leaders bridge that gap between analytics and production teams, making AI and ML-driven lifecycle “repeatable and sustainable,” the MIT-SAS report states. It’s a step above MLOps or AIOps, which “have a more narrow focus on machine learning and AI operationalization, respectively,” ModelOps focuses on delivery and sustainability of predictive analytics models, which are the core of AI and ML’s value to the business. ModelOps can make a difference, the report’s authors continue, “because without it, your AI projects are much more likely to fail completely or take longer than you’d like to launch. Only about half of all models ever make it to production, and of those that do, about 90% take three months or longer to deploy.”

Getting to ModelOps to manage AI and ML involves IT leaders and professionals pulling together four key elements of the business value equation, as outlined by the report’s authors.

Ecosystems: These days, every successful technology endeavour requires connectivity and network power. “An AI-ready ecosystem should be as open as possible, the report states. “Such ecosystems don’t just evolve naturally. Any company hoping to use an ecosystem successfully must develop next-generation integration architecture to support it and enforce open standards that can be easily adopted by external parties.”

Data: Get to know what data is important to the effort. “Validate its availability for training and production. Tag and label data for future usage, even if you’re not sure yet what that usage might be. Over time, you’ll create an enterprise inventory that will help future projects run faster.”

Platforms: Flexibility and modularity — the ability to swap out pieces as circumstance change — is key.  The report’s authors advocate buying over building, as many providers have already worked out the details in building and deploying AI and ML models. “Determine your cloud strategy. Will you go all in with one cloud service provider? Or will you use different CSPs for different initiatives? Or will you take a hybrid approach, with some workloads running on-premises and some with a CSP? : Some major CSPs typically offer more than just scalability and storage space, such as providing tools and libraries to help build algorithms and assisting with deploying models into production.”

People: Collaboration is the key to successful AI and ML delivery, but it’s also important that people have a sense of ownership over their parts of the projects. “Who owns the AI software and hardware – the AI team or the IT team, or both? This is where you get organizational boundaries that need to be clearly defined, clearly understood, and coordinated.”  Along with data scientists, a group that is just as important to ModelOps is data engineers, who bring “significant expertise in using analytics and business intelligence tools, database software, and the SQL data language, as well as the ability to consistently produce clean, high-quality, ethical data.”

Feature Image Credit: IBM Media Relations

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Sourced from ZDNet

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Facebook is looking to find its voice with the roll-out of a series of audio features over the coming months.

A new category of audio products and features serves as a battle cry to Clubhouse, the invitation-only audio platform that has generated significant word of mouth, as Facebook joins increasingly aggressive moves to bend the ear of listeners.

What is Facebook launching?

  • Over the coming months, Facebook will unleash a succession of audio-centric features, such as Live Audio Rooms for people to participate in live conversations – a direct ’homage’ to the popular Clubhouse app.
  • Reportedly ready for an April launch, the literal chat room also bears more than a passing resemblance to Twitter’s Spaces feature.
  • The full-throated embrace of sound waves also includes the launch of Soundbites, a utility for people to generate and share brief audio clips of their own making.
  • Both facilities are expected to be made available to a small number of creators in a matter of weeks with users also able to make money from either format, although Facebook hasn’t clarified if this will be open to anyone or solely established creators.
  • Last but not least, Facebook will also permit members to listen to podcasts without leaving the confines of the walled garden.

Why should marketers care?

  • Facebook’s enthusiastic embrace of a new medium of communication closely mirrors that of competitors such as the invitation-only Clubhouse app to enable natural-sounding, real-world engagements.
  • The resulting opportunities span the full spectrum of human speech, providing Facebook with a megaphone to amplify its utility as a home for speeches, lectures, conversations and conferences.
  • Calls to embrace sound have only grown louder since the imposition of lockdowns, while the rapid growth of Clubhouse has provided ample proof that public demand is rapacious.
  • Laying claim to his share of this growing market, Mark Zuckerberg told The Verge editor Casey Newton at the launch: ”Audio as a medium just allows for longer-form discussions and exploring ideas. You can get into topics that frankly are a lot harder to with other mediums. And audio, I think, is just a lot more accessible because you can multitask while listening.”
  • Zuckerberg’s ears doubtless pricked up upon hearing that Clubhouse has been downloaded 4.7m times since its April 2020 (according to Apptopia), with 3.7m of those installs occurring in the opening months of 2021.
  • This rush of sign-ups was further fueled by an appearance by Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg on a Clubhouse talk show, further elevating its profile.
  • Clubhouse operates using an ad-free model but offers marketers the chance to host events and discussions of their choosing, enabling them to target very specific audiences.
  • This has already been embraced by Pernod Ricard, which hosted a series of themed conversations to coincide with Black History Month, joining other brands such as Milk Bar, Kool-Aid and Politico which have built a presence on the platform.
  • The Drum’s own Sam Scott recently delved into the opportunities presented by this soundscape for brands by exploring the opportunities and the pitfalls of opening your mouth.

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Sourced from The Drum

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Traditional command and control leadership styles are being replaced by Agile management techniques that encourage collaboration and foster accountability.

What is Agile leadership?

Agile leadership is a management style that involves the application of the principles of Agile software development to running teams. Rather than the command-and-control tactics of traditional management techniques, Agile leadership relies on decentralised decision-making, with workers encouraged to take more responsibility.

What are the origins of Agile leadership?

Agile software development itself only has a short history; it emerged in 2001, when a group of developers met in Utah to create the Manifesto for Agile Software Development, which is a set of values for developing software in an flexible, iterative manner.

As Agile development took hold in IT departments, so tech chiefs started thinking about how the approach could be used – not just to create software products – but to lead teams and projects more generally. As this happened, CIOs started talking about the importance of Agile leadership.

SEE: Guide to Becoming a Digital Transformation Champion (TechRepublic Premium)

Over the past decade, the use of Agile as a technique for leading and completing projects has moved beyond the IT department and across all lines of business. The increased level of collaboration between tech organisations and other functions, particularly marketing and digital, has helped to feed the spread of Agile management.

Why has Agile leadership spread so quickly?

In many ways, it hasn’t. CIOs might have been talking about the importance of an Agile leadership approach for more than a decade, but it has been slow to grow. That might be about to change.

