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GETTINGINSYNC.
TRENDS IN THE CONSUMER
MARKETING LANDSCAPE




@ www.33interactions.com.au
THE ‘NEW CONSUMER’ BRAND ARCHITECTS.
    WE SYNCHRONISE BRANDS WITH EMPOWERED CONSUMERS.
    We achieve this by designing “just for me” brand propositions
2
    and weave those propositions into the lives of consumers in
    fresh and creative ways, to develop lasting customer
    relationships and advocacy.




    Jeeva Sathurayar | Joel Maloney
    612 9993 0450 | info@33i.com.au
    @ www.33interactions.com.au
AGENDA.
» Introduction          ± Trends
                           1.    Desire for greater control in our
» About this Briefing            lives and over our interactions.
                           2.    Search for meaning and authen-
» Getting in Sync                ticity.
                                                                     I

                           3.    Trust in a person like yourself.
» The Fine Print           4.    Experience matters.
                           5.    Participation as consumption.
                           6.    Web 2.0 is mainstream
                           7.    Social patterns enforced through
                                 digital tools.
                           8.    Immersion of technology into
                                 our daily lives.
                           9.    The Connected Customer.
                           10.   Non-linear purchase funnel.
IF MARKETING METHODS HAVE NOT EVOLVED IN CONCERT
     WITH TECHNOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL EVOLUTION, ARE WE
     OUT OF SYNC WITH CUSTOMERS?

     The short answer — YES! Consumers are adopting new technolo-        Traditional marketing is not working: 95% of consumer
     gies such as social networking, podcasts, blogs, RSS, commenting,   product introductions fail to reach ROI targets; 84% of
     rating, widgets, mobile, and apps faster than we can keep up.       B2B marketing campaigns result in falling sales; 85% of
     Breakfast TV covers Twitter before most marketers have figured      sales promotions are unprofitable; and 72% of TV adver-
     out how or if they should use it.                                   tising campaigns fail to achieve positive ROI. Today’s
II                                                                       consumer is technically adept, open for experimentation
     Search engines have taken centre stage in purchase decision
                                                                         and — most importantly — more active than ever before.
     making and online social usage has altered the consumer
                                                                         Traditional communications, based on classical condi-
     marketing landscape. Brands offering people something, compete
                                                                         tioning and clever ways to dispose of products, does not
     with everything a few clicks away.
                                                                         address connected, savvy, and empowered consumers.
     The “Internet is a nearly perfect market because information is
                                                                         For brands to remain relevant, they must adapt to
     instantaneous and buyers can compare the offerings of sellers
                                                                         both emerging technologies and shifting consumer
     worldwide. The result is fierce price competition, dwindling
                                                                         behaviour, and create genuine customer value — brands
     product differentiation, and vanishing brand loyalty.” Robert
                                                                         need to get in sync with new consumers.
     Kuttner, BusinessWeek, 11 May 1998

     Customers can find what they want, critique brands that don’t
     deliver, and connect with peers to spread criticism across the
     globe instantly.
ABOUT THIS BRIEFING.
 This briefing is a ‘synopsis’ of a body of work undertaken by over 30 individuals from 12 countries, spanning five conti‑
 nents — taking over four years to complete since late 2004 – and not to mention the numerous sources we researched.
 Brands were finding it harder to connect with consumers; conventional wisdom seemed irrelevant; and CRM systems and
 1‑2‑1 promised much but delivered little. The Internet, globalisation, and hyper‑competition propelled us away from a
 production‑led economy to an economy driven by consumption. Our task was to identify this distinctly different creature
 known as the new consumer, and to develop frameworks to help brands and agencies develop real responsiveness to this
 new consumer.
                                                                                                                               III
 We found that: a) brands were out of sync with new consumers; b) in a consumption‑driven economy, successful marketing
 must be underpinned by customer value; and c) successful marketing forms a dyanamic system that offers real respon‑
 siveness to the new consumer. In other words, brands need to get in sync with new consumers by bringing together new
 marketing ideas to change the way they connect with their consumers.
 Brands need to rethink the way they create conversations and relationships with consumers and the way they engage
 consumers across channels. They need to provide valuable services over one‑way messaging, deal with an increasingly
 complicated and expansive content distribution model, and address the empowerment of connected customers.
 This briefing outlines trends in the consumer marketing landscape and core ideas that brands can address to remain
 relevant today. For information on workshops and strategic planning, please get in touch with Jeeva or Joel on 02 9993
 0450.
 This briefing document is provided in good faith to parties receiving the “Getting in Sync with New Consumers” briefing and
 may not be distributed in any form, sold for profit, or incorporated in any documents without written permission from 33
 Interactions Pty Ltd. Third party material referenced in this document is the domain of respective parties.
GETTING IN SYNC.
 Organisations need to adapt to shifting consumer behaviour and emerging technologies and address the empowerment of
 connected customers immediately. We have developed a comprehensive programme to help organisations and their suppliers
 “get in sync” with new consumers and create lasting transactive relationships that result in consumer advocacy
 (recommendation and referral).
 Briefing sessions on “trends in the consumer marketing landscape” and “ideas in 21st century marketing” are provided
 at no cost to organisations and marketing agencies. Marketers can develop specific actions plans in full day workshops to    IV
 address an increasingly volatile marketing landscape. Tailored workshops help participants deal with specific consumer
 marketing problems and address emerging trends and technologies. Our workshops take a step-by-step approach to plan and
 implement marketing programmes including the use of specific marketing tools, best practice examples, and related theory.
 Workshops cover: *1-2-1 communications; *interaction design; *social marketing; *marketing integration; *the new brand
 positioning; *micro-interactions; *crowd sourcing; *brand experience; and *technology-based marketing systems.
 Our strategic planning helps clients and their agencies align marketing strategy with contemporary consumer behaviour
 and emerging technologies, and covers: *alignment of marketing with the CEO’s agenda; *alignment of marketing strategy
 with the new consumer; *integration across the marketing communications mix for response; *ROI and ongoing customer
 dialogue; and *brand positioning in the 21st century. We use a zone based approach to focus participant effort on specific
 outcomes. The Five Zones© (Insight, Breakthrough, Transformational, Impact, and Results) enable participants to develop
 breakthrough strategies that achieve business objectives.
 To arrange a briefing session, please contact: jeeva.sathurayar@33i.com.au, howard.moodycliffe@33i.com.au or
 joel.maloney@33i.com.au.
TRENDS IN THE
           CONSUMER
           MARKETING
           LANDSCAPE.

