Social selling – Consumer vs shopper – Who is the audience?
Papirfly
2minutes read
Marketing and selling have taken a rather drastic turn in recent years.While advertising online has existed in some shape or form since the 1990s, social media has turned it on its head. Social media serves as an incubator for relationships of all kinds. While initially started for the primary function of connecting with friends,successful businesses fully take advantage of the selling potential found within social media.
Known as social selling, the process develops a relationship between the buyer and seller. With so much effort directed towards social selling, how can a more traditionalshopper marketing campaignsurvive? Very easily, to be honest. It just takes some careful planning and proper execution.
The difference between consumer and shopper
Retail marketing focuses on brick and mortar retail but is not limited to in-store marketing and takes into account that the shopper and the consumer may not be the same. If the wife buys the food on her way home from work and the husband cooks supper (or vice versa), clearly the shopper and the consumer are two different people. If a child wants a new collar for the dog but the parents are buying it, there is another split between roles. This affects how the consumer plans ahead and what the shopper actually buys.
During a “store pickup” customer journey, where an online consumer is also the shopper during the initial stages of shopping, and may have been converted through social selling, the shopper who actually picks up the products at the local store may be a different person. This is where traditional brick-and-mortar sales and marketing tactics can really shine.
Upselling to the shopper by introducing upgrades and cross-selling where the shopper adds additional products to the basket before proceeding to the final checkout are tactics that can make “store pickup” a very valuable strategy. Upselling and cross-selling are not limited to interactions with a salesperson, such as “would you like a belt with those trousers?”. Displays and packaging, category management, posters and store layout all play a role in increasing the value of each customer.
Social selling needs to be an integral part of the brick and mortar shopping experience. For shopper marketing, the social part will be more targeted towards the consumer who may or may not be the shopper, while the in-store experience is 100% focused on influencing the shopper. Social selling can help the consumer direct the shopper to your stores and may even help the consumer by providing a pre-made shopping list for the shopper.
Remember analytics
One of the beautiful aspects to the Internet is all the data it provides. Analytics can provide a lot of information about the interests of consumers and the buying habits of shoppers. Using this information can help you develop campaigns that convert both consumers and shoppers.
In the age of social selling, you don’t need to completely rely on Google and Facebook to market your storefront. All you need is to properly understand your demographic and design customer journeys that cater to consumers and shoppers alike.
Marketing – What is marketing in business? Is it important?
Papirfly
17minutes read
Marketing is all around us. In our inboxes, on the side of the roads, on our televisions.
When the whole world has a product, service or idea to sell, only the strongest marketing strategies and creatives will be enough to cut through the noise.
It goes without saying that to grow into new markets, increase leads and raise brand awareness a business needs a successful marketing strategy in place.
To deliver an effective strategy, you either need an agency by your side that truly understands your business needs, or an in-house team that will help you to strategise, plan, execute and review your activity.
What is marketing?
Historically, types of marketing have been split into two overarching categories, traditional and digital. Traditional marketing includes anything from newspaper advertising and billboards to radio and direct mail. Digital marketing includes things such as Pay Per Click (PPC), Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) and social media marketing. One of the most significant differences between these two categories is that the latter provides much greater tracking of campaign effectiveness, whereas traditional methods are incredibly hard to quantify.
While digital marketing is certainly on top, traditional very much still has its place in the world. For example, if you were to promote over 70s life insurance, you’d likely be more inclined to use traditional channels to reach them over digital.
A definition of marketing
The concept of marketing means different things to different people. In a nutshell, it’s the what, why and how you communicate your product, service or idea to your target audiences.
In principle, you have a marketing strategy that includes your channels, audiences and personas, messaging strands, creative concepts and distribution calendar. But as the marketing landscape becomes ever more complex, it takes a dedicated team to constantly adapt and refine your digital and traditional marketing campaigns to stay ahead of the competition.
Most online definitions do tend to agree loosely that marketing revolves around the customers. And that’s important. From the initial concept of a product or service to the sale and aftercare, the customer should be at the heart of your business and marketing strategies.
People may come from different cultures and consume promotions in different ways. But what remains a constant when looking at marketing strategies is finding a way of communicating your sales message in a way real people will relate to. People don’t want to be sold to, they want to be informed, engaged and entertained. The art of selling through marketing is all about how you communicate.
People care about what your business can do for them. It’s about turning an insight, a pain point or a USP into something tangible for them. For example, you wouldn’t say ‘our design company is the coolest ever’, but you might say ‘fresh design that will bring your brand into the 21st century’.
The Four Ps
Known as the marketing mix, the traditional model of marketing used the Four Ps. These were:
Product
Price
Place
Promotion
When services, as well as a product, became marketable, the Four Ps developed into the Seven Ps and included:
Participants
Physical Evidence
Processes
Then digital marketing made the experience of buying more personal. Consumers expectations increased exponentially. And while the marketing mix remains a reference point, it became only a small part of a much wider conversation.
The Four Cs
As the digital age advanced the Four Ps were seen as lacking and a modern version, the Four Cs evolved.
Consumer
Costs
Convenience
Communication
Here the focus changed from creating a product that a target group of customers wanted to buy, to creating products that satisfied a customer need.
Costs were still meant to cover overheads, but customers would set prices based on what they were prepared to pay. Marketers had to think about the cost of a consumer switching to a competitor.
Convenience meant making it as easy as it could be to get the product in your customers’ hands. And instead of promotion, communication became a two-way street. It was a conversation – “Hey brand XYZ. Do you know what would be really useful to go with that product I just bought?”