Johnson Matthey CIO Paul Coby agrees that CIOs have been talking about the importance of Agile methodologies for the best part of 15 years. But he says agility is now crucial to supporting the business’ almost-continual transformation: “They need agile IT, in the best sense of the word, to support that.”

The challenges of the coronavirus pandemic have led to the adoption of Agile leadership across IT departments and the wider business. The need for rapid digital transformation in all sectors means projects had to be completed by cross-functional teams quickly – and Agile leadership proved a good fit.

Why is Agile leadership so well-suited to digital transformation projects?

When the lockdown came, workers and their managers went home. However, organisations in all sectors still had a huge to-do list: they had to keep operations running and find innovative ways to deal with their business challenges.

Many CIOs report that Agile management has been a great fit for the new working normal – and they’ve adopted leadership approaches to support this shift. Here are some examples:

What are some of the key techniques of Agile leadership?

Although Agile leadership leans heavily on the principles and techniques of Agile software development, such as iteration, stand-ups and retrospectives, it’s probably fair to say that it’s a management style that involves a general stance rather than a hard-and-fast set of rules.

Mark Evans, managing director of marketing and digital at Direct Line, says the key to effective Agile management is what’s known as servant leadership, a leadership philosophy in which the main goal of the leader is to serve.

On the other hand, Elke Reichart, chief digital officer at TUI Group, has coined her own philosophy for effective Agile leadership known as management as a service, which is about being available to make decisions rapidly.

What is undoubtedly true is that Agile leaders are nothing like traditional managers. They’re open-minded, rather than closed, they encourage their teams to make their own decisions, rather than keeping a tight grip on control, and they enjoy the process of learning and reflection, which means embracing failures and celebrating teams successes.

Consultant McKinsey refers to three sets of capabilities for Agile leaders. First, they must transform themselves to evolve new mindsets and behaviours. Second, they need to transform their teams to work in new ways. Third, they need to build the capabilities to transform the organisation by making agility core to the design and culture of the enterprise.

How do business leaders apply Agile management techniques?

Rich Corbridge, CIO at high-street chemist Boots, reflects on how his firm has applied Agile leadership during the past 12 months and says it involves three big elements. First, it’s about how organisations make decisions quicker: “How do we do stuff in small batches and test and learn?”

Second, it’s about establishing growth, mindset and collaboration – that’s to do with getting people to step up, do new things and then create new leaders. “A set of skills across my team has really being exposed by working in this way that we didn’t know existed before,” he says.

Finally, Agile leadership is about closer interaction with the rest of the executive body – rather than formal three-hour meetings every week, C-suite execs at Boots chat every day at 8am and 5.30pm.

“We do two half-hour standups; one at the beginning and one at the end of the day. It’s been an amazing way of getting to know my colleagues and really value what everybody brings to the table every single day,” says Corbridge.

What are the benefits and downsides of Agile leadership?

Agile management produces benefits in two key ways: it gives workers the empowerment that research suggests they crave, and it frees up leaders to focus on higher-level tasks, such as refining strategy and developing new business models.

The obvious drawback of Agile leadership is the potential for a loss of control. As managers empower their teams, so they stop being involved in the minutiae of decision-making processes. Get Agile management wrong and there’s the possibility for chaos and anarchy.

Feedback and iteration, therefore, are crucial to a successful Agile leadership style, just as they are to Agile software development. Good Agile managers don’t use command-and-control to manage their staff, but they do focus on fostering accountability and creating a careful balance between total freedom and micro-management.

What’s the future of Agile leadership techniques?

Agile management is here to stay. First, the technique has proven its value during the COVID-19 crisis – self-empowered teams have produced great solutions to tough business challenges quickly. Second, agile management is a great fit for the future of work, which is likely to involve a blended mix of home- and office-working.

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Sourced from ZD Net

By Brian Solis.

Under pressure to act fast during the pandemic, businesses sped up their digital transformation plans, compressing their timetables from years into months. Now they face the next phase of evolution, what digital prophet Brian Solis calls the “novel economy”. For businesses to adapt and thrive, says Solis, they must take a more profound and humanistic approach to transformation.

Stephen Shaw, Chief Strategy Officer of Kenna, and Brian Solis, recently had a refreshingly honest conversation about the real future of digital transformation and customer experience.

Digital Darwinism: An Interview with Brian Solis, Global Innovation Evangelist, Salesforce and Renowned Digital Prophet and Author

When the pandemic first struck, most businesses were stunned by the severity of the impact. Seeing people storm online for essential goods made them take stock of their digital readiness. Alarmed by how unprepared they were, they fast-tracked their digital transformation plans.

Up until that moment, those digitization efforts had plodded slowly along, mainly concerned with finding quick wins by increasing efficiency and productivity. Improving the customer experience was often a more distant goal, modest in ambition, meant to fix the broken parts. If a business was imaginative enough to dream up bolder ideas, those plans invariably got pushed into the future, since there was no pressing urgency.

Now those same businesses are scrambling madly to catch up to their customers, compressing their digital roadmaps from years into months, worried about losing ground to challenger brands or more agile competitors. Already the pandemic has mowed down a slew of bricks and mortar retailers who were slow to adapt to an omnichannel world. Other sectors too have been caught flatfooted – travel, hospitality, apparel makers, out-of-home entertainment, just to name the worst hit. The businesses that have managed to pivot quickly are the ones with the foresight to have invested intelligently in digital transformation, and were ready to absorb the sudden surge in ecommerce traffic.

Even with a vaccine in sight, businesses are likely facing a slow recovery and a populace whose habits and attitudes have been deeply affected by months of internment. Just how enduring those changes are likely to be is on every marketer’s mind right now. Early evidence from China suggests that people might revert to old shopping habits quickly, judging by the rapid return to normal in that country’s retail spending after they quelled the virus. But China’s health crisis was over too soon for new habits to take root. Whereas people still waiting for the pandemic to end may never want to return to the way things were before.

Of course, digital prophets like Brian Solis have been warning about this moment of reckoning for years. As the bestselling author of such books as “Business As Usual Is Not an Option”, still a highly relevant read eight years later, and the prescient “What’s the Future of Business”, he has been a leading voice for holistic digital transformation. He has long argued that society and technology have been evolving much faster than businesses’ ability to adapt, leading to what he calls “digital Darwinism”: the speed at which companies evolve to survive and thrive in a digital economy.