    1.	 Desire	for	greater	control	in	our	lives	
        and	over	our	interactions.
    2.	 Search	for	meaning	and	authenticity.
    3.	 Trust	in	a	person	like	yourself.
1
    4.	 Experience	matters.
    5.	 Participation	as	consumption.
    6.	 Web	2.0	is	mainstream
    7.	 Social	patterns	enforced	through	
        digital	tools.
    8.	 Immersion	of	technology	into	our	
        daily	lives.
    9.	 The	Connected	Customer.
    10.	 Non-linear	purchase	funnel.

                                                   COPYRIGHT © 2007–2009 BY 33 INTERACTIONS | WWW.33INTERACTIONS.COM.AU | INFO@33I.COM.AU
MORE CONTROL.                           1.



                                        As we move faster and more
                                        furiously throughout our ‘always‑on,
                                        always‑connected’ lives, we become
                                        sharply aware of the demands on our time
                                                                                     2
                                        and the lack of control we have.
                                        The end result is increased tension and a
                                        desire for greater control.
                                        And not having that control, especially in
                                        interactions with products and services,
                                        motivates people to become more vocal
  The more you see the less you know
                                        and audible about how they deal with
    The less you find out as you grow
                                        companies and brands.
I knew much more then than I do now

                                  U2
GUARDING
    1.1 AGAINST
        INTRUSION.



    Customers face intense levels of message
    saturation and intrusion from marketing
                                                 “...people are realising that web 2.0 is actually a
    today.
                                                 huge time sink. Facebook, Twitter, Flickr and Plaxo
3
    Customers have subsequently cultivated       may have helped foster community and commu-
    much higher levels of resistance to          nication, but they’ve also added immensely to the
                                                 flow of often-interruptive messages that their
    marketing practises and messages.
                                                 users receive, leading to information overload and
    Consumers have no desire to stop shopping    possibly a nasty internet addiction.”
    altogether but they want to be engaged by    Betsy Schiffman, Wired Magazine, April 2008

    marketers in a more satisfying and less
    intrusive manner — they just want a better
    way to interact with marketers.




                                                                       COPYRIGHT © 2007–2009 BY 33 INTERACTIONS | WWW.33INTERACTIONS.COM.AU | INFO@33I.COM.AU
SEARCH FOR MEANING AND AUTHENTICITY.                                      2.


     Authentic relationships are integral to our happiness and
     success.
     However, the quick-fire connections we seek on a day-to-day
     basis — to help deal with the stress, urgency and information                 4


     overindulgence in our lives — lack authenticity.
     LACKING THAT EMOTIONAL SUSTENANCE, CONSUMERS ARE CONTINUALLY SEARCHING FOR
     THE MEANING AND AUTHENTICITY THAT SUPPORTS THEM.




4
3.         TRUST IN A PERSON LIKE YOURSELF.


        The lack of trust in companies and institutions has
        motivated people to trust their peers or people similar to
        them as the best sources of information.




5       According to the Edelman Trust       Clearly, a deep void of trust
        Barometer, in most markets:          exists between consumers,
        1. 80% would refuse to buy goods     businesses, and institutions.
           or services from a company they
           do not trust;
        2. More than 70% will critique
           companies to the people they
           know; and
        3. One-third share their opinions
           and experiences of a distrusted
           company on the Web.




    5
SIDEBAR


 PERCEPTION |             REALITY |
 80% OF CEO’S
 BELIEVE THEIR
 BRAND                                            6


 PROVIDES A
 SUPERIOR                 8% OF THEIR
 CUSTOMER                 CUSTOMERS
 EXPERIENCE               AGREE
Bain & Company Research
4.            EXPERIENCE MATTERS.

    Savvy customers value novelty and             Customers with infinite choice are
    new experiences. Overseas travel,             not looking for more products — they
    along with vicarious experiences              are looking for experiences that cater
    facilitated by the Internet, has raised       to their deep-seated needs at every
    the bar. These days, the                      point of contact.
    expectations of value are much
                                                  WE MUST REMEMBER THAT ALL
    higher for all brands.
                                                  EXPERIENCES COMPETE AGAINST EACH
                                                  OTHER FOR THE ATTENTION OF THE
7                                                 CONSUMER.