With the pace of change in online promotional techniques, it’s no longer a nice principle to put the customer at the heart of everything. It’s a necessity
Marketing techniques
Digital marketing software is constantly changing the environment, blending online and offline experiences into one journey. And as this collection becomes more and more exhaustive with the development of new technologies and platforms, discovering ways to streamline the marketing process has become increasingly valuable.
Without these, it would be exceptionally difficult for organisations of any size and experience to keep tabs on the extensive range of channels they can use to engage with their audience.
Here are just some of the common types of marketing companies today should be looking to utilise:
Internet marketing
Internet marketing is a more generic term to describe all aspects of promoting a business through the internet. Internet marketing might include using affiliates to generate sales in exchange for a commission or retargeting adverts that follow consumers around sites. As well as the other aspects of online marketing, explained below.
In-store marketing
Promoting your business or product in-store could mean handing out samples, the use of posters and point of sale, a catalogue or having a shop-in-shop experience.
Search engine optimisation
Having a site that ranks well on search engines, such a Google and Bing is important. SEO is the process of helping a site be optimised for getting great search results.
This includes keyword research, which uncovers the words and phrases that consumers are searching for, then building site content around those words. The ones that return the best information for customer search queries get ranked higher and visited more. Link-building to that content is another key aspect.
Content marketing
Creating good content builds relationships and gets you ranked well in search engines. But you want to promote it too. This might be through other sites or bloggers and if it’s great it might get a link to your site from a high-ranking newspaper site.
Social media marketing
Social media offers a huge marketing opportunity. Most platforms have monthly visits into the 100s of millions, so the reach is massive. Here marketers generally use a blend of organic posts and paid adverts to promote their businesses.
Search engine marketing is marketing to get yourself ranked highly in search engines. Whereas SEO is about building a site to get great returns in a search engine, SEM uses paid channels to achieve similar results. This means using paid-for strategies such as AdWords, or PPC as its also known. Like SEO keywords are crucial and you have to account for other factors such as ‘does an advert link through to the right page?’. These affect your quality score, which is a factor in how high up the search results your advert is displayed.
Video marketing
YouTube has become a powerful video marketing channel. Some businesses place adverts at the start of YouTube videos, that click through to the advertiser’s site. But there’s also an opportunity to use videos in an organic sense too. Many businesses create ‘how-to’ guides’ and as Google displays a snippet of the best videos at the top of its search results, as a business you have an opportunity to create videos that get ranked on the first page of Google.
Print marketing
These are the more traditional forms of marketing that would include newspaper adverts, billboards and flyers. Catalogues are another form of printed marketing, as are point of sale and posters.
Word of mouth
Word of mouth is one of the most powerful marketing tools there is. A good recommendation goes a long way. A more formal version of this would be a refer-a-friend scheme, where the referrer gets a reward for introducing the new customer to a business, and the referee gets a discount when they buy. PR and online reviews are other aspects of this.
Why marketing automation is important
The world of marketing is vast and ever-growing. Having things in place that can automate complex processes can help you relieve the burden of time-consuming and menial tasks, and allow you to collate, manage and analyse the data that’s collected alongside it.
There are many tools out there that can make your team’s lives easier, ranging from email marketing platforms, keyword research tools, design programmes, social media publishers and more. The landscape is vast and there’s no limit to what you can achieve with the right marketing automation tools at your disposal.
What is digital marketing?
Even more people are spending time online. And remember the third C in the four Cs marketing mix – ‘convenience’. Putting these two pieces of information together means getting your product in front of the customer in a way that’s convenient for them.
Digital, in a traditional sense, really means promoting online. But don’t think of digital marketing in a purely online environment.
An example is a printer sending a report to the supplier that you’re out of ink. You pay for a subscription and get the ink replaced when it’s needed. As a consumer you likely don’t care about online or offline, you just care about not running out of ink.
So, when creating your digital marketing strategy, you will need to consider how each element plays its part in your marketing campaign and business goals.
The digital landscape
So digital marketing really is the set of tactics needed to connect with customers where they spend the most time. These tactics may include:
Search engine optimisation – optimising your site to rank high in search engines, such as Google
Search engine marketing – using AdWords and other PPC,
Online ads – using social media, PPC, retargeting, or adverts on sites YouTube
Affiliates – a link to your site in exchange for a portion of the sale, or promoting on voucher sites
Social media – using organic posts and adverts
Blogs – writing website content for your site or guest blogging on other sites
Emails – building a database of email addresses that you can remarket to and automation of sales emails in the customer journey
Mobile apps – placing adverts in games and apps on smartphones
SMS messaging – sending texts to prospects and customers
As pretty much everything to do with digital marketing can be measured, it’s a great way to refine and improve campaigns. One subject line worked better than another? Why? Was it a particular word? Was it the offer? How can we replicate this for future campaigns?
Measuring your success allows you to refine any messages, remove the ones that aren’t working and improve on the ones that are. You can also work out where the budget is being spent most effectively.
The problem is, without a dedicated team or employee, could digital mean data overload – are you filtering out what’s important, and when it comes to qualitative data, has it been interpreted properly?
But offline and online are all coming together into one big marketing mix. Online would traditionally be when a consumer is sat in front of a computer screen. Offline is when they aren’t… but the lines have blurred. And this blurring is known as online-to-offline marketing.
Online-to-offline – O2O – is this where marketing is going?
