Posts Tagged ‘Google’

4 Things I Just Learned About Location-Based Marketing

by on Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

As someone who enjoys – but doesn’t completely get – Foursquare and other “check-in” services on the Web, I was looking forward to the Location-Based Marketing Summit I attended last week in New York. I learned a great deal about this rapidly-growing field, and I had the chance to hear and speak with some of the people who are responsible for the latest thinking and most interesting developments in location-based services (LBS) and their application to marketing. Here are some of the things I learned at the conference:

via jorgempf (Creative Commons)

Check-in is only the beginning. Services such as Foursquare and Gowalla have received so much publicity lately that it’s easy to equate LBS with check-in. But LBS also includes maps and other query-based services (imagine wandering through a museum and using your mobile device to learn about the painting you’re standing in front of) and a variety of shopping platforms (mostly deals and discounts but also several loyalty platforms) as well as socially oriented services like Foursquare. What can LBS do for marketers? At least three things:

  • Grow loyalty. Some marketers, such as Tasti-D-Lite, are using LBS as a loyalty platform, where a purchase results in an automatic “check in” and a message to friends as well as an award of loyalty points. A new service called TopGuest drives enrollment in hotel loyalty programs by offering bonus points when a guest checks in (in the LBS sense).
  • Increase relevance. Adding time and place to any information increases its relevance. And almost any kind of information can be made more valuable by adding relevance. Location data can tell marketers about what people like to do and to buy, and when and where they like to do it. It can place consumer behavior in context: Is going to Starbucks after the gym the same as going there on the way to work? Is going to Starbucks because it’s convenient the same as going there because you like it? With more detailed and relevant information about the consumer, marketers can create messages and offers that are much more relevant to the consumer – and more likely to be acted on.
  • Provide data. Marketers also can use aggregated location data to make better decisions. Comcast, which uses Twitter as a customer service channel, has been mapping tweets as a way to learn where service resources are needed most and communicate with customers in those areas. Location data can also be used to map patterns of customer behavior, from which bars attract fans of what teams to which doctors are prescribing what medications.

Engagement is everything. The hype about check-in services has obscured the wide variety of location-based services that are already available. The common denominator among them is engagement. How can LBS create engagement? One way is to deliver relevant information delivered in real time. Or, as one speaker called it, earning attention by being in “the right place, right time, all the time.” Another source of engagement is providing an enjoyable experience, such as by including game mechanics. On a superficial level this is how the check-in services work. But the real value of these services is relevance: for avid users, where their friends are and what they are doing right now matters. Another way to create engagement is financial: location-based shopping services that provide deals and discounts certainly have an audience.

Local is next. It’s easy to think of LBS as the province of large marketers, and it’s true that large marketers are better able than small ones to take the risk of jumping into LBS early. However, many of the speakers (and attendees) at the conference were talking about local applications. Why? One reason may be that, according to Google, one-third of mobile searches and 20% of all searches have local intent. That’s a big audience to overlook, and with the cost of technology decreasing, local marketers have a chance to engage with them using a location-based platform. Although local use of LBS is still in its early stages – for one thing, awareness of and interest in LBS is thought to be low among local marketers – look for substantial growth in this sector. And look for Zavee to be right in the middle of things.

Privacy is a transaction. This was one of the most eye-opening insights of the entire conference. No speaker disagreed that consumer privacy concerns were a legitimate issue for LBS and the marketers who use them. Several speakers, for example, were critical of Facebook for being insufficiently sensitive to users’ privacy concerns. But every speaker who discussed privacy at any length made the same point: While a service that exists only to push marketing messages will always have a privacy problem with consumers, a service that delivers a genuine benefit will find consumers more likely to share private information. The greater the benefit, the greater the sharing. This only works, of course, if consumers know what they are being asked to share – a potential issue with some advertising programs. All of the speakers at this conference, however, emphasized the need for LBS to be transparently opt-in with an easy way to opt back out. It will be very interesting to see, over the next several years, whether this transactional notion of privacy reflects consumer behavior or whether there are certain bright lines that no LBS can safely cross.

This has been a busy few weeks but our conference-going isn’t over: Zavee CEO Alan Pleskow and I are off to California for the Rise of Social Commerce Conference in Palo Alto – expect a post about it next week.

Competition and Creativity

by on Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Competition can bring out the best in marketers, or the worst. It can make them clever and creative, or literal and banal. When Verizon Wireless wanted to respond to AT&T’s iPhone-fueled growth, it promoted its advantage in network coverage with the “There’s a Map for That” campaign. When DirecTV wanted to respond to price competition from Dish Network and local cable providers, it created a campaign called “To Tell the Truth” that uses a game show format to claim that only DirecTV tells the truth about its pricing. Similar competitive challenges, but very different creative solutions.

There's a Map for That

The standard agency creative development process involves identifying a significant consumer insight, turning that insight into a relevant, credible claim and bringing the claim to life in a compelling and memorable way. Verizon’s insight was that a smartphone is only as capable as the network it runs on, and its claim was that its network has more coverage than AT&T’s. DirecTV’s insight was that consumers in this category are value-driven, and its claim was that it provides more channels for less money.

Both campaigns are from major agencies: McCann Worldgroup for Verizon and Deutsch for DirecTV. But while Verizon’s commercials make their point in a clever and engaging way, DirecTV’s spots are uninvolving and numbingly literal. One creative team was able to make the jump from Apple’s “There’s an app for that” to Verizon’s network coverage map to “There’s a map for that” while the other creative team got only as far as an old game show. In fact, one wonders whether DirecTV even bothered trying to be creative, or whether they thought that being literal was the best way to reach their audience.