    Companies intending to be relevant today must learn the
    art of creating experiences that genuinely engage their
    customers. Choice fatigued consumers are not looking for
    another product that hasn’t taken their true needs and
    desires into consideration.
    Sohrab Vossoughi, It’s All About Experience, BusinessWeek, April 11, 2008
PARTICIPATION AS                              5.
CONSUMPTION.

Consumers driven by experiences are increasingly
obsessed with the here and now, and have a strong
desire to collect as many experiences and stories as
possible.

Rather than being passive viewers they spend time
searching, reading, scrutinising, authenticating,
                                                          8
collaborating, and organising. Participation is the new
consumption. Status comes from finding an apprecia-
tive audience — effectively pitting creative consumers
against brands for audiences.

Everyone is a creative. Anyone can make a YouTube
video or design a MySpace page that sits on an
equal media playing field with anything anyone else
produces.

Importantly, participation alleviates the tension
that comes from a lack of authentic connections and
relationships.
6.          WEB2.0 IS MAINSTREAM.


        Web 2.0 is effectively the                 Widespread acceptance and frequent
        democratisation of the Internet.           consumer usage of Web 2.0
                                                   technologies indicates that
        The paradigm shift towards an Internet
                                                   distribution of content and services is
        that facilitates creativity, information
                                                   challenging Internet destinations for
        sharing, and collaboration among users
                                                   consumer attention.
        has become mainstream.

9       Web 2.0 based communities and hosted
        services from social-networking, wikis,
        blogs, and folksonomies (categorising
        content through tags) have reached the
        critical point where consumer adoption
        is far more significant than anyone ever
        anticipated.

        Homepage customisation, RSS feeds,
        shared bookmarks, content sharing,
        commenting, rating, desktop widgets,
        and Facebook are now commonplace
        across customer digital experiences.




    9
SOCIAL PATTERNS ENFORCED VIA DIGITAL                                                7.
TOOLS.

                   Human beings are social animals and we have a basic need to
                   interact with one another to fulfil our emotional and material
                   goals. For consumers, social is not a technology fad or a
                   destination for marketing messages, it is a dimension of our
                   humanity.

                   The difference today is that technology is helping replicate
                   social structures both online and off. Consider the customer that      10

                   consumes the best, the coolest, or the most expensive — they
                   will gain the most status.

                   Ratings, bookmarks, connected friends, and other tools help
                   replicate and enforce that status in a digital economy.




                                                                                         10
7.1 THE WEB AS A SOCIAL MEDIUM.

                            The most significant change in Internet behaviour is the mass
                            acceptance of the Web as a social medium. From tools that
                            help people communicate directly (such as instant messaging,
                            e-mail, and twitter) to those that allow people to connect
                            via non-traditional means (such as photo and video sharing,
                            blogging, commenting, reviewing, and rating), the entire web
                            is becoming social.

                            Instead of simply creating social networking sites, the concept
11                          of social computing is evolving towards making the entire
                            Internet social.

                            While most consumers use social networking to connect with
                            others, this does not suggest that that there is no role for
                            advertisers; it just has to be accomplished on the user’s terms.

                            With the socialisation of the Internet, consumers are increas-
                            ingly relying on peers for recommendations and on search to
                            locate products.

                            THE REAL VALUE FOR ADVERTISERS IS THE ROLE OF SOCIAL
                            INFLUENCE IN PERSUADING CONSUMERS TO PURCHASE.
IMMERSION OF TECHNOLOGY IN                                    8.
OUR EVERYDAYLIVES.

 Shifts in technology are not what concern people. They
 are more concerned with how technology can support
 them in their daily lives and with the things they
 value. The technology of today is finding its role in the
 lives of consumers.

 If it is good, it gets used; if it’s great, it changes our
 lives... and it has changed our lives. We are squarely            12
 in the age of the digital lifestyle and the Web has
 become so ubiquitous that it’s nearly invisible.

 All of the learning we’ve done with regards to
 marketing via the Web is suddenly bigger than the
 Internet. And, just as importantly, the challenges we
 are yet to solve on the Web are now challenges that
 exist beyond the PC. This is all relevant anywhere that
 digital technologies and experiences exist and, these
 days, that’s just about everywhere.
8.1 THE WEB IS EVERYWHERE.




13    Smartphones in general, specifically the iPhone, have radically accelerated Web usage on mobile devices.
      Growth is accelerating as carriers push flat data rate plans and this move is already leading content
      producers to accelerate investments in building robust mobile offerings.

      This means that the information and transparency the Web brings to the buying process, like price and
      quality, is free from the desktop. Continued advancements in device capabilities are making consumers
      more informed and better connected as they shop.

      The phone is just the beginning, too. Everything is getting connected: from in-store kiosks, storefront
      windows and shopping carts, to refrigerators, cars and so on.

      The march toward ubiquitous computing is on and we are just beginning to see the implications of how
      we interact with digital technologies and vice versa.
THE GAMING FAMILY.                                                 SIDEBAR




 36% of American parents say they play computer and video games.
                                                                              14


 80% of gamer parents say they play video games with their kids.

 66% feel that playing games has brought their families closer together.




                                                                             14
9.            THE CONNECTED CONSUMER.