Customer journeys aren’t just made offline, or online. Today they’re just a journey. A person shops in-store but buys on a phone while there. They buy online and collect from a nearby store. It’s sometimes called O2O marketing, or online-to-offline.
Other examples of this type of marketing would include:
Interactive Billboards
Digital product demos and samples
Radio adverts
Sponsoring television shows
Televisions ads
Tele-shopping
Phone marketing
Cold calling and following up with an email
SMS (text message) marketing
QR codes
It’s an all-encompassing journey where the only consistent thing is the customer, and of course, your brand.
What is direct marketing?
When you sell directly to a customer it’s usually a form of direct marketing. When you look at the difference between this type of marketing and advertising as another form, think about the difference between a push and a pull.
Advertising pushes out to an audience. The job of direct marketing is to pull in a response – for example, a website or in-store visit, an invitation to send for more information, or to generate a sale. Traditional adverts can be direct response too.
Direct Response Television is also very popular. The long-form version of direct response television was once known as the infomercial, those seriously clever 28-minute ads that have you reaching for your wallet in no time. The demographics of direct television respondents show that 79% are homeowners aged between 35-45 and 53% are professionals – perhaps not an audience you’d expect to see?
The other most common forms of direct response are:
Brochures
Direct mail
Flyers/leaflets
Newsletters
Postcards
Mailers/letters
Coupons
Emails
Targeted online display ads
Phone calls and SMS text messages
Junk mail is perhaps the most famous form of direct mail. More politely known as circulars, these are the speculative letters that tend to pile up on your doorstep if you don’t tackle them daily. Most organisations with a good blend of marketing channels frequently use them.
When you’re being bombarded by a digital world, with ads, emails and retargeting it’s perhaps a good strategy to stand out in a different way. And it’s harder to ignore something physical, compared to say email, where for consumers it’s a case of easy come, easy go.
With a direct mail piece, there’s an incredible opportunity to be highly creative too, but of course, all effective direct mail starts with data.
Creating effective direct mail
Make sure your data is good – people move and old addresses really won’t help. What’re more people get disproportionately upset when their name is spelt wrong on junk mail. And make sure you’re compliant with laws such as GDPR. While you don’t need explicit consent to send direct mail, you do need to make sure there is a legitimate interest. Has that person visited your store? That’s a legitimate interest in what you have to say.
Personalise – you’ll see an increase in opens and therefore an increase in responses, but go beyond a first name. Marketing software allows all sorts of levels of personalisation, such as personalising images. Make your customers feel special.
Targeting – similar to having good data, your targets need to be good. Bad data is a risk with buying lists, as people may have signed up in exchange for the chance to enter a big prize holiday, but not be interested in what you are promoting. Selling fences to bricklayers just won’t work, even if your creative is award-worthy.
Test different approaches – testing and refining is key to effective direct mail. Business who have tested different messages, even tested whether to include a pre-paid reply envelope or not, found a winning control and then run with it until it’s beaten.
There are three key messages to take away here if and when considering direct mail: weigh up whether it’s a cost-effective route to your audience, testing is always best, and don’t fix what isn’t broken. When you have a winner, don’t discard it until it’s run its course.
What is content marketing?
Websites and social media, they’re all about content. Content is king, wrote Bill Gates in 1996. And it is (even if that phrase has been somewhat overcooked).
But if content is king, context is queen. In a world where non-marketers can create a video on their way to work, are we suffering from a content overload?
Brilliant website content is not about creating reams of rich media or delivering highly creative yet ineffective marketing pieces. Done well, content is a strategy not a tactic, that generates leads or brings in new ones.
Some organisations’ financial departments may want to see content as an immediate means to generate a sale and look for a return on their content investment. But content is about creating an ongoing relationship and helping to define your brand’s personality. It’s a marketing strategy to support sales, and it won’t work in isolation.
The content marketing institute defines it like this:
“Content marketing is a strategic marketing approach focused on creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a clearly-defined audience — and, ultimately, to drive profitable customer action.”
Purpose and Goals – why you are creating content, and what value it will provide?
Audience – who you are creating content for, and how they will benefit
Story – what specific, unique, and valuable ideas will you build your content assets around?
Process – how will you structure and manage your operations in order to activate your plans?
Measurement – how you will gauge performance and continually optimise your efforts?
What outcomes can you expect?
Content isn’t designed to be a replacement for any of your other marketing efforts. Instead quality content will make those work better and more efficiently, by providing genuine value to your existing audience and prospects.
What makes good content?
Understanding your audience is important. So are these:
Make it original
Write brilliant headlines
Is it practical advice that readers can actually use?
Is it engaging, thought-provoking and accurate?
Make every word count. That means losing the fluff
Videos and images are crucial
Keep it entertaining, show your expertise and make it worth the time to read
Some basic content marketing metrics
A general rule in marketing is having measurable goals. These are some useful metrics to measure your content marketing success against your goals:
Users – showing the number of unique visitors to a particular page
Pageviews – shows how many times a page is viewed
Unique Pageviews – shows the number of times a page was viewed during a session
Location – useful for creating and marketing customised content for specific audiences
Source/Medium – shows which channel your content was consumed, so you can tailor what you create
But it’s key you set goals with actionable metrics.
What is social media marketing?
Social media marketing is huge. Once just a single ingredient in the marketing mix, its significance and effectiveness have grown – now the largest companies have teams of people dedicated to social media marketing strategy.