At the start of this year, even before the pandemic hit, Brian wrote that “digital transformation will start to become synonymous with business modernization and innovation”. Competing for the customer of the future, he predicted, will become “mission-critical”. Clearly, we’ve now reached that inflection point, much faster than even he might have thought possible. Facing the biggest disruption in living memory, we’re entering a “novel economy”, as he calls it, meaning the old playbooks are of no use anymore. That’s where I started the interview, wondering what marketing’s role is in the digital reengineering of the customer experience.

Brian Solis: Customer experience has not really been owned by any classical group that spans the organization, right? Just that role has not really existed. And even if you have somebody like a chief customer officer, it’s still only relegated to aspects of the journey not necessarily the entire experience. So, when we talk about customer experience, we tend to think about it as a practice or a cost center in worst case, where we’re looking at it with traditional metrics, we’re looking at it as a traditional model, as we put X, Y, and Z into this, what do we get back from it and how quickly?

If you think about simple metrics like in customer service, you know, there are some metrics that we look at how quickly we can get someone off the line, not necessarily how does someone feel when they’re off the line. So, we have to rethink the entire model of what it means to invest in customer experience. And I wrote two articles, one in “Forbes” which is the one that Tom Fishburne thankfully picked up, and another one yesterday on LinkedIn, which was really focused on the concept of adding an apostrophe as to customer experience so that we could personalize the conversation – humanize the conversation is probably a better word – and see what the experience is from their eyes. And the point of it was to reset the argument or reset the conversation away from, how do we do this … to, why are we going to do this? And then how do we build from there?

Because I think what we’re trying to do today is attack it from the classical models that we have built today and that leads to the typical things like politics, and egos, and silos, and budgets, and resources, and constraints, and priorities that are focused elsewhere. When in fact, we could show that investing in the word experience, which just simply means an emotional and intellectual reaction to any moment. If we looked at it that way and measured it that way: How did someone feel? How did someone react? What did someone do? And what is the memory that someone takes away from that moment and how do those moments add up together? We can now reconstruct not only customer experience but the entire brand relationship. From there, anyone who cares about human beings could lead the charge for bringing together the organization in a much more cross-functional way, that’s productive, that’s optimized, that’s customer-centered, that’s joyful even, and then we can start fixing the broken things and start innovating in the areas that we’re not investing in today. So, it’s complex, but it’s possible, it’s just, we have to shift perspective.

Stephen Shaw (SS): So there’s this current pandemic, this global crisis we’re facing, that all businesses are wrestling with today. I think you’ve said, it’s awakened a sense of urgency amongst businesses that some level of change is required, and I think you talk about the “novel economy”. You’re suggesting, I think, that this is a matter of hitting the total reset button, this isn’t just accelerating digital transformation, this is a total reset in how businesses have traditionally operated, is that fair to say?

Brian: It’s more than fair to say. So let’s take a step back, the novel economy is something that I introduced to studying these times in this pandemic. I talk about it as “BC”, sort of before COVID, what was the state of the world? What was the state of customer relationships? What was state of brand? And then after disruption, “AD”, is, instead of what we’re referring to it as this new normal is actually taking a step back again and realizing, no, this is not the new normal, this is an “interim normal” while we play out, specifically in the United States, politics, but everywhere in the rest of the world, health, where we’re focused on vaccines, treatments, we’re focused on new social behaviors and socioeconomics associated with that. Then what we actually see is a plan to move forward in this interim normal, and also setting the stage for this post COVID world.

The novel economy was this three-stage approach that looked at digital transformation, that looked at customer experience, that looked at also innovation in terms of digital business models, to say, when you have a customer thrust into a digital-first world simply because they’re not as physical as they were before, then we have to take Phase One, which is survive: How do we explore the customer transformation that’s happening, right? Because they were emotionally affected, they were psychologically affected, they’re spending differently, they’re not spending, what they’re buying is different, and has changed radically since March 1st just in the few short months that we’ve been hit with this pandemic, understanding that to ensure business continuity, to ensure stabilization, but then setting the stage for Phase Two in this interim normal, which is alive, which is looking at then: How do we start to not only do great things, deliver greater experience in this interim normal that goes beyond the post-apocalyptic scenes that we see everywhere, like plexiglass, and masks, and horrible news headlines every single day, to find ways to deliver joy in these times, to rethink the customer experience, to look at digital-first and look at ways that we could deliver “wow moments”. And then build the muscles, build the expertise, build the intellect to set the stage for Phase Three, which is thrive. So once we start to come out of this, once we start to think about the world in a post-COVID way, that we’re actually ready to just accelerate, to excel, to be in this new and innovative position that’s nothing like the pre-COVID world, there’s no going back to normal. Many facets of normal were part of the problem to begin with. And this Phase Three opportunity is a true competitive advantage because a lot of companies are just looking at ways where they can cut costs, save resources, and just kind of coast through these times, when in fact history shows us that any time of disruption, whether it’s health-related, or it’s economic-related, that we can thrive and innovate and we have thrived and innovated in these times before. (10.53)

SS: So customers for a long time now have been out ahead of businesses and the market, certainly in terms of their expectations of what they think an experience should look like. Are you suggesting that businesses are gonna have this epiphany now where they’ve been so slow up until now to really digitize their businesses, to transform their businesses as you’ve been describing them? You’re suggesting that this crisis is something not to waste, to take advantage of, and then to catch up, if you will, to where customers are – but aren’t customers now coming out of this crisis going to change even more? And I think that’s what you’re implying. What do you see as the biggest permanent shifts that, coming out of this, we’re gonna see amongst customers, consumers, the market in general, and then how is that gonna impact things? I mean, you referenced, I think just now, the adoption of e-commerce has accelerated. What are some of these other shifts that are gonna force businesses to make change that they’ve been very resistant to in the past?

Brian: Well, there’s that famous saying, never waste a good crisis. You know, the problem with change is that it’s hard and oftentimes change is limited by the vision of those who are making the decisions, those who are in charge of the organization. So, if they don’t see the world or feel the world the way that it’s changing or evolving or being disrupted, it’s very difficult for them to actually empathize with it and create a sense of urgency, to then allocate resources and drive that change. As I used to call it before COVID, the “undercover boss moment”, if you’ve ever watched that show. Every executive who’s ever gone through, you know, walked in the shoes of their employees and their customers, leaves that experience a better person, more informed and enlightened person, a more driven and inspired person, and everything changes after that, or at least it should. And what we miss oftentimes is that undercover boss moment in much of our work. So COVID, you know, for better or worse, has given that undercover boss moment or that sense of urgency to decision-makers. Now the question is, what are they going to do about it? And this is where true competitive advantages are forged, and competitive disadvantages are spotlighted.

