Tuesday 3 May 2011

Building Meaningful Digital Strategy

Issue: If consumers are spending 30% of their time online, why does marketing department spend only 5% of their budgets online?


We are amidst the second wave of excitement around digital. In the ‘90s, there was a lot of excitement around the new way of selling products and services to the customers. The euphoria was short-lived. There was nothing wrong with the channel – what we failed to realise that it takes a long time for habits to change.

Over the decade, as Internet grew, our target customers have become more active online, embracing all manner of new digital media habits—from social networks to smart phones—and they are continuing to spend more time and money online despite the economic meltdown. Unfortunately, digital marketing has been largely unable to benefit from this shift. The reason is simple: People no longer need what we offer to them. We continue to dish out what we had created in the ‘90s (or micro-improved variants of the same content) and expect our consumers to lap it up.

What gets passed around as Digital Way of engagement - spam emails, banners, commercials, pop-ups – no longer catches the fancy of customers. In fact, they are actively taking steps to get rid of them. Today, customers actively take part in selection of the content, presentation and audience.

And this is not a passing fad. Digital connectivity is here to stay. It will radically change the way a business engage with the world (consisting of customers, prospects, defectors and critics). As the ‘digital way of life’ sinks in people’s psyche, it is important that businesses recognise this trend and build strategies for it.

So what is a meaningful Digital Strategy?

Digital Strategy is NOT about Social Media. Social Media is – at best - a part of digital strategy. Neither are mailers, banners or pop-up. A mere presence on the web – be it website, or a presence on the social networks – does not constitute a digital strategy. There exists a wide divergence on the exact definition of Digital strategy. For the purpose of this blog, I have used a generic definition of digital strategy as a process of specifying an organisation's vision, goals, opportunities and initiatives in order to maximise the business benefits digital investments and efforts provide to the organisation. These can includes customer intelligence, collaboration, new product/market exploration, sales and service optimisation, enterprise technology architectures and processes, innovation and governance using marketing and customer-focused efforts such as web sites, mobile, eCommerce, social, site and search engine optimization, and advertising.

The profusion of social media sites, fuelled by easily accessible tools for content generation has put customers in the centre-stage. Connected customers have become ‘prosumers’ (borrowing a term from Alvin Toffler), producing and consuming information as they surf in the digital space. They actively seek to engage with the businesses for a variety of needs. They seek information, they provide feedback and are willing to be consulted. Being empowered, and equipped with the tools, they definitely not appreciate being ignored! If they have a point of view, they post it, share it and invite comments on it. Be it a product, service, provider or an event. They can be cryptic and post their views in less than 140 words (on Twitter), and/or provide details in greater length (on a blog), and/or provide visual evidences (Flicker) or even videos (YouTube). And the list does not end there! If your website does not provide enough information on your products/services or if they do not agree with your view, they can leave comments on your website using sidewiki!

This empowerment of the prosumer poses a great risk and an opportunity for businesses. The risks are pretty obvious. A serious (and malicious) campaign against your business can be launched with little effort and, if directed carefully, can cause serious damage to your brand. After the explosion of BP’s Deepwater Horizon drilling platform, for example, Leroy Stick (an alias) began publishing the tweets of a totally made-up representative of a similarly bogus BP global public relations division. While crude oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico, devastating the regional ecology and economy, the satirical Twitterer (@BPGlobalPR) tweeted about the division’s lunch menu and other inane matters. Tens of thousands followed his updates—far more than the number who followed the real BP Twitter account. Through this low-cost effort, Stick helped keep Americans’ rage boiling as BP scrambled to plug the well and restore faith in its brand.

On the other hand, a well-thought strategy to engage with the prosumers on digital space, can provide new business opportunities, insights and opportunities to collaborate more actively with your customers and prospects alike. And that too, at a fraction of cost.

The prosumer seeks connectivity. The prosumer is looking at ways to engage with you. So why are businesses shying away from this opportunity to work closely with their customers and prospects. For one, they have little idea on the composition of the prosumers – who are they, what is their profile, are they my potential customers or just ‘teenagers wasting their time on the Net’. Second, businesses are (most often) unaware of what is being talked about them. Third, they are unclear how to channelize the prosumers into meaningful conversation, and for what purpose.

A meaningful digital strategy provides answers to precisely these questions, provides insight to the popular sentiments on your business and helps you build activities to enable you to engage with your market, build meaningful dialogue and prepares you to counter any negative sentiments arising out of internal or external factors.

Unfortunately, you cannot buy digital strategy off the shelf! Your digital strategy should reflect the uniqueness of your business. It should be based on a careful deliberation of the face that you want to present to the world, how you want to be perceived, the scenarios that you foresee and your typical response to the scenarios. These gets built and refined over time, as your digital engagement increases. Your digital strategy may get ‘dictated’ by the prosumers – they may disagree with your digital persona creating a situation for you to ‘think through’ the strategy again.

Scary as it may sound, building a digital strategy is as much simple (or complex) as thinking through your business/marketing strategy. The difference being, you work with ‘real’ insights gathered from the digital world, and the response to your strategy is far more quicker than any other strategy.
Before I end, one word of caution. Digital strategy is a one way street. You cannot decide to abandon it half-way. Once you have built your presence on the digital space and have decided to engage with the world, back-tracking can cause you more damage than before. In all my engagements, I do not fail to emphasise this over and over again. Before you start your journey, you need to be completely sure that this is the way forward, as it will radically change the way you engage with your customers and prospects going forward.

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