For example, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube will be among the best ways of reaching out to generation Y, if that’s your target audience. LinkedIn is the best way to attract professionals.
Although each social media platform was created with a different function or aim, the term social media marketing is about getting traffic or attention through them.
Marketing through social channels will include a mix of paid adverts, posting organic content and perhaps paying to boost organic content, to get it in front of more people. Social media is also where people have conversations.
But it’s not single direction marketing, from brand to audience, instead it’s a 360-degree experience with the audience at the centre.
Social media strategy
A social media strategy, on the face of it, is not so different from others. You need to:
Set achievable goals
Understand your audience
Define your metrics
Monitor the competition
Create and curate engaging content
Prioritise timelines
Test and refine
Take as an example the differences between Twitter and Facebook. Twitter is a short update site, whereas Facebook allows videos, images for the full sharing of personal experiences.
Broadly speaking, a powerful social media strategy is good for:
Increasing traffic to your website
Increasing website conversions
Brand building and awareness
Talking to your audience
Social media strategy tips:
Here are some general tips for marketing on social media:
Don’t start without a strategy
Look at what other people are doing, look at what’s been successful for competitors and see what you can learn from that
Use social to support other marketing campaigns
Use social media for getting customer feedback about products or testing new lines
If your business is online, ensure you have the infrastructure in place to provide customer service on social media. Some people only use social to contact businesses
Encourage customers to tell the world if they’ve had a good experience with your company
Listen to what people are saying about your business, your competitors or your market
Let people buy direct from you with social shopping
Use retargeting when someone leaves your site or shop without buying
Facebook marketing
One of the biggest and you should definitely be active here. Facebook is informal and relaxed. So don’t make it all about product sales. Having said that 97% of companies that use social advertising chose Facebook as their most used and most useful social media platform. And the 25 to 34 is the most common age demographic.
Do:
Create a business page
Post images and videos
Consider running ads and boosting posts to support organic content
Twitter marketing
Twitter is good for communicating, and its limited character count is designed to keep conversations short, snappy and focused. Many have found it to be an extension of their customer services too and 88% of social advertisers use Twitter. Keep your content varied and don’t be sucked into posting the same here as on other social channels.
Do:
Keep up the dialogue
Follow influencers and people in your industry
Retweet positive customer experiences
YouTube marketing
As well as being the number one portal for video, it’s great for marketing. Share videos from YouTube to other channels, and if you have a great video strategy you could find yourself at the top of Google SEO rankings in the video snippets.
Do:
As with site content, make video content useful
Create ‘How To’ and instructional guides
Viral is great but don’t focus on it – focus on being authentic
LinkedIn marketing
It’s social media for career professionals. It’s where industries talk, share information and share jobs. Employees network here too. LinkedIn says that 630 million professionals use its tools and that it’s rated the number 1 platform for lead generation. 80% of social media B2B leads come from LinkedIn. If you’re a brand looking to hire staff or generate business, you can’t afford to ignore LinkedIn.
Do:
Try to establish yourself as an expert
Earn recommendations
Join groups/create your own
Post high-quality content
There are a lot of social sites, and each has its own very specific set of rules from character count to image shape and size. To effectively market on these channels, you’ll need to learn the functional basics, as well as develop the content appropriate to each.
What is a marketing strategy?
Most major marketing plans start with a blueprint, to take them through from start to finish. And an important starting point in any marketing endeavour is to be realistic about where you are.
The Four Ps or Four Cs, as mentioned earlier or the more detailed Seven Ps, a variation on the 4Ps, are all versions of a marketing strategy. A marketing plan combines all the strategies, based on the organisational objectives.
Marketing strategies are unique to your organisation’s goals and set of circumstances. But having a framework is a good place to start. The marketing framework known as SOSTAC is a popular one.
This framework can help you develop marketing strategies with a view to writing marketing plans.
What is a marketing plan?
Situation
Before understanding where you want to be, it starts with understanding where you are. And success depends on you being realistic too.
Carry out a SWOT analysis – strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats – these mini-plans help give you an overall view of where you are, and also can inform your plan as to where you need to focus. Is a threat a new competitor’s service? Is there an opportunity for a new line? Getting these elements down on paper will really help give your plan some focus.
You could dive deeper here too. Doing a PESTLE analysis (there are variations on PESTLE but the idea is the same) can help get these even more detailed.
PESTLE looks at the situation from a Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal and Environmental perspective. For example, a government in one market may be about to relax the rules on services that your business is selling. Or technological advances may mean that the way your service is delivered will drastically change.
Once you know where you are the next question in SOSTAC is where do you want to be?
Marketing objectives
It’s pretty self-explanatory, but what are your objectives? Where do you want to be? Once you have understood your challenges and know where you need to be you can fill in the next part of the plan.
What is your business vision? What KPIs are important?
Make your objectives measurable and set time limits as milestones. Will you check progress after 30 days, 60 days, 90 days? Or all of them? Who is responsible for making these happen?
Incorporate SMART objectives – that is specific, measurable, actionable, realistic and time-bound. It will help you stick to the plans.
Marketing strategy
How will you get there? Look at this in terms of meeting the objectives you’ve set. This is one of the most important areas, so while the analysis of where you are is key, changes can only happen when you create a strategy. You know what’s happening, and what you want but crucially you need to have a proper plan to get there. This might include:
Marketing segmentation and how you target
What is your product/brand positioning?
What channels you’ll use for communicating with your audience
What messages will you use?
