In the digital age, marketing buzzwords abound: Dashboard-driven. KPIs. Omnichannel. Metrics tell the story. But where are the customers in this picture? Today’s consumers demand highly personalized, relevant experiences, and companies that place the customer at the center of their marketing initiatives gain a strategic competitive edge. Here’s what you need to know about customer-centric marketing.
Your customers are the reason your business exists; that’s obvious. Yet many companies get so caught up in channel optimization or product segmentation that they forget their core focus: the buyers.
According to Custora University, customer-centric marketing “places the individual consumer at the center of marketing design and delivery.” In other words, customer-centricity requires marketers to:
Customer-centric marketing allows you to build your brand around different market segments, adapting to each demographic’s product or service affinity. By analyzing customer perception against customer-centric metrics, you will differentiate your brand, build loyalty, and retain customers long-term, according to the American Marketing Association.
A customer-centered focus is the hallmark of profitable, world-class organizations, confirms customer centricity expert Bill Self. What is good for your customers is good for your business: employees who feel empowered to deliver top-notch customer experiences tend to have greater job satisfaction, so it’s a win-win.
Several core competencies are necessary for companies to embrace customer-centric marketing, including:
Since analytics are key to customer centricity, the principal challenge is harnessing appropriate Big Data. A study by the CMO Council, in partnership with SAS, found that, “The main challenge, according to 52% of marketers and 45% of IT professionals is that functional silos block aggregation of data from across the organization.”
This speaks to corporate culture, and the need to align around customer needs in order to drive connected experiences. If there is no clear-cut ownership of a customer-centric model across all levels of the organization, from chief executives to sales to IT to line staff, a true customer-centric model is not possible.
Beyond focusing on the customer internally, device proliferation has made it more challenging than ever before to home in on your target audience. While email has the least friction of any form of communication, it’s also harder to understand who your customer is, or which devices they use.
And, while email remains the highest ROI channel in e-commerce, the trend over the last decade has been to augment email marketing with a consistent message across all channels.
A third challenge concerns the explosion of social media and mobile, which has driven the growth of word-of-mouth marketing. Three-fourths of consumers say they rely on social media and friends’ input in their decision-making process.
A recent McKinsey study found that companies with a customer-centric, data-driven marketing and sales platform improve marketing ROI by 15-20% or more.
Successful customer-centric marketing relies on four best practices:
As best-selling author Gary Vaynerchuk writes in The Thank You Economy, “There is proven ROI in doing whatever you can to turn your customers into advocates for your brand or business. The way to create advocates is to offer superior customer service.” That is the essence of a customer-centric culture.