Is there Power in Personalisation? Part 2

Following Eagle Eye Senior Account Manager, Olivia Jackson's last blog which discussed the importance of personalisation, we explore what tools marketers need for success, along with benchmarks and examples they can take inspiration from.

Author: Olivia Jackson, Senior Account Manager at Eagle Eye

Following my last blog, which discussed the importance of personalisation, I explore what tools marketers need for success, along with benchmarks and examples they can take inspiration from.
 
To some, Amazon have long been the poster child for personalisation. Every customer’s homepage is different, tailored to offer products based on what a customer has viewed in the past, along with recommendations based on past purchases. Even the sales messages are different, customised by geography and demography, as well as personal preferences, to name a few.
 
However, that’s not to say Amazon is the only business taking data and turning it into something more meaningful. Using sophisticated customer relationship management (CRM), customer data platform (CDP) analytics and marketing execution engines, businesses of every shape and size are using customer data to offer more consistent and relevant content, offers and engagement. Take a look at a few of my favourite examples of personalisation below.
 
Hyper-Personalisation
 
One of the most sophisticated forms of personalisation used at present, hyper-personalisation can be defined as the use of real-time data and analytics capabilities to deliver relevant offers, messages, content and product recommendations for customers.
 
The Canadian grocer, Loblaws, delivers over 150 million offer permutations every week to members of its PC Optimum loyalty scheme, ensuring they always receive relevant offers and that every set of offers is unique to each customer. While there may be thousands of offers available across the store, customers will only see offers in their app’s wallet that have been tailored to them, based on their shopping history. Each customer’s wallet is unique and contains offers that reflect their preferences.

optimum-promo_1_jpg.jpeg

Credit: Loblaw Digital
 
Moreover, it’s working. As of 2019, PC Optimum was delivering personalised offers worth over $1 billion each year to over 18 million members. Further, Loblaws is now using data from the programme to deliver relevant ads to customers browsing online and thank them for allowing Loblaws to use their data and advertise to them.  
 
Loblaws uses sophisticated CRM, CDP and loyalty tools to understand its customers via their digital connection through PC Optimum in order to thank and better serve them with rewards and offers.
 
User Curated Personalisation
 
For me, Spotify are the brand to beat when it comes to understanding and using customer behaviour to enhance the user experience in a meaningful way. Using customers’ listening habits, they curate personalised playlists based on their tastes, suggesting new artists to listen to. Results showed after a listener played a new artist’s track once, 80% then sought out that track to listen again.
 
Further, its run of wildly successful big data marketing campaigns started with ‘Thanks, 2016. It's been weird,’ where it used customer data in irreverent ways, including using geographic analysis. For example, a UK poster read: "Dear 3,749 people who streamed 'It's The End Of The World As We Know It' the day of the Brexit Vote. Hang in There,” while a US one read: "Dear person who made a playlist called: 'One Night Stand With Jeb Bush Like He's a Bond Girl in a European Casino,' We have so many questions." It then tailored this content event further, down to city level, with this billboard appearing in New York: "Dear person in the Theater District who listened to the Hamilton soundtrack 5,376 times this year. Can you get us tickets?"

spotify_new_york.png

Credit: Medium.com
 
Since 2015, Spotify has also sent customers ‘Year in Review’ emails, with insights into a listener’s usage, including most played song, most listened to artist, total listening time, etc. These personalised interactions drive brand affinity, create social buzz and have thus ensured that Spotify continues to invest in the concept each year, including introducing a standalone page in-app for the feature in 2019. Why, you ask? According to its global head of consumer and product marketing, June Sauvaget, it’s because of ‘FOMO’ (the “fear of missing out”), and knock-on impact of enticing in new subscribers.
 
Like Loblaws, Spotify is using the in-built digital customer connection that comes via its streaming music platform to analyse the customer data it generates. It uses the resulting insight to drive actions that demonstrate relevance, and so drive sales and new customer acquisition as well as loyalty.

spotify_phones_spread.png

Credit: Elite Daily
 
Product Personalisation
 
Matching a product with elements based on a Facebook profile may seem gimmicky, but Cadbury leveraged the power of video on social media to create personalised videos. Using age, interests, location and photos, Cadbury generated a video of their content, suggesting at the end a customer’s taste in chocolate. Using the data it had available, the campaign saw a 65% CTR and a 33.6% conversion rate.
 
In the same way, Coke launched its phenomenally successful ‘Share a Coke’ campaign in 2013. The premise was simple; instead of the usual Coca-Cola logo, customers could buy a bottle with their name on it. The campaign was phenomenally successful, in part due to the uptake of Millennials wanting to jump on the social media bandwagon and share pictures of their personalised bottles.

cokecola.png

Credit: Branding Mag
 
But it didn’t stop there. Coke extended the campaign into 2014 and, by the end, they had sold more than 150 million personalised bottles, growing sales for the first time in 10 years.
 
Chris Ross, Coca-Cola Senior Brand Activation Manager, credits the success of the campaign to using personalisation to connect with friends or loved ones and creating special moments of happiness and memories.
 
Final Thoughts
 
What’s key in all these examples is the data. Without data, none of these are possible. Dependent on the company, certain types of personalisation will work better than others, but all businesses have the ability to incorporate some form of personalisation in their marketing.
 
They all also use CRM, CDP and loyalty or promotional marketing execution engines to embed personalisation using D.I.A.L (Data, leading to Insight, driving Action to promote Loyalty) into marketing campaign strategic planning, creative design and measurement.
 
Catch the final, Part 3 in this series next week, where I look at what’s next for personalisation – and what tools marketers can use to increase personalisation whenever and wherever customers want it.
 
This is the second of a series of blogs on the power of personalisation in marketing. Click here to read Part 1.

To find out more about how Eagle Eye can help you personalise your marketing strategy and execution to foster more relevant and profitable customer engagement, please contact us.