Once you have the strategy mapped out you need to get detailed and talk tactics. Think of strategy as the big picture of what you’re going to do to achieve those objectives. Your overall plan will likely include more than one strategy, taking into account the different channels, media and audience.
Tactics and actions
If you’ve identified that better SEO is an objective, for example, a tactic would be to conduct keyword research. And you might create a three-month calendar with actions to support it.
You might detail which keywords are being targeted in a pay-per-click campaign. Are the landing pages the correct ones? Who is responsible for which elements? With so much to consider, it’s important you plan ahead, ensuring you have the right resources in place to keep things moving.
Build in milestones to help measure if things are working and be prepared to change plans if those KPIs aren’t being met as expected.
Test and refine
Control is the ‘final’ part of PR Smith’s marketing approach, where the actions, tactics and strategy are monitored. It’s the test and refine process, where you see if the strategy has worked, and if it needs any adjustments.
It feeds directly into the Situation where you can ask the starting question again – where are we now? Were the targets met? If not, what is the next step?
Overall, a marketing strategy will show how you will achieve a particular mission or goal.
How marketing helps businesses
Promoting your business
You need customers to succeed in business and marketing is what puts you in touch with those people. Marketing helps promote your business, products and brand to new and existing customers.
Better sales
Marketing increases the chances of someone buying what you’re selling. If they have a good experience, they’ll tell more people. If your campaigns are effective, you’ll see more conversions.
Relationships
Marketing helps build relationships between your business and the customer. These relationships can inform new product ranges, will create dialogue between your organisation and customers, and help create loyal customers that could spend more, more frequently.
Your reputation
Much is said about brand value and brand equity, and marketing your business will enhance its reputation. Every piece of marketing will build trust between your organisation and the customer or potential customers and will inspire their confidence when it comes to purchasing.
Healthy competition
Marketing promotes healthy competition between businesses within an industry. But it can also give you a strategic advantage over rivals too. Your customers will be the real winners here as products and services get better at more competitive prices. If you’re significantly more advanced than a competitor, marketing gives you a channel to exploit this.
Principles of marketing
When it comes to sales and marketing, using the theory and strategies outlined here will help provide the blueprint of a strong plan for your organisation.
Understand where you are, where you want to be and how each channel works.
Keep your messaging and branding consistent and measure everything you can. Build in milestones and be prepared to change the plan if needed. If an area of your marketing is suffering, look for ways to take the pressure off. Explore automation in certain areas, get in professionals for help when needed and explore whether different software could help with the planning, management and delivery of campaigns.
BAM, Brand Activation Management
A balanced life – redefining the way people work and live
Papirfly
3minutes read
More than ever we’re looking for that balance between our personal and professional lives. But doesn’t it sometimes feel that success in one means sacrifice in another?
It’s virtually a cliché now to say that employees with a good work-life balance are happier, healthier and more productive. As the tide of modern working practice rolls on, it’s almost a given that business leaders understand the importance of their employees living balanced lives, even if it’s not a working reality.
While free fruit, flexitime and a visiting masseuse would certainly take the edge off a tough week for most of us, if employee perks aren’t accompanied by smart systems and processes that break down everyday barriers, are these benefits really helping to strike that balance? Or do they just serve to pacify the pressures that employees are facing on a longer-term basis?
What does a balanced life mean in today’s world?
The phrase ‘achieving work-life balance’ is well-worn, yet difficult to materialise. With increased workloads, many employees feel they’re frantically teetering on the career ladder.
Some don’t have the tools to do their job effectively, remember the last time they had lunch somewhere other than their desk or when they last got home in time to put the kids to bed. For some, stability can feel like a distant dream.
Interactions in all aspects of life – friends, family, hobbies and work – help us grow personally and professionally, and stress in one can permeate them all.
Physical, spiritual and emotional development plays an incredibly important role in making us feel more rounded and productive as people. But exercise, meditation and socialising should be embraced for the benefits they bring individually, not solely how they help us escape from workplace stresses that could and should be put right.
While an employer can’t directly influence these areas outside of work, they can help by allowing staff opportunities to manage all aspects of their life inside of work effectively.
What can employers do to increase productivity and welfare?
Simplified, the happier and healthier an employee is, the more productive, engaged and loyal they are. Their mental and physical health is better too.
And though work and home can’t always be emotionally separated, there are some simple solutions that can be explored to keep employees as untroubled as possible.
Automation = less burnout
When stress overwhelms a person’s ability to cope, burnout occurs. If the issues causing this can be identified and discussed, there may be opportunities to find a relatively easy solution.
There’s often a double benefit in looking at areas of a role that could be automated. The employee’s day-to-day becomes much more manageable and time starts to free up. The employer benefits from a happier employee who’s more focused on the strategic elements of their role.
Encourage agile working
Another natural outcome of the increased use of technology is flexibility. Web-based tech can allow employees to work from home or on the go. As more companies are adopting the remote-working approach to reduce overheads, those who still have the comfort of central offices could look to introduce a working-from-home policy.
Email is pretty much instant, and video conferencing means teams can be put in touch wherever an office is based. Teams can work better over distances and share projects more easily – and employees love it. Overall it squeezes the most out of the working day without draining the juice from your team.
The perks are important, too!
If your employees are doing a fantastic job, why not show them your appreciation? We spoke briefly about non-financial benefits companies tend to bring in to attract candidates, but they’re also great for retaining existing employees.