      “The rapid adoption of broadband and technology has fostered the rise of the connected
      customer. These customers “continue to be exposed to traditional mass media but
      simultaneously access information directly (anywhere, anytime) to make informed choices
15    when engaging brands, marketers and special-interest groups on a one-to-one basis.”
      Source: Marketing Science Institute

      “Connected customers” don’t just surf the digital world, they shape it! They are more intense about their digital communications
      and media use. Moreover, these “connected consumers” are actively shaping their engagement with brands and retailers, and
      influencing each others’ perceptions and buying behaviour. Connected customers are no longer confined to certain segments
      - they roughly mirror the entire Australian population. For these customers, the new experience might be a conversation or it
      might be an interactive storytelling session.

      ONE THING IS FOR SURE - IT IS DEFINITELY NOT ABOUT THE STATUS QUO!




 15
CONNECTED WORLDS ARE TRANSPARENT.                                                                               SIDEBAR



 “... both tempests began with candidates making a critical
 mistake in the internet age: lowering their guard at private
 events, under the false belief that there are still private events.

 The incidents demonstrate how the net has flattened the                                                                  16


 landscape for political candidates, who can no longer pander
 to a compartmentalized audience without fear of it leaking out
 to less-receptive voters.”
 Wired (April 2008) - Clinton and Obama were caught making “critical” comments by bloggers at private events.
9.1 MY MEDIA.

     In the sixties, a generation fixated on creating
     new forms of community and expression forced
     media and advertisers to adapt. Today, a new
     generation is following suit and dragging the rest
     of us along for the ride.

     This generation expects that they can customise
     and personalise everything in their world and
17
     daily experiences. Everything must become ‘their
     media’ — and their media holds more weight in
     their community.

     This generation demands products and services
     that cater to their moods and desires and will
     actively search, modify, or create their own
     products and services to meet this demand.           “CONSUMERS ARE THE NEW MEDIA
                                                          AND THEY KNOW IT.”
                                                          Elizabeth Ross, Tribal DDB, AdAge, 8 April, 2008
MEDIA MESHING.                                                                       9.2



 Media meshing is a behavioural phenom-        More than a third of all ages say that they
 enon that occurs when people begin            have surfed the net while watching televi-
 an experience in one medium, such as          sion and almost half say they have listened
 watching television; then shift to another,   to the radio or watched TV while online.
                                                                                             18
 such as surfing the Internet; and maybe       Ofcom | Times Online

 even a third, such as listening to music.
 The explanation for this behaviour is the
 constant search for complementary
 information, different perspectives, and
 even emotional fulfilment.
9.3 MICRO INTERACTIONS.




     With information overload, permanent “on” situations, and media proliferation consumers are
     moving toward shorter micro-interactions like SMS, Twitter, and Facebook. Consumers prefer
19
     micro-interactions through which strong, definitive opinions can be articulated.
     These opinions carry a “larger than life” influence that make it easier, quicker, and more
     meaningful for consumers to socially influence each other as they make product purchase and
     brand affinity decisions.
     TOOLS IN THE MICRO-INTERACTIONS REALM ALLOW FOR SOCIAL INFLUENCE BECAUSE THEY
     DEMAND SO LITTLE OF THE SENDER AND EVEN LESS OF THE RECIPIENT.
NON LINEAR FUNNEL.                                                                           10.



 Traditional marketing is built around a linear purchase funnel, starting with awareness and
 ending with the sale. The proliferation of new digital touch-points has made this concept
 obsolete as we face a complex digital ecosystem that includes video, widgets, online
 advertising, podcasting, search, virtual worlds, blogs, mobile, gaming, desktop applications,
 podcasting… All of this is intensified by the rise of social computing and user participation.    20

 Customers snack on digital content and share ideas about products and brands via an array of
 devices — brand awareness and purchase consideration is formed just as much by consumers as
 by branding efforts.
 They research online and buy in stores; they shop in stores and buy online. The Internet has
 shattered the entire concept of a linear purchase funnel.
New marketing needs to
     incorporate new ideas.
     But
21

     The difficulty lies, not in the
     new ideas, but IN ESCAPING
     FROM THE OLD ONES.
     John Maynard Keynes
THE FINE PRINT.
 This briefing document and “the body of work” referred to as ‘Getting in Sync with New Consumers©’ is an ongoing labour
 of love for all involved and forms the basis for how 33 Interactions and its partners help businesses get their marketing
 act together. While we are willing to provide briefing sessions and relevant versions of this document to any that ask, our
 [pesky and protective, yet sensible] legal people have taken steps to protect our intellectual property.
 Copyright of this document, variants of this document, and the ‘body of work’ referred to as ‘Getting in Sync with New
                                                                                                                                    22
 Consumers©’ is wholly owned by Jeeva Sathurayar, Joel Maloney, and 33 Interactions Pty Ltd. All material contained in
 this document (including any supplementary data) is the property of Jeeva Sathurayar, Joel Maloney, and 33 Interactions
 Pty Ltd, and its affiliates, and is protected by copyright; all rights regarding this material are reserved by Jeeva Sathurayar,
 Joel Maloney, and 33 Interactions Pty Ltd and includes but is not limited to Transdigital Communications Planning®, the 33
 Customer Advocacy Ladder©, and The Five Zones Strategic Planning Framework©.
 This briefing document is provided in good faith to parties receiving the “Getting in Sync with New Consumers” briefing
 and may not be distributed in any form, sold for profit, reproduced, developed, or incorporated in any documents without
 written permission from 33 Interactions Pty Ltd. Third party material referenced in this document is the domain of
 respective parties.
 © 2009, 33 Interactions Pty Ltd (ABN 87 408 247 635). All rights reserved.
CLOSING CREDITS.
 33 Interactions would like to thank the following Flickr members who have offered their work for use in this presentation
 under the Creative Commons Attribution Licence. All images in this presentation are copyright to their original authors.


