Monday, January 1, 2018

Touchpoints In The Consumer Journey

Touchpoints In The Consumer Journey

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Too many marketers continue to rely on last-click attribution, according to a report by ClickZ, without understanding the value played by all touchpoints in the customer journey. Here are six drivers of multi-touch attribution, by author Sam Carter,that will play a big role in 2018.

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According to Pearl Zhu, author of the Digital Master book series, saying for ClickZ, “One of the biggest pitfalls for performance measurement is to measure the ‘part’ with ignorance of the ‘whole,’” Her quote reflects the growing realization of marketing measurement’s critical role, says the report.

The report shows a requirement to evolve beyond attributing the value of a conversion to single customer touchpoints (the ‘part’) toward an understanding of marketing effectiveness throughout the ‘whole’ customer journey, says the author.

Multi-touch attribution delivers change through modeling all of a brand’s customer interactions to attribute fractional credit for each conversion to each unique touchpoint.

Here are some of the key drivers of the change for 2018:

Marc Benioff, Chairman and CEO of Salesforce, believes the convergence of powerful forces, including social, mobile, cloud, big data and community, is reshaping the world. “The combination of these technologies unlocks an incredible opportunity to connect everything together in a new way,” he says.

For the first time, silos are actually collapsing, says the report, allowing access to integrated, end-to-end customer data: the basis for multi-touch marketing measurement. In November, Google and Salesforce announced a global partnership enabling GA360 clients to integrate online and offline customer touchpoints.

The opportunity that this interconnectivity provides has helped businesses shine a brighter light on the tangible role that digital advertising is playing anywhere in the customer journey.

Procter & Gamble has been causing a major stir all year, says the report, starting in January when Chief Brand Officer Marc Pritchard called upon P&G’s agencies to clean up transparency and demand that all platforms provide third-party measurement. Pritchard threatened to pull spend if they failed to comply, and was true to his word.

In  Q2, the company cut $140 million in digital advertising spend, identifying and eliminating ineffective ads. P&G experienced no drop in revenue or sales volume.

While P&G cut 65% of their year-on-year Q3 spend, L’Oréal ramped theirs up 76% over the same period. Having carried out a similar crackdown on wasted spend, L’Oréal renewed confidence by better placing digital spend to measure the returns.

% Change in Digital Spend

 

Q3 2016 vs Q3 2017

Brand

Digital Spend % Change

L’Oreal

+76%

Comcast

48%

Volkswagen

44%

Toyota

24%

Ford

01%

Daimler

-3%

Nestle

-18

LVHM

-33

Anheuser Busch

-41

Unilever

-41

General Motors

-58

P&G

-65

Source: ClickZ, December 2017

Developments at Facebook continue to enable more cohesive cross-channel campaigns, particularly leveraging the full suite of their platforms: Instagram, Facebook and AI-driven engagement on Messenger

These represent great opportunities for marketers to acquire customers at a sustainably low cost and increase their lifetime value. However, for most, these new opportunities are not only executed but measured exclusively within the same advertiser’s ecosystem. With most marketers using more than one ad channel, this inevitably creates data silos across an organization, a less coherent view of the actual customer journey and the risk of each channel reporting total credit for the same conversions.

This increasing complexity is combined with spiraling costs. We’ve witnessed a 65% increase in average cost per click in paid search since 2015. As a result, businesses are challenging these partisan tools for measuring marketing effectiveness to gain a holistic view of the customer, their touchpoints, costs and value.

It feels like multi-touch attribution is now just as imperative for the CEO and CFO as the CMO, says the report. The CMO Council and Deloitte found that more than 70% of CEOs now expect marketing to drive revenue growth. What was once a creative brief must now evolve to fully engage with data, science and technology.

Marketo expects marketing to grow revenue and acquire new customers, while improving the customer experience. By contrast, the survey found that nearly one-third of marketers don’t measure their contribution to revenue. Even fewer (14.8%) say they contribute to more than half of company revenues. When pushed on the matter, half admitted to guessing the number.

The biggest barriers to successfully implementing multi-touch attribution are organizational, says the report. Many companies are unwilling to treat data-driven marketing measurement as a business change rather than a project. With mature measurement practices, the CMO must work closely with the CFO while driving business growth at a manageable cost, concludes the report.

Data, says the report, helps us predict where the highest value opportunity exists to invest marketing spend. Additionally, we can calculate the true incremental value of marketing activity and incorporate external events into modeling.

For example, Starbucks leverages weather data so granularly that they can predict tiny variations in demand, street by street. They then adjust stock and display, and drive sales, accordingly. The profound advancements here are a real cause for excitement in the immediate future.

For additional information from ClickZ, pleas visit here.





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January 1, 2018 at 03:55PM

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