Once your internal systems and processes are as complementary to the working day as possible, a perks package can really sweeten the deal. The right balance between the everyday and over-and-above gestures can help employees feel appreciated and even be the catalyst for that all-important work-life balance. It cannot be stressed enough, that without ways for employees to carry out their day-to-day roles effectively, these perks, while attractive, are unlikely to be enough to keep anyone truly satisfied professionally.
Balance? A win-win…
Balance creates happy and engaged employees, promotes good health and maintains physical and mental wellbeing for individuals. Staff stay longer at companies where they feel happier. Churn is reduced, and fewer sick days are taken from burnout.
And it’s not just about front line employees – business leaders also need time to recharge and get their life in balance to remain effective leaders, and of course, lead by example.
You have one life and a group of valuable employees that help strengthen the work you do each day. It’s important to listen and notice the warning signs when the tipping point goes out of balance. There will always be new challenges to face, but as long as there are people willing to find solutions, your workplace – and your workforce – can become unstoppable.
From DAM to BAM by Papirfly™ – The future is Brand Activation Management
Papirfly
5minutes read
The future of marketing is a topic that many spend hours contemplating on a daily basis. Sometimes innovations and developments can immediately cause marketers to have to think on their feet and adapt. Other times, it is a natural evolution from one useful piece of technology into another, more comprehensive solution.
The transition from DAM to BAM by Papirfly™ is a strong example of the latter. And that evolution is taking place as you read this.
For a long time, a Digital Asset Management system was a blessing for rapidly digitising organisations looking for an effective solution to data overload. With more and more assets in the ether, and brands expanding to locations worldwide, having a place to centrally store and share data was essential. DAMs have made this a reality.
But, like many great developments, it is just one evolutionary stage. Gradually, the introduction of Brand Activation Management has built on DAM’s capacity to collect vast quantities of assets from a range of sources, and added the ability to deliver control over branding on a much deeper level.
(It’s important to note here that when we refer to BAM, this shouldn’t be confused with Brand Asset Management, which focuses solely on the management of any asset your company has related to your branding. Brand Activation Management encompasses this and DAM, as well as the ability to create, educate and analyse.)
Here, we’ll break down the DAM vs BAM debate, and illustrate why BAM software represents the future of how organisations market themselves to customers, employees and the public around them.
From DAM to BAM: The origins
The first Digital Asset Managers became prevalent in the early-to-mid 1990s. With the number of digital files companies needed control over rapidly expanding, softwares like Cumulus were developed to make it easier for businesses to get a handle on their data. From there, their sophistication and reach have continued to develop into more integrated, innovative solutions.
In 2017, the value of the global digital asset management market was valued at around £1.9 billion ($2.5 billion), and by 2024 it is expected to be worth an incredible £6.3 billion ($8.1 billion). A means of compiling and controlling digital assets is something that more and more businesses need in their lives – both as a result of globalisation and the demand to deliver more marketing output in an increasingly competitive landscape.
But, as alluded to earlier, DAM is just the beginning. An effective answer to a problem that’s plagued organisations since the digital age began. A terrific starting point. However, now it can play a vital role in resolving another challenge for companies need to overcome – effective brand management.
Your brand is your most valuable differentiator. The message that’s going to connect with your audiences and convince them to choose you over your competitors. Being in control of that messaging is critical to building that bond with your target audiences.
How valuable is your brand?
82% of people on search engines will first click on a brand they’re familiar with
72% of marketers view branded content as more valuable than traditional advertising in magazines
60% of millennials expect a consistent presence from a brand across all channels
DAM vs BAM: Breaking down the benefits
An effective DAM system provides powerful benefits to any global organisation, including:
Improved efficiency
Research from Gleanster has illustrated that it can take five times longer for employees to find assets without the use of DAM software. That is an incredible gulf of time that can be better utilised in a number of ways, be it employee training or strategic thinking. Plus, your teams spend less time searching folders and network drives, and more time delivering an effective piece of collateral.
Greater collaboration
A central resource for all your digital assets, be they images, videos, PDFs or branding, makes it easier for those in your organisation to collaborate on projects. Someone on one side of the globe could upload something to your DAM hub that will be employed by another person on the opposite end of the planet to use in their next marketing campaign.
Cost-effectiveness
How much money do your teams spend searching for assets they need for marketing campaigns? Research from The Geeky Globe reveals that an average company wastes $10,000 a year on mismanaging their assets. By collecting all assets in a single space that can be searched through and accessed whenever required, this loss of money is greatly reduced, meaning more can be spent in other areas of your company.
Faster to market
Time spent searching for digital assets is time that you lose from creating and disseminating your marketing campaigns. Fundamentally, having all the assets your team requires available to them in a couple of clicks will drastically cut down the time it takes for you to turn around campaigns, and subsequently increase the number you can deliver in a set timeframe.
There is no questioning the scope and value that DAM offers any organisation with a substantial amount of assets to manage at any given time. But, the movement from DAM to BAM encompasses all of the above benefits, and takes them so much further.
Think of DAM as a robot butler. It is incredibly useful and efficient, and when you ask it to give you something, it delivers it no questions asked. However, unless you have a working knowledge of your brand guidelines, and direction on how to locate these within the system, then the robot butler has no means of interpreting this – it is programmed to deliver what it’s specifically asked for.