Creativity is a particular challenge in online marketing. In Zavee’s Google advertising we have a very limited space in which to induce users to click, and every word is analyzed and evaluated. If we weren’t highly literal our ads might not even appear where we want them. Within the Zavee site and this blog, we try to use keywords that will improve our rankings in searches. Search Engine Marketing and Search Engine Optimization are absolutely vital to Zavee’s marketing plan, but they don’t result in much creativity. In fact, it sometimes feels like we are writing for Google, not for our audience.

One online medium where creativity doesn’t have to be sacrificed for effectiveness is YouTube. Many marketers have figured out how to create videos that pull the audience in, expose them to the marketer’s brand and get them talking about it with others. And some of the best YouTube videos are produced by consumers, not the marketer. Look for Zavee to make greater use of this medium in the near future.

The Zavee takeaway:

  • Competition should make marketers more creative, not less.
  • SEO and SEM present challenges to creativity, but they aren’t the only online media.
  • YouTube is one online medium that rewards creativity.

Juliet Was Wrong

by on Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

In Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, a frustrated, frightened and ultimately doomed Juliet wonders aloud, “Wherefore art thou Romeo?” Why, she pleads, must her beloved bear the one name – Montague – forbidden to any of her Capulet clan.

Juliet argues to her unseen Romeo that names themselves have no meaning:

‘Tis but thy name that is my enemy;
Thou art thyself, though not a Montague.
What’s Montague? It is nor hand, nor foot,
Nor arm, nor face, nor any other part
Belonging to a man. O be some other name!
What’s in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet ….

Romeo and Juliet via HL42

Romeo and Juliet (via HL42)

But Juliet was mistaken. Montague and Capulet are brands, as surely as if they were Coke and Pepsi. And like Coke and Pepsi they have brand equities, which are the attributes (values, personality, meaning, etc.) that are the essence of the brand, and brand promises, which is what the brand will do for its audience. (Part of the tragedy of the play is that both families have the same brand equities – pointless jealousy and excessive self-regard – and the same brand promise – the destruction of the other).

Brands communicate their equities and promises in many ways, from their logo to their tag line. Their names can have branding value, too. Many brands have names that describe their business. This naming strategy has several advantages, not least that it makes it easy for consumers to understand what the brand is and does. It also frees up marketing resources to communicate brand messages rather than focus on the basics of the business.

The problem with descriptive names, however, is that similar businesses can use similarly descriptive names. At best descriptive names risk diluting a brand’s uniqueness (unless it has a unique description) and at worst they can lead to consumer confusion. Also, descriptive names tend not to be memorable and, inherently, they do not do much to convey brand messages. We should not forget, however, that many of the world’s strongest and best-known brand names, from IBM to UPS, are (or began as) descriptive.

The other end of the naming spectrum is often referred to as “evocative” names. As the term suggests, these names are meant to evoke a response that relates to the brand’s positioning. There are many ways to do this, which makes naming something of a black art. Names can consist of real or invented words, with real or invented spelling; words from modern or classical languages; single or compound words; and so on. Some names try to embody the entire brand while others focus on one key aspect of the positioning, such as the consumer experience. In addition to their messaging component, names have to be easy to read and say and have a look and sound that is appropriate to the brand.

Evocative names are the flip side of descriptive names: they are unique and can be memorable, but it takes more resources to communicate what the brand is and does as well as the essential brand messages. However, once that is accomplished the name is more likely to remain in the audience’s consciousness and be associated with the desired brand positioning. Many newer brands, from Amazon to Google to Yahoo, have evocative names, but this naming strategy is far from an online-only phenomenon. Several companies have used evocative names as part of a re-branding strategy, such as Altria (ex-Phillip Morris), Tenet (ex-National Medical Enterprises) and Accenture (ex-Andersen Consulting).

Why did we choose an evocative rather than a descriptive naming strategy? And how did we come up with Zavee? Our company was originally called Charge Rewards, which is still the name of our holding company. That name accurately describes one important element of our business – a rewards program that uses registered credit/debit cards – but was unsatisfactory for several reasons. First, it says nothing about social shopping, online marketing or social giving, all of which are elements of our business that are both very significant and highly differentiating. Second, it might be difficult to protect against another registered-card loyalty program that wanted to use a similar name. Third, it simply isn’t very memorable or exciting.

We wanted our new name to be unusual and memorable, and suggest in some way what we were trying to accomplish. We weren’t convinced that any descriptive name could easily encompass our business, and we didn’t want our name either to limit us (like Charge Rewards did) or confuse our audiences. We worked with two agencies to develop a new name, briefing their teams with both a description of our business and a statement of our brand positioning. They came up with literally scores of possibilities, which we discussed and analyzed before coming up with three finalists. We ultimately decided on Zavee. One of the things that sold us on the name was the way it embodies a key brand promise. Our platform helps merchants market smarter; helps consumers shop smarter; and helps causes raise funds smarter. That focus on making communities smarter led one of our agencies to the notion of “savvy”, which they transformed into the more unique, interesting and memorable “Zavee”.

The Zavee takeaway:

  • Juliet’s wrong. Names matter.
  • Descriptive names are generally more intuitive for the consumer and less expensive to market, but less memorable, harder to protect and less valuable to the brand.
  • Evocative names are generally less intuitive for the consumer and more expensive to market, but more memorable, easier to protect and more valuable to the brand.