The practice of using analytics to make advertising messages and product experiences feel unique to each customer. Personalized marketing is much more than just inserting the customer name into the same marketing email that goes to all of your customers. It’s about reaching the right person with the right message at the right moment with the right suggestions.
When you personalize your marketing, you send the right message to the right people at the right time. Not only does it give your content a touch of humanity, it can drive revenue, too. Here’s why you should make your marketing unique to every customer.
Personalized marketing is when you tailor your marketing based on the data you’ve collected from your contacts. This includes interests, shopping preferences, purchase history, and more.
When you use this data to customize the content your contacts receive via email, ads, and other platforms, you’re using personalized marketing.
As companies have become more familiar with this strategy, personalization has affected many forms of communication with customers. Here are a few recent trends:
Custom emails: Customers are 29% more likely to open personalized emails—and those emails drive 6x times more transactions than generic ones.
Targeted discounts: According to a 2017 report, over 60% of consumers say getting a discount within an hour of interacting with a brand can help drive loyalty.
Less generic advertising: With the rise of personalization, consumers are becoming increasingly less accepting of generic ads: Impersonal shopping experiences frustrate nearly three-quarters of customers. On the other hand, over 70% of shoppers respond to marketing only when it’s customized to their interests.
When done right, both businesses and customers win. Some of personalized marketing’s main benefits include:
The more we feel that someone understands our needs, the more inclined we are to trust them with our problems.
When you deliver a personalized experience to a customer, it tells them that you understand their pain points. It makes their whole customer journey easier, and it transforms the buying process from a transaction into a relationship.
As you build that relationship, the customer learns to trust your recommendations and will be more likely to go to you when they have a need you can meet.
You know the value of making your customers happy. After all, 65% of a company's business comes from repeat customers.
Personalization can also earn your customers’ loyalty. Over 40% of consumers say they will like become repeat customers of a business that offers a personalized shopping experience, and 80% of self-identified frequent shoppers only buy from brands that do so.
Personalized marketing is a more cost-effective strategy than traditional advertising. When you send a general ad out, some percentage of the audience will have no use for the product. Your return on investment (ROI) is limited.
Personalized recommendations, however, can drive customers to spend more. Almost half of the shoppers surveyed made an impulse purchase based on a brand’s suggestions, and 85% of those people were happy with their purchase.
According to McKinsey & Company, one of the world's leading producers of marketing insights, personalized marketing can increase sales by 10% (or more!) and deliver up to 8x the ROI on what you spend on marketing.
According to a survey of marketing influencers, nearly two-thirds reported that data-driven personalization was the most difficult digital strategies to execute.
Don’t let that stop you. It might not be easy, but it can be worth it. Here are some common struggles and how you can overcome them.
To deliver a truly personalized experience, you need to be able to accurately predict how each person will respond to a certain product or scenario. That means you need to collect data about your contacts (stored in a CRM), which can be hard to do.
There are 2 basic channels for gathering data:
Analytics track people’s behavior. The pieces of code you place on your site don't intrude on the customer experience, but some customers are uncomfortable when they see ads for products that they recently viewed.
Customer surveys and forms are more transparent, and many customers are more comfortable with them, but they take time to fill out. And the more questions a form has, the less likely a participant is to finish.
It's difficult to walk the line between transparency and convenience, but it’s possible. Before you make a change, ask yourself, “Would I actually appreciate this, or would it annoy me or creep me out?” Always put yourself in the customer’s shoes.
While some consumers like when brands speak to their interests, they dislike when those brands come on too strong. Only 6% of consumers in a 2017 survey expressed appreciation for retargeted ads.
It's all about balance. You need to clearly show the value you’re providing with personalized content and avoid aggressive targeted ads. At the same time, you need to emphasize their respect for privacy without focusing on it so much that your audience starts to wonder if they should be worried.
To develop an effective personalized marketing strategy, companies need to have the staff, funds, and time to do it. Automation can go a long way toward reducing the time and labor costs of personalization, but the overall strategy still needs to come from people.
Personalized marketing needs to be planned, targeted, and tracked. Tech can handle the nitty-gritty of data aggregation, but you still have to figure out what data matters to you and how to use it. You have to know how willing your customers are to share their information, when to collect it, and when to send out personalized messages.
You also have to keep track of what's working so you can funnel your resources into the most effective channels. Only people can do that. Make sure your marketing team has enough resources and that you’re not relying on your algorithms to handle everything.
To structure and monitor a personalization strategy, you need a team of skilled professionals, including:
Coordinate with senior leadership so that your efforts align with larger corporate goals, and make sure you have a plan in place to produce high-quality content with an appealing design.
As mentioned, customers want personalized experiences, but many are also wary of having their personal information out in the world. Remember to think about what data is most effective to track, and focus on the data that will allow you to deliver the best experience to your customers that you possibly can.
As a consumer, who would you trust more?:
You’re likely to trust the second company more. That trust can then solidify as your relationship with the business develops and they stay true to their promise to only send you high-quality personalized content.
When you have enough data about your contacts, you can organize them based on:
Not all of these segments will be relevant to your marketing, so decide what characteristics will help you send them messages that matter.
There are a number of different platforms that can benefit from personalization. You can send automated emails, remarketing ads—even landing pages. It all depends on where your customers are spending time. Use your data to figure out optimal placements.
Consumers expect businesses to customize their shopping experience to their interests. Good personalized marketing makes for happier customers, increases brand loyalty, and improves profits. It can be challenging, but the payoff is worth it!