With BAM software, your robot butler gets an upgrade. Think of it as the Alfred to your brand’s Batman. While still maintaining the capacity to collect and store significant numbers of assets valuable for your marketing materials, the move from BAM to DAM incorporates:
A dedicated space for employees to be educated on brand values and become fully engrossed with what visions and objectives your organisation stands for
Straightforward creation suites and intelligent templates that always keep your team on brand when producing marketing assets, which empowers those with little-to-no design experience to create compelling materials
A more intuitive user experience when compared with a DAM system, which is often used by a limited number of users trained to operate the software
Reassurance that the assets stored within the software have been ‘curated’, and thus only supplying users with the most up-to-date materials to prevent inconsistencies from creeping in over time
Capacity to plan, manage, oversee and assess your campaigns and the popularity of the collateral your teams worldwide are using
Without the foundation that DAM established decades ago and has continued to refine, BAM could not build on this with a means of enhancing an organisation’s ability to govern their brand voice and keep it consistent across all channels and locations.
Because at their core, DAM and BAM work to deliver the same highly sought-after commodity: control.
DAM or BAM: Which is right for your business?
If what your company is currently looking for is simply a means to get to grips with the sheer volume of digital assets scattered across your various folders and files, a DAM solution will do the job perfectly well. In many ways it’s a must-have technology for all organisations looking to operate in the most efficient and effective way when it comes to their marketing.
But if you want to take it further and make the move from DAM to BAM, then you’re enabling your team with the tools, information and motivation to drive your brand forward on every corner of the globe you touch. The ‘whats’, ‘hows’ and ‘whys’ of your brand will be clear to see across your employees, giving you a firm grasp over the consistency of your collateral.
So if you’re interested in getting in on the ground floor of the future of marketing, get in touch with our team today to learn more about our Digital Asset Management package, and how it fits into our overarching Brand Activation Management solution.
Go further with a system that empowers your team to Create, Educate, Manage, Store & Share your brand with your audience – no specialist support necessary.
In this modern, competitive landscape, a brand’s identity needs to be unique, clear and consistent in order to set itself apart. A big part of making this successful lies in effective corporate communications.
Learn more about how corporate communications showcases your brand’s personality to those within and outside your organisation, and how ensuring strong visuals and messaging across campaigns help to strengthen your image in the long term.
What are corporate communications?
Corporate communications is an incredibly broad field, which means it can be difficult to strictly define. At its core, the definition of corporate communications is the variety of ways a business or organisation communicates with its various audiences, both internal and external. These audiences will likely include:
Customers/leads
Employees
Stakeholders/investors
Partners
Suppliers
Media
Government bodies
The general public
Managing your corporate communications is an all-encompassing task, and one that is more important now than ever before.
Because, fundamentally, your corporate communications policy means more than just how you send messages – it is about fostering a unified brand identity. This ensures that your business speaks to a particular audience with one voice across all its available channels, with complete consistency of messaging and tonality, and effectively influences your audiences’ attitudes and actions.
As such, your corporate communications plan should first and foremost align with your corporate objectives.
What is the vision for your company?
What image do you want to project to each audience?
And of course, as the brand grows and evolves over time, your corporate communications strategy will too – it is a symbiotic relationship where a change in one directly influences the other.
The importance placed on corporate communications has resulted in blurring of the lines between this department with those responsible for marketing and PR. The head of your corporate comms team’s core function is to translate your brand’s identity to both your internal and external audience. To ensure this is maintained across all aspects of your work, this requires complete collaboration between these departments to avoid contradictions from creeping in.
Consider the functions that a corporate communications department nowadays is expected to fulfil:
The sheer enormity of what corporate communications covers is an indication of how pivotal it is to both forming and expressing your unique brand identity. It’s not an advantage to have a corporate communications strategy in place – it’s a necessity.
Maintaining this level of consistency across the vast number of channels you use to communicate is a challenge that often goes unappreciated, but it’s essential to maintaining how your brand is viewed by those who matter most to you.
How important are your corporate communications?
The importance of effective corporate communications cannot be understated. Your strategy plays an essential role in cementing the personality of your brand and influencing both current and prospective audiences to buy into your products, services or ideas.
This is true even in the midst of a global crisis, as maintaining communication during COVID-19 has been crucial in keeping employees, customers and the wider public engaged and informed with how businesses are managing the situation and supporting their audiences.
This is imperative to how you, as a brand and as a business, move forward for a variety of reasons, including:
Fostering employee engagement
Nobody wants to hear information second-hand, and this rings true for your employees. Employees that feel out of the loop or disconnected from the events taking place in their work will grow dissatisfied over time, decreasing productivity and the overall company culture. Remember, it is estimated that disengaged employees cost the UK economy up to £340 billion annually, and is one of the leading causes of staff churn.
Corporate communications go a long way towards keeping team members engaged with the big picture. From weekly newsletters informing your global teams about the latest developments for your company to regular evaluation meetings, your internal corporate communications play a big role in making employees aware, informed and included. The more engaged and involved your employees feel at work, the more productive and satisfied they will feel.
Furthermore, as consistent and strategic corporate communications trickle down from the executive-level to other employees, it will encourage greater two-way communication between employees and their managers. Having a greater understanding of the brand and what it stands for will spur engaged employees to make suggestions on how things may be improved, making corporate communications a great source of innovation from within.
Encouraging brand advocacy
Following on from keeping employees engaged and in-sync with your brand objectives, strong corporate communications also play a vital role in brand advocacy. With 2019’s Edelman report revealing that 63% of consumers trust what influencers say about a brand more than what the brand says about itself, having willing, active advocates for your brand – be it your employees or customers – can be a powerful advantage in attracting today’s audiences.