What they need to do is actually take advantage of the fact that customers have, by default, had to become digital-first. The thing about digital is that it makes or breaks the customer journey that you have today. Most of this, we’re essentially seeing 10 years of e-commerce evolution happen in a matter of weeks, and so most companies were unprepared for it. Many businesses were also affected by supply chains, of which customers have no idea what that even means, they don’t care about the backend, they just want what they want when they want it. And that’s about, you know, a decade or so of grooming, you know, customers that had smartphones, social media, their favourite apps or services that were delivered to them, or curb side pickup experiences. This is a consumer that’s evolved and now you have added to that a consumer that was not necessarily digital-first, but now has to be digital-first. So it’s an incredible demand and also an incredible opportunity for executives. So what they have to do is say, “All right, pre-March 1st, let’s ditch everything we knew about the customer or what we thought we knew about the customer and let’s start over.”

What are they doing? Where are they going? What’s important to them? What are the questions that they’re asking? What are they finding? What are they connecting with? And let’s start to rebuild. Let’s focus on the touchpoints that are broken. Let’s focus on the touchpoints that are missing, and let’s also focus on how we speak to them.

If we are learning so much about them, then this means that the opportunity for how we think about customer experience, the experience itself, how we talk, how we brand, how we market, everything can now become much more empathetic, and empathetic in a true sense, not in the buzzword, marketing-CX sense, like truly understanding who that person is and what they’re doing, because they’re evolved, they’re leaving signals with everything that they do and it’s our opportunity, our chance to learn from them. (15.14)

SS: Beyond the faster adoption of e-commerce, the discovery that they can get products shipped overnight quickly, whatever they want, beyond that change in habit, is it going to be also a permanent shift in attitudes that lie beneath the surface, people’s attitudes toward business, toward social interaction, toward life, really, are people’s attitudes gonna fundamentally shift along with everything else here and how will that impact sort of marketing’s approach do you think? You mentioned empathy, for example.

Brian: Steve, these are great questions. They have already started to change, and this is one of the reasons why I became, in the ’90s, a digital anthropologist because you could see how the consumer internet at the time was starting to give people experiences that they just didn’t have before and once you had these new and incredible experiences, it makes everything else before that seem obsolete or outdated. And so you want, you crave, more of these experiences, the conveniences that they give you, the personalization that it gives you, all of the attributes then that forge or lay the foundation for what their standard for experience should be. So now, post-March 1st, you know, it’s not just that they’ve become digital, it’s also they’ve become emotionally affected by these times, whether they know it or not. And when you look at it from not just an anthropology perspective but also one of psychology, you see that this is very much like a somatic marker that has united the entire world around this great stressor of the pandemic, so, we now are much more anxious, stressed, we’re worried about our health and the health of our loved ones, we’re worried about the economy, we’re worried about our own safety and our own income, our own stability – add to that, especially for those in the United States, this incredible politicization of the disease. People are just angry, and worried, and scared, and so those are factors that go into the behaviors that play out partly in consumerism and partly just in humanity itself or greatly in humanity itself. So, understanding that is what empathy is really all about. The customer now is not only digital, but they’re also becoming much more informed and at the same time, what’s also frustrating is they’re becoming equally misinformed. And now it’s an opportunity for a brand, a marketer, a CX strategist, customer support strategist to reimagine how to be the light in this world of chaos, and it’s going to be like this for at least 18 months, even if we get a vaccine or a treatment, that’s going to take time to play out and establish herd immunity and then we also need concerted leadership, whether that comes from brand or that comes from politicians or anybody, really, to start to give faith and calm to people so that they can feel better, more focused on creating not only a better world but a better self. (18.45)

SS: So I love that expression, a better self. You know, I wonder about this, I wonder if there’s going to be just a sling back once this is all over, back to traditional consumerism, or a realization with people that you are not what you buy – and that is heretical for marketers, who obviously have spent half a century convincing people to buy stuff. And that’s the other big pivot, it’s so hard. And I love everything you’re saying, it’s just so hard to imagine right now marketers who follow, don’t lead, taking a leadership position when those principles aren’t close to the heart. Effectively you’re calling for a new generation of marketers to come onto the scene, really.

Brian: I’m calling for it – I have been calling for it – simply because the behaviors that you’re seeing now, Steve, are accelerated behaviors. They’re not new behaviors. Digital and what digital afforded was much more than just a matter of mechanisms, it was a matter of, sort of, indoctrination into a new world of possibilities, a new world of aspirations. So, yes, essentially what you have had accelerate as well that we haven’t talked about yet, is this much more conscious consumer, let’s just say, so you don’t buy to become who you are, you buy who you are, and it’s a total reset of the brand-consumer relationship, because, by default, people have to rethink. This pandemic is actually a CTRL-ALT-DEL for life. It’s making people rethink who they are, where they are, who they become, how that aligns with who they thought they would be. And you’re seeing just a real great sense of mindfulness start to play out. Well, I wish it was actually more, we have to, politics aside, this is a real opportunity to recentre who you are and who you want to be. And brands are going to have to contend with that, they have a choice in how they want to build relationships moving forward. There’s a great article in Fast Company, oh, no, no, no, it was BuzzFeed that I read, and I think the headline was, “I don’t want to buy stuff anymore.” You also had, add to conscious consumerism, you have sustainability, which was already a factor, you have global warming or whatever you want to call it to be politically correct, you also have this other thing that was actually in play too that’s not getting a lot of attention, which was minimalism. So you had the Marie Kondos of the world getting people to rethink their relationship with stuff and what you need to sustain happiness in your life. So, all of these things are just being accelerated, digital on top of it, and then the conveniences that digital gives someone and you essentially have an opportunity for CTRL-ALT-DEL for brand and marketing itself. (21.46)

SS: Well, and it’s effectively a sea change, and I’m sensing that massive shift in sentiment as well, but there is a darker side to this. And I think the darker side is around – I think you alluded to it – is this pervasive mistrust that also exists. So just as customers are starting to shift in sentiment, they’re starting to look at businesses with this, through the eyes of mistrust. And I think that’s the other thing that I wanted to point out is that, you know, truth and trust go sort of hand in glove. And I think you’ve said, it’s a precondition to have an actual customer relationship. How do brands step up and prove their integrity and not be simply seen as camouflage for selling stuff? You talked about brands being more empathetic, but translating that into actionable steps, what do brands do to become more relatable?

