We recently blogged about research into the challenges facing marketers tasked with generating loyalty for their brands. Based on that research alone, marketers face significant barriers creating loyalty programs that have a chance of succeeding. Fixating on creating a loyalty club, issuing cards to customers with points awarded based on purchases redeemable for discounts is not the right place to begin.
Instead, marketers need to consider ways of driving consumption of their products across all kinds of customers, be they classified loyal or not, in the most efficient manner available. SMS text message sweepstakes contests promoted at and around the point of sale, and offering many rewards versus one, are a proven tactic that could be packaged and presented to customers as a loyalty program.
Such promotions can be executed quickly and largely in “hands off” mode for the marketer when using a mobile campaign management system like that offered by Interactive Mediums. That benefit came to mind as I came across additional research into customer loyalty that underscores the importance of an effective engagement strategy, more so than one designed to create “loyal” customers, who many in fact be a mythical concept. Consider the following from an article titled, “The 30 major factors behind a successful customer loyalty programme,” from TheWiseMarketer.com (registration required):
Focus on data value, not just repeat business: “The smarter operators used loyalty programmes not to buy repeat visits but to garner information from their customers in order to learn more about them: who their most profitable and least profitable customers were, what they wanted, and what changes or offerings would be most likely to make them truly loyal.”
Spend more time on engagement strategy, less on selling to customers you don’t want: “In Philip Kotler’s version of a Pareto Principle chart, the top 20% of customers generate 80% of the profits, while the bottom 30% of customers eat up 50% of the profits that the others produce.”
Paradoxically, attempting to sell to past customers is a distracting exercise: “Customer win-back expert Michael Lowenstein (of Harris Interactive) says that the success rate in approaching ‘lost’ customers can be three to four times as high as it is when prospecting for new customers. For example, the rate for converting prospects might typically be 5%, while that for reactivating inactive customers might be as high as 15% – 20%.”
These are just three of 30 different points, but were especially notable given the fit with mobile marketing tactics such as sweepstakes promotions. Interactive Mediums’ Customer Engagement Platform has powered effective promotions for many marketers who didn’t likely approach the project with the facts in hand regarding loyalty.
Marketers yet to embrace mobile marketing tactics such as sweepstakes as part of a broader engagement strategy need to get started now; because if you don’t your competition will, making it that much harder to break through the engagement barrier.