 1 / ClickFlashPhotos             9 / Sndrv                         16 / Mandolyn
                                                                                                                             23
 2 / Hamed Masoumi                10 / Emdot                        18 / Striatic
 3 / Lucas Hoyos                  11 / Capitan Giona                19 / Futileboy
 5 / Greg Loby                    13 / Chegs                        20 / Abulic Monkey
 7 / InfoMofo                     14 / Andreanna
 8 / Beija-Flor                   15 / Luc Legay

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Getting In Sync - 10 Trends in the Consumer Marketing Landscape

  • 1. GETTINGINSYNC. TRENDS IN THE CONSUMER MARKETING LANDSCAPE @ www.33interactions.com.au
  • 2. THE ‘NEW CONSUMER’ BRAND ARCHITECTS. WE SYNCHRONISE BRANDS WITH EMPOWERED CONSUMERS. We achieve this by designing “just for me” brand propositions 2 and weave those propositions into the lives of consumers in fresh and creative ways, to develop lasting customer relationships and advocacy. Jeeva Sathurayar | Joel Maloney 612 9993 0450 | info@33i.com.au @ www.33interactions.com.au
  • 3. AGENDA. » Introduction ± Trends 1. Desire for greater control in our » About this Briefing lives and over our interactions. 2. Search for meaning and authen- » Getting in Sync ticity. I 3. Trust in a person like yourself. » The Fine Print 4. Experience matters. 5. Participation as consumption. 6. Web 2.0 is mainstream 7. Social patterns enforced through digital tools. 8. Immersion of technology into our daily lives. 9. The Connected Customer. 10. Non-linear purchase funnel.
  • 4. IF MARKETING METHODS HAVE NOT EVOLVED IN CONCERT WITH TECHNOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL EVOLUTION, ARE WE OUT OF SYNC WITH CUSTOMERS? The short answer — YES! Consumers are adopting new technolo- Traditional marketing is not working: 95% of consumer gies such as social networking, podcasts, blogs, RSS, commenting, product introductions fail to reach ROI targets; 84% of rating, widgets, mobile, and apps faster than we can keep up. B2B marketing campaigns result in falling sales; 85% of Breakfast TV covers Twitter before most marketers have figured sales promotions are unprofitable; and 72% of TV adver- out how or if they should use it. tising campaigns fail to achieve positive ROI. Today’s II consumer is technically adept, open for experimentation Search engines have taken centre stage in purchase decision and — most importantly — more active than ever before. making and online social usage has altered the consumer Traditional communications, based on classical condi- marketing landscape. Brands offering people something, compete tioning and clever ways to dispose of products, does not with everything a few clicks away. address connected, savvy, and empowered consumers. The “Internet is a nearly perfect market because information is For brands to remain relevant, they must adapt to instantaneous and buyers can compare the offerings of sellers both emerging technologies and shifting consumer worldwide. The result is fierce price competition, dwindling behaviour, and create genuine customer value — brands product differentiation, and vanishing brand loyalty.” Robert need to get in sync with new consumers. Kuttner, BusinessWeek, 11 May 1998 Customers can find what they want, critique brands that don’t deliver, and connect with peers to spread criticism across the globe instantly.
  • 5. ABOUT THIS BRIEFING. This briefing is a ‘synopsis’ of a body of work undertaken by over 30 individuals from 12 countries, spanning five conti‑ nents — taking over four years to complete since late 2004 – and not to mention the numerous sources we researched. Brands were finding it harder to connect with consumers; conventional wisdom seemed irrelevant; and CRM systems and 1‑2‑1 promised much but delivered little. The Internet, globalisation, and hyper‑competition propelled us away from a production‑led economy to an economy driven by consumption. Our task was to identify this distinctly different creature known as the new consumer, and to develop frameworks to help brands and agencies develop real responsiveness to this new consumer. III We found that: a) brands were out of sync with new consumers; b) in a consumption‑driven economy, successful marketing must be underpinned by customer value; and c) successful marketing forms a dyanamic system that offers real respon‑ siveness to the new consumer. In other words, brands need to get in sync with new consumers by bringing together new marketing ideas to change the way they connect with their consumers. Brands need to rethink the way they create conversations and relationships with consumers and the way they engage consumers across channels. They need to provide valuable services over one‑way messaging, deal with an increasingly complicated and expansive content distribution model, and address the empowerment of connected customers. This briefing outlines trends in the consumer marketing landscape and core ideas that brands can address to remain relevant today. For information on workshops and strategic planning, please get in touch with Jeeva or Joel on 02 9993 0450. This briefing document is provided in good faith to parties receiving the “Getting in Sync with New Consumers” briefing and may not be distributed in any form, sold for profit, or incorporated in any documents without written permission from 33 Interactions Pty Ltd. Third party material referenced in this document is the domain of respective parties.