Brian: Think about this in terms of just the human element or the human quotient, right? Is how do I get this person in life to like me? And the other way to ask the question is, well, what’s important to this person? And can what’s important to this person inspire me to want to align with those values and those beliefs and those aspirations? Because if enough people are like that and I align with enough people then it’s inspiration for me to want to be better, to want to be changed, to want to grow, to want to learn, and to want to unlearn, right? And when you break it down into a conversation of humanity, you realize that brands can and have to be human in these times. And also we’ve been asking for this for a long time as well, and you can see the inhumanity of it all at the dawn of the pandemic when basically every commercial, every ad, sounded and looked the same, “We’re all in this together, in these uncertain times,” you know, and that, you know, look, I get it, they got a market, they got to sell, but look, really, if they want to be better, they can be better. I’ve already studied since March through this time, it’s just a matter of months, I’ve already seen waves of massive shifts in spending behaviors and values and what people want. For example, 84% of customer experiences, or 84% of customers said – this is in a Salesforce report that just came out recently – they’re gonna value brands more for the experience they deliver rather than their product or service – that’s huge. Then you look at another study, I believe it was Accenture, that said that customers are judging brands by how well they treat employees during this pandemic. You have other things like values, conscious consumerism, minimalism, like we were talking about. So now you have all of these. You also have health and safety, that’s come up in another series of research, that they’re judging brands by how safe and how well-regarded they are both just in their communications, but also in the physical experience that they deliver as well. So now essentially what you have is, if you’re paying attention and you’re using what I call data-driven empathy, right? You’re not just looking at data, you’re looking at ways to humanize the data, to feel the data, so that you can deliver something that’s meaningful like you would in any relationship, that you essentially have the opportunities to add new pillars and remove old pillars to your brand, what do you stand for? And is it something that I can stand with as a customer, and are we moving in the same direction together? Because if so, then let’s go, but you can’t do that unless you’re going to take the time to try to be human. So, you know, to your question earlier, we are absolutely talking about a new dawn of brand and marketing. (25.33)

SS: So how does marketing go from here, where it is traditionally and where baked into their DNA is brand messaging and being a pretty picture department, to making this leap to becoming a leader here? And that’s what’s really required is leadership. You’re not gonna to get it from operations, you’re not gonna get it from finance, you’re not gonna get it from any logistical part of the business, it’s gonna come from marketing. Yet marketing has lost its voice as a strategic influence in most enterprises that I see. How do they make this transformation? I mean, customer first thinking is all about marketing transformation, but there’s a tall mountain to climb right now considering where we are. How do they make that leap?

Brian: Well, let’s start with just the intent. I think that if we think about this in any way like a startup might think about it, which is, what is the market opportunity? And what does our investment in that opportunity yield us in the short term and in the longer term? And you can also project out, you know, what is the opportunity cost of not doing these things? So we could make a financial case, especially now, when in a pandemic the CFO is raised in sort of or elevated in the decision making process, everything has to go through the CFO filter. So we do want to make the case that actually investing in relationships is a competitive advantage and it is, right? Historically, actually there’s a great report by Gapingvoid – gapingvoid.com – that talks about how companies that build a culture of employee engagement and customer engagement, and it talks about the details of what a culture – because this is really, at the end of the day, what we’re talking about – is how do you build a culture of an organization that puts the customer first across all facets of the organization? And it lists out everything you need – companies that have a culture of customer-centricity and employee-centricity, a culture of a vision where we’re all moving together in a way that matters together, that they do better financially, that they have greater margins, that CEOs make more money, that CEOs are much more famous and liked by the public and also by the media. I mean, all of these attributes that you would want – that shareholders get greater returns. So the ROI is there. It’s just a matter of then finding a place where we can make a dent, right? I always believe that pilots are a great way to start. But the customer experience, right now, the customer journey, is specifically focused on e-commerce and also in customer support: those are two Achilles heels right now in the pandemic where we could find what’s broken just simply by looking at the data, listening and talking to the customer and investing in those areas, capturing a “before state” and capturing an “after state”, say in a matter of like, I don’t know, things are moving fast, let’s say four weeks, and we can show progress. We could show quick progress, and then we can expand that exact thinking across the journey until it becomes a way of being. And at the end of the day, leadership has to embrace the fact that having better customer relationships with a new customer, I call it “Generation N”, for novel, and we could talk about that maybe in a later podcast, but, by prioritizing people and learning what matters to them and what doesn’t matter to them, it should also recharge leadership. If leadership can’t embrace this or doesn’t want to embrace this or they’re stuck with stakeholders and shareholders, and stuck in the panic and the chaos, then you’re not gonna get through that. But if you look at ways to deliver light to the customer, because the customer is what matters to you, then you will find a way one step at a time. (29.24)

SS: I love what you’ve just said. Your career has largely been around the whole digital disruption of business and urging businesses to transform their practices. You certainly have been a key voice in that. 5G is coming along, the fourth industrial revolution, AI, etc, etc, etc. Is technology once again going to then force a lot of this change that you’re talking about, simply because we’re going to be dealing with an entire new reality in a number of years in the way people interact, not just with each other, but with business? Is that gonna be the true transformative force, not the pandemic, but this wave of new technologies that are arriving on our shores?

Brian: Oh, man. All right. Well, let’s have a part two because there is no quick answer to this, this is where we’ve gotten into trouble going back 20 years. So the consumerization of technology going back to the ’90s with the internet, going into the early 2000s with smartphones, social media, with mobile apps, real time everything, now looking at 5G, looking at AI automation, looking at AR/VR computer vision. We tend to lean on the technology first as an enabler for scale and efficiency and cost savings and not for the experience that it can deliver, and that’s what inspired me to write the book “X” a few years ago, “What’s The Future of Business” a few years ago.

SS: Great book.

Brian: And those were talking about experience-led technology investments, and that’s completely different. So if you take everything that we talked about, if you had insights, if you had empathy, if you had purpose for what was gonna matter to people as they were evolving, and then you apply technology to that, then you’ve got what I call multimodal digital transformation. So operational focused for excellence for employee experience, you have digital business model innovation so that it’s relevant and modern and awesome for customers and also employees, and then you have it connected by what’s human-centered design, which is at the heart of true innovation.

SS: Brian, this has been everything I thought it would be and more, that was a fantastic conversation, and if I could have a part two with you at some point, I would just welcome the opportunity. So, thank you very, very much for your time today.

Brian: Thank you, Steve. I very much enjoyed it and we can get a part two on the books later in the future for sure.

SS: I would love that option. I have so many other questions I’m gonna ask you, so thank you. Seriously, I could spend a lot of time with you. Thank you very much. Again, love your books, love your work, keep up the great work, Brian, it’s been terrific.

Brian: Thank you, Steve.

That concludes our interview with Brian Solis. As we learned, the first instinct of business during the early phase of this pandemic was just to emerge from it unscarred – making whatever operational changes necessary to survive. But simply upgrading back office plumbing or integrating new customer-facing channels is not enough. The next phase must address new customer expectations. And then ultimately, as society recovers from this trauma, an awakening to novel possibilities, when businesses begin to find innovative ways of creating customer value. At that point businesses will start to see the real benefit of holistic digital transformation: grateful customers, thankful for the role the brand plays in their lives.

Originally posted on Customer First Thinking

By Brian Solis

Brian Solis is world-renowned digital analyst, anthropologist and futurist. He is also a sought-after keynote speaker and an 8x best-selling author. In his new book, Lifescale: How to live a more creative, productive and happy life, Brian tackles the struggles of living in a world rife with constant digital distractions. His previous books, X: The Experience When Business Meets Design and What’s the Future of Business explore the future of customer and user experience design and modernizing customer engagement in the four moments of truth.

Sourced from Brian Solis

By 

Farrow & Ball’s sales have grown “exponentially” this year thanks to a home improvement boom. The Drum catches up with the 75-year-old posh paint purveyor’s chief exec to find out how it has been fine-tuning its digital capabilities and baking luxury into its online experiences as it looks to appeal to DIYers and professionals alike.

Paint and wallpaper company Farrow & Ball is famous for its muted colour charts, on which you‘ll find shades with names such as ‘Downpipe’, ‘Elephant’s Breath‘ and ‘Hague Blue’. Its intensely pigmented paints have earned it a reputation among interior designers and influencers alike, with the aspirational brand selling not only distinctive tins but a lifestyle that goes with them.

This year, the business has seen the best financial results in its 75-year history, powered by a lockdown decorating boom that has pushed digital sales through the roof as people seek to reinvent the spaces they are spending more time in. In the year to August, sales were up 4.1% for the British brand, reaching £87m. Online sales were up 14% over the same period, representing over 10% of group sales versus 9% in the prior year.

“We’ve seen a huge increase in our digital demand,” explains chief executive officer Anthony Davey, the ex-P&G marketer who also sat in the top spot at GHD. “At one stage, our demand had gone up 15-fold online,” he explains, saying that “almost overnight” the business went from selling 90% of its stock through third parties to a 50:50 split between retail and direct-to-consumer (DTC).

This shift was aided by the brand’s small-batch production methods, which see all of its manufacturing based out of Dorset. “It’s quasi-handcrafted, we go through the process twice to ensure that the quality and consistency of our paint is exceptionally strong. So we were able to ‘pick and pack’ for individual customers. Lots of [bigger] companies that are highly scaled with a mass manufacturing approach weren’t able to offer that individual ordering service.”

Its marketing strategy has shifted too. Farrow & Ball has upped its investment in PPC and Google Shopping to capture the demand from buyers. For people who are in the discovery and exploration stage, the company is investing in social media content for its 2 million followers across the “obvious” channels like Instagram and Pinterest.

Its commitment to quality has been evident not only in the assembly of its products, but also in the way it has shifted the services it offers to customers online.

Bringing the Farrow & Ball experience online

When showrooms shut at the start of March, the paint company brought a live-chat function to its website. It has also started allowing customers to book virtual appointments with its specialist colour consultants – seasoned interior specialists who help people pick out the perfect swatches and themes for their homes.

The brand has also run live sessions with some of its more high-profile colourists and designers (the same ones who painstakingly curated a fresh colour pallette for the recently redesigned Museum of Modern Art in New York), giving people the chance to ask questions and receive tips.

“In lockdown, we brought our designers into our social media channels to give customers a ‘daily dose of colour’, which in the past is something we haven’t done much of.

“We want to make sure we‘ve got sufficiently engaging and relevant content, and people want to see us as a source of inspiration and advice. That‘s very much a strategy of the whole business. If you were to go into our showrooms or on to any of our channels, you‘ll find people who‘ve got many years’ experience in interior design or fabrics or all different aspects of design. They‘re much more than just someone managing a store. They have passion for the industry and passion for the category.”

Having recently appointed BMB as its lead creative agency, the company isn’t just focusing on digital – in fact, it has just invested in its first series of TV ads, which gently poke fun at Farrow & Ball’s serious image.

Featuring a cast of neurotic decorators doing everything they can to keep their paint pristine and protect their freshly decorated walls and woodwork from the threats of muddy dogs, messy children and careless wine drinkers, the self-aware ‘Modern Emulsion’ campaign will be stacked against a variety of KPIs.

Davey points to two kinds of metrics – growth and brand awareness, but also engagement and attribution on the digital and VOD side.

He says his firm wasn’t inspired to make its TV debut owing to Covid-19. “It is more just about continuing the evolution of the brand.”

Feature Image Credit: Paint and paper company Farrow & Ball is perhaps best known for its muted colour charts

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Sourced from The Drum

By Joe McKendrick

It takes design thinking to do digital transformation right. That’s the word from Teonna Akinsete and Kenton Hankins, both with Pega. In an insightful post, they describe the essence of design thinking as “co-production” with end-users of software and related products, to “encourage empathy and collaboration.”