  • 6. GETTING IN SYNC. Organisations need to adapt to shifting consumer behaviour and emerging technologies and address the empowerment of connected customers immediately. We have developed a comprehensive programme to help organisations and their suppliers “get in sync” with new consumers and create lasting transactive relationships that result in consumer advocacy (recommendation and referral). Briefing sessions on “trends in the consumer marketing landscape” and “ideas in 21st century marketing” are provided at no cost to organisations and marketing agencies. Marketers can develop specific actions plans in full day workshops to IV address an increasingly volatile marketing landscape. Tailored workshops help participants deal with specific consumer marketing problems and address emerging trends and technologies. Our workshops take a step-by-step approach to plan and implement marketing programmes including the use of specific marketing tools, best practice examples, and related theory. Workshops cover: *1-2-1 communications; *interaction design; *social marketing; *marketing integration; *the new brand positioning; *micro-interactions; *crowd sourcing; *brand experience; and *technology-based marketing systems. Our strategic planning helps clients and their agencies align marketing strategy with contemporary consumer behaviour and emerging technologies, and covers: *alignment of marketing with the CEO’s agenda; *alignment of marketing strategy with the new consumer; *integration across the marketing communications mix for response; *ROI and ongoing customer dialogue; and *brand positioning in the 21st century. We use a zone based approach to focus participant effort on specific outcomes. The Five Zones© (Insight, Breakthrough, Transformational, Impact, and Results) enable participants to develop breakthrough strategies that achieve business objectives. To arrange a briefing session, please contact: jeeva.sathurayar@33i.com.au, howard.moodycliffe@33i.com.au or joel.maloney@33i.com.au.
  • 7. TRENDS IN THE CONSUMER MARKETING LANDSCAPE. 1. Desire for greater control in our lives and over our interactions. 2. Search for meaning and authenticity. 3. Trust in a person like yourself. 1 4. Experience matters. 5. Participation as consumption. 6. Web 2.0 is mainstream 7. Social patterns enforced through digital tools. 8. Immersion of technology into our daily lives. 9. The Connected Customer. 10. Non-linear purchase funnel. COPYRIGHT © 2007–2009 BY 33 INTERACTIONS | WWW.33INTERACTIONS.COM.AU | INFO@33I.COM.AU
  • 8. MORE CONTROL. 1. As we move faster and more furiously throughout our ‘always‑on, always‑connected’ lives, we become sharply aware of the demands on our time 2 and the lack of control we have. The end result is increased tension and a desire for greater control. And not having that control, especially in interactions with products and services, motivates people to become more vocal The more you see the less you know and audible about how they deal with The less you find out as you grow companies and brands. I knew much more then than I do now U2
  • 9. GUARDING 1.1 AGAINST INTRUSION. Customers face intense levels of message saturation and intrusion from marketing “...people are realising that web 2.0 is actually a today. huge time sink. Facebook, Twitter, Flickr and Plaxo 3 Customers have subsequently cultivated may have helped foster community and commu- much higher levels of resistance to nication, but they’ve also added immensely to the flow of often-interruptive messages that their marketing practises and messages. users receive, leading to information overload and Consumers have no desire to stop shopping possibly a nasty internet addiction.” altogether but they want to be engaged by Betsy Schiffman, Wired Magazine, April 2008 marketers in a more satisfying and less intrusive manner — they just want a better way to interact with marketers. COPYRIGHT © 2007–2009 BY 33 INTERACTIONS | WWW.33INTERACTIONS.COM.AU | INFO@33I.COM.AU
  • 10. SEARCH FOR MEANING AND AUTHENTICITY. 2. Authentic relationships are integral to our happiness and success. However, the quick-fire connections we seek on a day-to-day basis — to help deal with the stress, urgency and information 4 overindulgence in our lives — lack authenticity. LACKING THAT EMOTIONAL SUSTENANCE, CONSUMERS ARE CONTINUALLY SEARCHING FOR THE MEANING AND AUTHENTICITY THAT SUPPORTS THEM. 4
  • 11. 3. TRUST IN A PERSON LIKE YOURSELF. The lack of trust in companies and institutions has motivated people to trust their peers or people similar to them as the best sources of information. 5 According to the Edelman Trust Clearly, a deep void of trust Barometer, in most markets: exists between consumers, 1. 80% would refuse to buy goods businesses, and institutions. or services from a company they do not trust; 2. More than 70% will critique companies to the people they know; and 3. One-third share their opinions and experiences of a distrusted company on the Web. 5
  • 12. SIDEBAR PERCEPTION | REALITY | 80% OF CEO’S BELIEVE THEIR BRAND 6 PROVIDES A SUPERIOR 8% OF THEIR CUSTOMER CUSTOMERS EXPERIENCE AGREE Bain & Company Research
  • 13. 4. EXPERIENCE MATTERS. Savvy customers value novelty and Customers with infinite choice are new experiences. Overseas travel, not looking for more products — they along with vicarious experiences are looking for experiences that cater facilitated by the Internet, has raised to their deep-seated needs at every the bar. These days, the point of contact. expectations of value are much WE MUST REMEMBER THAT ALL higher for all brands. EXPERIENCES COMPETE AGAINST EACH OTHER FOR THE ATTENTION OF THE 7 CONSUMER. Companies intending to be relevant today must learn the art of creating experiences that genuinely engage their customers. Choice fatigued consumers are not looking for another product that hasn’t taken their true needs and desires into consideration. Sohrab Vossoughi, It’s All About Experience, BusinessWeek, April 11, 2008
  • 14. PARTICIPATION AS 5. CONSUMPTION. Consumers driven by experiences are increasingly obsessed with the here and now, and have a strong desire to collect as many experiences and stories as possible. Rather than being passive viewers they spend time searching, reading, scrutinising, authenticating, 8 collaborating, and organising. Participation is the new consumption. Status comes from finding an apprecia- tive audience — effectively pitting creative consumers against brands for audiences. Everyone is a creative. Anyone can make a YouTube video or design a MySpace page that sits on an equal media playing field with anything anyone else produces. Importantly, participation alleviates the tension that comes from a lack of authentic connections and relationships.
  • 15. 6. WEB2.0 IS MAINSTREAM. Web 2.0 is effectively the Widespread acceptance and frequent democratisation of the Internet. consumer usage of Web 2.0 technologies indicates that The paradigm shift towards an Internet distribution of content and services is that facilitates creativity, information challenging Internet destinations for sharing, and collaboration among users consumer attention. has become mainstream. 9 Web 2.0 based communities and hosted services from social-networking, wikis, blogs, and folksonomies (categorising content through tags) have reached the critical point where consumer adoption is far more significant than anyone ever anticipated. Homepage customisation, RSS feeds, shared bookmarks, content sharing, commenting, rating, desktop widgets, and Facebook are now commonplace across customer digital experiences. 9
  • 16. SOCIAL PATTERNS ENFORCED VIA DIGITAL 7. TOOLS. Human beings are social animals and we have a basic need to interact with one another to fulfil our emotional and material goals. For consumers, social is not a technology fad or a destination for marketing messages, it is a dimension of our humanity. The difference today is that technology is helping replicate social structures both online and off. Consider the customer that 10 consumes the best, the coolest, or the most expensive — they will gain the most status. Ratings, bookmarks, connected friends, and other tools help replicate and enforce that status in a digital economy. 10
  • 17. 7.1 THE WEB AS A SOCIAL MEDIUM. The most significant change in Internet behaviour is the mass acceptance of the Web as a social medium. From tools that help people communicate directly (such as instant messaging, e-mail, and twitter) to those that allow people to connect via non-traditional means (such as photo and video sharing, blogging, commenting, reviewing, and rating), the entire web is becoming social. Instead of simply creating social networking sites, the concept 11 of social computing is evolving towards making the entire Internet social. While most consumers use social networking to connect with others, this does not suggest that that there is no role for advertisers; it just has to be accomplished on the user’s terms. With the socialisation of the Internet, consumers are increas- ingly relying on peers for recommendations and on search to locate products. THE REAL VALUE FOR ADVERTISERS IS THE ROLE OF SOCIAL INFLUENCE IN PERSUADING CONSUMERS TO PURCHASE.
  • 18. IMMERSION OF TECHNOLOGY IN 8. OUR EVERYDAYLIVES. Shifts in technology are not what concern people. They are more concerned with how technology can support them in their daily lives and with the things they value. The technology of today is finding its role in the lives of consumers. If it is good, it gets used; if it’s great, it changes our lives... and it has changed our lives. We are squarely 12 in the age of the digital lifestyle and the Web has become so ubiquitous that it’s nearly invisible. All of the learning we’ve done with regards to marketing via the Web is suddenly bigger than the Internet. And, just as importantly, the challenges we are yet to solve on the Web are now challenges that exist beyond the PC. This is all relevant anywhere that digital technologies and experiences exist and, these days, that’s just about everywhere.
  • 19. 8.1 THE WEB IS EVERYWHERE. 13 Smartphones in general, specifically the iPhone, have radically accelerated Web usage on mobile devices. Growth is accelerating as carriers push flat data rate plans and this move is already leading content producers to accelerate investments in building robust mobile offerings. This means that the information and transparency the Web brings to the buying process, like price and quality, is free from the desktop. Continued advancements in device capabilities are making consumers more informed and better connected as they shop. The phone is just the beginning, too. Everything is getting connected: from in-store kiosks, storefront windows and shopping carts, to refrigerators, cars and so on. The march toward ubiquitous computing is on and we are just beginning to see the implications of how we interact with digital technologies and vice versa.
  • 20. THE GAMING FAMILY. SIDEBAR 36% of American parents say they play computer and video games. 14 80% of gamer parents say they play video games with their kids. 66% feel that playing games has brought their families closer together. 14
  • 21. 9. THE CONNECTED CONSUMER. “The rapid adoption of broadband and technology has fostered the rise of the connected customer. These customers “continue to be exposed to traditional mass media but simultaneously access information directly (anywhere, anytime) to make informed choices 15 when engaging brands, marketers and special-interest groups on a one-to-one basis.” Source: Marketing Science Institute “Connected customers” don’t just surf the digital world, they shape it! They are more intense about their digital communications and media use. Moreover, these “connected consumers” are actively shaping their engagement with brands and retailers, and influencing each others’ perceptions and buying behaviour. Connected customers are no longer confined to certain segments - they roughly mirror the entire Australian population. For these customers, the new experience might be a conversation or it might be an interactive storytelling session. ONE THING IS FOR SURE - IT IS DEFINITELY NOT ABOUT THE STATUS QUO! 15