However, they add, this is easier said than done, even in enterprises that seem to have robust design thinking initiatives. “In most digital transformation projects, the goal is to design a product or service that users or customers will love,” they observe. “Traditionally the design team will employ user-centered methods, such as conducting user research and usability testing. These methods are still essential to the design process, but when it comes to impactful collaboration, they only really scratch the surface.” The best way to approach productive design thinking “is to make users and stakeholders part of the entire design process; not just at certain touch points.”

Surveys out of McKinsey put a sharp point to this challenge, noting that many enterprises are still struggling with the right approach to design thinking. Companies that excel at design grow revenues and shareholder returns at nearly twice the rate of their industry peers, the survey finds. However, design thinking is not something that pops up overnight. “What we found was striking,” the McKinsey survey team, led by Melissa Dalrymple, points out. “Some 90 percent of companies weren’t reaching the full potential of design, even as, in the past five years, double the number of companies have added senior design roles to their organization.”

Overall, McKinsey finds, organizations with the most robust design initiatives increased their revenues and total returns to shareholders substantially faster than their industry counterparts did over a five-year period—32 percentage points higher revenue growth and 56 percentage points higher growth for the period as a whole.

Dalrymple and her co-authors make the following recommendations to deepen design thinking into every enterprise activity:

Create bold, user-centric strategies. “Embrace user-centric strategies, improving not only products and services but also the full user experience and, in some cases, the organization itself.”

Embed the design leader into the C-suite. As part of its study, McKinsey interviewed 200 design leaders, and they focus on three key players: customers, employees, and designers themselves. The key is to “embed your senior designer into the C-suite while cultivating a collaborative top-team environment in which your design leader will thrive,” Dalrymple and her co-authors state.

Get the metrics right. Only 14 percent of the companies in the McKinsey survey se are currently setting quantified targets for their design leaders. “Make the most of user data through a balance of quantitative and qualitative design metrics and incentives that enhance user satisfaction and business performance.”

The bottom line is everyone should engage in design thinking. “Gone are the days when the design department receives instructions via email and creates a fully fleshed-out design before aligning with the product owner,” say Pega’s Akinsete and Hankins. “In a design thinking scenario, everyone works together using all available tools, and the team selects winning ideas to go into the final product brief.”

Feature Image Credit: Getty

By Joe McKendrick

I am an author, independent researcher and speaker exploring innovation, information technology trends and markets. I am also a co-author of the SOA Manifesto, which outlines the values and guiding principles of service orientation in business and IT. I served on the organizing committee for the recent IEEE International Conference on Edge Computing, and was active on the program committee of the International SOA and Cloud Symposium series. Much of my research work is in conjunction with Forbes Insights and Unisphere Research/ Information Today, Inc., covering topics such as cloud computing, digital transformation, enterprise mobility, and big data analytics. I am also a contributor to CBS interactive, authoring the ZDNet “Service Oriented” site. In a previous life, I served as communications and research manager of the Administrative Management Society (AMS), an international professional association dedicated to advancing knowledge within the IT and business management fields. I am a graduate of Temple University.

Sourced from Forbes

By James Henderson

Partners building out IT services are best positioned to capitalise in a big data and analytics (BDA) market set to experience double-digit growth in 2019.

That’s according to new IDC findings, which forecasts investment to reach US$189.1 billion globally, representing an increase of 12 per cent over 2018.

Of note to the channel, IT services will be the largest category within the BDA market this year at $77.5 billion, followed by hardware purchases ($23.7 billion) and business services ($20.7 billion).

Collectively, IT and business services will account for more than half of all BDA revenues until 2022, according to IDC.

“Digital transformation is a key driver of BDA spending with executive-level initiatives resulting in deep assessments of current business practices and demands for better, faster, and more comprehensive access to data and related analytics and insights,” said Dan Vesset, group vice president of IDC.

“Enterprises are rearchitecting to meet these demands and investing in modern technology that will enable them to innovate and remain competitive. BDA solutions are at the heart of many of these investments.”

Meanwhile, Vesset said BDA-related software revenues will be $67.2 billion in 2019, with end-user query, reporting, and analysis tools ($13.6 billion) and relational data warehouse management tools ($12.1 billion) being the two largest software categories.

According to IDC, the BDA technology categories that will see the “fastest revenue growth” will be non-relational analytic data stores (34 per cent) and cognitive/AI software platforms (31.4 per cent).

“Big data technologies can be difficult to deploy and manage in a traditional, on premise environment,” added Jessica Goepfert, program vice president of IDC. “Add to that the exponential growth of data and the complexity and cost of scaling these solutions, and one can envision the organisational challenges and headaches.”

However, Goepfert said cloud can help “mitigate some of these hurdles”.

“Cloud’s promise of agility, scale, and flexibility combined with the incredible insights powered by BDA delivers a one-two punch of business benefits, which are helping to accelerate BDA adoption,” Goepfert explained.

“When we look at the opportunity trends for BDA in the cloud, the top three industries for adoption are professional services, personal and consumer services, and media. All three industries are rife with disruption and have high levels of digitisation potential.

“Additionally, we often find many smaller, innovative firms in this space; firms that appreciate the access to technologies that may have historically been out of reach to them either due to cost or IT complexity.”

By James Henderson

Sourced from ARN

By

Despite what retailers may think, digital transformation doesn’t always require huge business model changes and drastic process shake-ups.

Today’s retail landscape is more competitive than ever before, so it is crucial for businesses to embrace digitalisation and new technologies to gain and maintain a competitive edge in today’s market. As the retail sector attempts to keep up with changes in consumer behaviour and customer experience expectations, failure to bridge the gap between what buyers what and what brands offer can often mean the end of a business. Massive retailers including Patisserie Valerie and Coast have shown severe distress signals this year, and it is becoming imperative for brands to continuously perform at the top of their game in order to survive against the challenges posed by competitors and market fluctuations.

Longstanding womenswear retail chain Bonmarché felt the struggles of a downturned high street  earlier this year, when shares in the company dropped 18 per cent after a warning that profits would fall short due to weak consumer demand. Other retailers have also fallen prey to the worsening retail environment, with several well-established chains having closed stores or seeking serious financial restructuring in order to survive, including Toys R Us and Debenhams. It is becoming increasingly clear that change needs to happen, and that brands need to innovate to survive. Overall, brands that fail to offer good customer experiences will struggle. Little but impactful technological changes could make a huge difference to a business’ operations and profits.