  • 22. CONNECTED WORLDS ARE TRANSPARENT. SIDEBAR “... both tempests began with candidates making a critical mistake in the internet age: lowering their guard at private events, under the false belief that there are still private events. The incidents demonstrate how the net has flattened the 16 landscape for political candidates, who can no longer pander to a compartmentalized audience without fear of it leaking out to less-receptive voters.” Wired (April 2008) - Clinton and Obama were caught making “critical” comments by bloggers at private events.
  • 23. 9.1 MY MEDIA. In the sixties, a generation fixated on creating new forms of community and expression forced media and advertisers to adapt. Today, a new generation is following suit and dragging the rest of us along for the ride. This generation expects that they can customise and personalise everything in their world and 17 daily experiences. Everything must become ‘their media’ — and their media holds more weight in their community. This generation demands products and services that cater to their moods and desires and will actively search, modify, or create their own products and services to meet this demand. “CONSUMERS ARE THE NEW MEDIA AND THEY KNOW IT.” Elizabeth Ross, Tribal DDB, AdAge, 8 April, 2008
  • 24. MEDIA MESHING. 9.2 Media meshing is a behavioural phenom- More than a third of all ages say that they enon that occurs when people begin have surfed the net while watching televi- an experience in one medium, such as sion and almost half say they have listened watching television; then shift to another, to the radio or watched TV while online. 18 such as surfing the Internet; and maybe Ofcom | Times Online even a third, such as listening to music. The explanation for this behaviour is the constant search for complementary information, different perspectives, and even emotional fulfilment.
  • 25. 9.3 MICRO INTERACTIONS. With information overload, permanent “on” situations, and media proliferation consumers are moving toward shorter micro-interactions like SMS, Twitter, and Facebook. Consumers prefer 19 micro-interactions through which strong, definitive opinions can be articulated. These opinions carry a “larger than life” influence that make it easier, quicker, and more meaningful for consumers to socially influence each other as they make product purchase and brand affinity decisions. TOOLS IN THE MICRO-INTERACTIONS REALM ALLOW FOR SOCIAL INFLUENCE BECAUSE THEY DEMAND SO LITTLE OF THE SENDER AND EVEN LESS OF THE RECIPIENT.
  • 26. NON LINEAR FUNNEL. 10. Traditional marketing is built around a linear purchase funnel, starting with awareness and ending with the sale. The proliferation of new digital touch-points has made this concept obsolete as we face a complex digital ecosystem that includes video, widgets, online advertising, podcasting, search, virtual worlds, blogs, mobile, gaming, desktop applications, podcasting… All of this is intensified by the rise of social computing and user participation. 20 Customers snack on digital content and share ideas about products and brands via an array of devices — brand awareness and purchase consideration is formed just as much by consumers as by branding efforts. They research online and buy in stores; they shop in stores and buy online. The Internet has shattered the entire concept of a linear purchase funnel.
  • 27. New marketing needs to incorporate new ideas. But 21 The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but IN ESCAPING FROM THE OLD ONES. John Maynard Keynes
  • 28. THE FINE PRINT. This briefing document and “the body of work” referred to as ‘Getting in Sync with New Consumers©’ is an ongoing labour of love for all involved and forms the basis for how 33 Interactions and its partners help businesses get their marketing act together. While we are willing to provide briefing sessions and relevant versions of this document to any that ask, our [pesky and protective, yet sensible] legal people have taken steps to protect our intellectual property. Copyright of this document, variants of this document, and the ‘body of work’ referred to as ‘Getting in Sync with New 22 Consumers©’ is wholly owned by Jeeva Sathurayar, Joel Maloney, and 33 Interactions Pty Ltd. All material contained in this document (including any supplementary data) is the property of Jeeva Sathurayar, Joel Maloney, and 33 Interactions Pty Ltd, and its affiliates, and is protected by copyright; all rights regarding this material are reserved by Jeeva Sathurayar, Joel Maloney, and 33 Interactions Pty Ltd and includes but is not limited to Transdigital Communications Planning®, the 33 Customer Advocacy Ladder©, and The Five Zones Strategic Planning Framework©. This briefing document is provided in good faith to parties receiving the “Getting in Sync with New Consumers” briefing and may not be distributed in any form, sold for profit, reproduced, developed, or incorporated in any documents without written permission from 33 Interactions Pty Ltd. Third party material referenced in this document is the domain of respective parties. © 2009, 33 Interactions Pty Ltd (ABN 87 408 247 635). All rights reserved.
  • 29. CLOSING CREDITS. 33 Interactions would like to thank the following Flickr members who have offered their work for use in this presentation under the Creative Commons Attribution Licence. All images in this presentation are copyright to their original authors. 1 / ClickFlashPhotos 9 / Sndrv 16 / Mandolyn 23 2 / Hamed Masoumi 10 / Emdot 18 / Striatic 3 / Lucas Hoyos 11 / Capitan Giona 19 / Futileboy 5 / Greg Loby 13 / Chegs 20 / Abulic Monkey 7 / InfoMofo 14 / Andreanna 8 / Beija-Flor 15 / Luc Legay