Digital transformation is huge and can often feel like a mountain to climb. However, despite what retailers may think, it doesn’t always require huge business model changes and drastic process shake-ups. As it becomes clearer that customer experience is the key to driving sales, businesses should not overlook the benefits of making small changes that can greatly enhance the experiences of their customers. This is especially crucial given that over half (56 per cent) of international adults are more likely to choose digital resources for recommendations on products and services. Strong ‘word of mouth’ is vital, and good customer service is intrinsic to this.

The help of AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) can help retailers analyse customer behaviour, journey data and assist in identifying their individual needs – so they can then be met. By starting to predict what customers want, and need, AI (in tandem with machine-learning) can elevate the whole shopping experience to another level. As it stands, only 7 per cent of retailers currently use AI to enhance their services, and this should increase as retailers see the benefits that AI-driven technology can provide.

Thread, an online start-up, has used AI to assist men in selecting clothes – and subsequently raised £16.7 million from investors, further demonstrating that retailers should look to new, AI-driven technologies to stay competitive. Interactions and conversations between humans and brands become more productive for both parties with AI-enabled technologies. This is because these technologies combine artificial intelligence and data to provide analytics – learning from and responding to a slew of data points in a way that no human ever could. With these analytical insights available, high street retailers can provide the empathetic, responsive service that customers appreciate and increasingly demand. It’s a win-win: consumers get a customised service, and retailers benefit from their improved customer satisfaction which builds brand loyalty and ultimately helps boost market position.

Despite what retailers might think, AI doesn’t always have to mean going as far as installing a team of robot workers to keep up with the digital landscape. However, robot-driven technologies can certainly help. When it comes to the specific technology elements that retailers can implement to start reaping the benefits of digital transformation, dynamic call numbers are just one example of how simple elements can offer huge growth benefits. Simply put, these are unique phone numbers, assigned to each visitor, that are automatically displayed on a brand’s website or in a digital advertising campaign. This simple feature gives businesses the ability to track a specific customer’s journey, and provides extended data insights into that customer, helping to deliver a tailored customer experience.

 Putting customers at the heart of business operations

Retailers can also look to geographical call routing as a method of attracting their target customers across different regions. Call routing allows users to understand the digital context of each visitor, such as by discovering why they were visiting the site, where they came from, and why they ultimately contacted the brand. With this rich contextual data, businesses can then target the customers who truly want to buy and prioritise the journey of these customers through to specific call handlers who are trained and equipped to handle their enquiries most effectively.

Using a dashboard to analyse customer insights and enabling call tracking are also simple functionalities that businesses can utilise to drive growth. For example, enabling customers to text customer service departments, instead of having to call them (and most likely be put on hold or stuck in a long queue) can help speed the process up – both for customer service teams and for customers themselves. This is especially effective when targeting key audience demographics. For example, millennials tend to prefer text messaging over making phone calls, so for businesses who cater to this age range as their primary sales segment, implementing this type of tech is a no-brainer.

Retailers need to put customers at the heart of their business operations, now more than ever. They should also use data insights to not only enhance customer experiences, but also direct investments in the long run for optimal growth. Advertising and marketing campaigns have previously involved putting large sums of money into campaigns to increase profits, without generating insights post-campaign to understand its effectiveness. This is not a sustainable, or wise, way of spending – and could lead businesses to ruin later down the line.

In today’s competitive marketplace, companies need to make use of every tool they have at their disposal – as well as investing in new tools – to minimise chances of failure and maximise success. Spending lots of money doesn’t have to be the answer – but spending in the right way, on technologies that improve customer experience, will be vital in the coming months and years.

Feature Image Credit: Shutterstock/Wichy

By

CEO, Freespee

Sourced from ITProPortal

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There is a clear tie between transparent business communications on social media and consumer spending, according to a new report.

Data breaches, fake news, and misinformation have seeded doubt in consumers. Organisations want to step up and restore customer confidence. With this crisis in trust, organisations are looking to add transparency to their business practices according to a new report.

Chicago, Ill.,-based social media analytics company Sprout Social has released its Social media and the evolution of transparency report.

It surveyed 1,000 US consumers on their transparency beliefs, expectations and desires.

It discovered that consumers’ expectations of transparency grow daily. Almost nine out of 10 Americans believe transparency from businesses is more important than ever before.

And transparency is important to Americans with 85 percent of respondents saying a business’ history of being transparent makes them more likely to give it a second chance after a bad experience.

Almost nine out of 10 people (85 percent) are more likely to stick by a business during a brand crisis if it has a history of being transparent.

Organisations can reap rewards from being transparent. Nine out of 10 people (89 percent) said a business can regain their trust if it admits to a mistake and is transparent about the steps it will take to resolve the issue. A similar ratio (85 percent) are more likely to stick with them during crises.

But transparency is not enough. Companies need to tell their customers that they are transparent. Two out of five (40 percent) of people who say brand transparency is more important than ever, attribute it to social media.

Over half of consumers (53 percent) are likely to consider brands that are transparent on social for their next purchase.

Four out of five (81 percent) of people believe businesses have a responsibility to be transparent when posting on social media–a higher standard than they set for politicians, non-profits, friends, family, and even themselves.

However, only one in six (15 percent) of consumers believe brands are currently “very transparent” on social.

9 out of 10 consumers will stop purchasing from brands that lack transparency ZDNet
(Image: Sprout Social)

People feel brands lack transparency when they withhold information (69 percent). Ignoring questions — regardless of who asks them — can be deemed to be detrimental to the brand as well.

If companies are not transparent, then consumers will look elsewhere. A lack of transparency on social means that nine out of ten (86 percent) of people are likely to take their business to a competitor.

Transparency is not simply a sales tactic, or a way to communicate a new marketing message.

Organisational transparency asks every level of an organization to adjust how it engages, to demonstrate its aspirations and its values. Brands should commit to being transparent in both reactive and proactive ways.

Jamie Gilpin, chief marketing officer at Sprout Social ,said: “Our data shows that transparency truly makes the difference in forming lasting connections between businesses and consumers.”

This company-wide effort should have buy-in from the top. CEOs that are more present on social makes it easier for organisations to connect with target audiences and earn their loyalty — from shoppers and from potential employees.

Give your boss the microphone and embrace the social channels that will ultimately bring in business for the brand. Transparency drives loyalty, and loyalty will bring benefits for the business.

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Sourced from ZDNet