A particularly strong way to achieve boosted brand advocacy is by employees resharing content on your social media channels. When employees are feeling satisfied in their understanding of the direction the brand is moving, and feel involved in it, they will be more willing to share content with their friends and other followers, increasing the reach of your brand in a more natural, personable manner.
Improve customer loyalty and trust
Your customers are one of the most important audiences your corporate communications will engage with on a daily basis. And they expect authenticity through these in order to build trust with your brand and become loyal followers. As your marketing nurtures and connects with them through your various touchpoints, staying consistent and genuine with your messaging is crucial to developing this trust.
When your communications presents these qualities, customers become advocates. They evangelise your brand. Like and share content on your social channels. Let their family and friends know about the quality of your offering. All this stems from a corporate communications strategy that promotes your brand values coherently and frequently.
Building brand reputation
Your marketing activity needs to work hard to build and maintain a positive brand reputation. Social proof is a key indicator for employees, customers and the general public that your company is doing good things and following through on your brand values. Projecting these through your corporate communications is a powerful way to enhance your reputation.
Whether it’s a press release highlighting your annual earnings, or a social post about your work in the local community, communicating your core values, positive reviews and examples of your CSR work indicate to your audiences that you are a reputable organisation. And this reputation can act as a powerful factor in a customer or recruit choosing you over a competitor.
Furthermore, your corporate communications don’t just play a role in growing and reinforcing your current branding – it also plays a key role in cementing a corporate rebrand. This is a difficult change for any company, particularly one with locations spread across the globe. Your communications strategy can be crucial in detailing the rebrand both internally and externally, so you can quickly familiarise people with the alteration and minimise any backlash or confusion caused by this change in direction.
Limit fallout of crises
Crises often cause an unexpected blow to brands, but if your teams are well prepared, they can control the damage before it gets out of control. Turning to your corporate communications plan helps you swiftly respond to potential crises, be it a factory shutdown, loss of a member of staff or something mistakenly being published.
A crises plan will give guidelines and terminology to use in the event of these unfortunate circumstances taking hold, and outline how to prevent issues from escalating with a set of actions for your comms team.
What is your corporate communications strategy?
Now we’ve established how important corporate communications is to your overall brand identity, it is time to discuss how you put that strategy into practice.
Fundamentally, your corporate communications strategy should be tied to your overall business strategy and objectives. If it doesn’t have this foundation in place, teams will struggle to understand what’s being communicated and why it’s important. Objectives come first, followed by your strategy, followed by execution.
Aligning your corporate communications plan to your overarching brand objectives means that when your objectives change, your team can adjust your messaging too. It’s essential that the person at the helm of your corporate communication department – be it a specified Communications Director or another member of your staff – has a defined presence at boardroom level. The person in charge of comms is responsible for communicating the ethos developed at an executive level, so it’s important they hear the vision directly from the source.
When this is established, the production of your corporate communications strategy should incorporate the following to ensure best practice:
Identify and prioritise the goals of executives – this could involve a deeper dive into your organisation’s values, strengths, weaknesses and more
Clarify the audiences that will need to be engaged with – clearly defining the audience your communications are directed at, be it a group of employers, one of your target markets or your shareholders, is crucial to establishing the tone and information that needs to be incorporated to secure their attention
Conduct both internal and external corporate communications audits – this will help you to better understand what your audience wants from this aspect of your business – employee surveys, customer comments, supplier feedback, etc.
Craft your core communications messages, starting from the initial ideas and objectives – this is vital to establishing the tone of voice you wish to project to your various audiences, and removing any terminology you aren’t comfortable with
Develop the graphical details of your corporate communications – your strategy should think beyond the terminology you use, ensuring your various communications use the right logos, fonts, layouts, signatures, design elements, and more, ensuring consistency across the board
Identify the various tools and channels you’re going to utilise – consider conducting an audit into the various avenues you use to communicate your messages to discover what’s working and what isn’t, and use this information to create a plan of action into what channels and techniques are best placed to project your values to your audiences
Evaluate and amend your corporate communications strategy over time – remember that is an ever-evolving plan that should support your business as it develops – as your company changes, so should your communications to ensure they remain consistent with your objectives and in-line with the attitudes of your audience
The goal of your corporate communications strategy is to present a unified, coherent picture of who your organisation is, what it stands for and why it exists to your audiences. If you’d like to learn more about how we help global businesses achieve this level of uniformity across their range of communications,
What are the types of corporate communications?
At its most basic level, corporate communications break down into two categories:
Internal corporate communications
External corporate communications
While internal and external corporate communications are often unique to the audiences they talk to, they in many ways coincide. Especially following the rise of employee advocacy, brand ambassadors and social media platforms, the lines between the two have become increasingly blurred. They remain distinct entities with unique goals, but both work towards the unified goal of communicative consistency and increasing brand reputation.
What are internal corporate communications?
Your internal corporate communications are how your company connects with those within your organisation. From the personnel in your head offices to your workforce spread across the globe, your internal communications are crucial to engaging each individual in your company with your brand messages.
At a time where just 13% of employees worldwide are considered truly engaged with their company, having an internal corporate communications strategy is paramount to getting employees, from new recruits to stalwarts, in-sync with what your brand stands for. It’s focused on fostering a collective culture and identity among your employees with your organisation, ensuring staff fully understand where it is heading.
As mentioned above about the important benefits of following best practice with your internal corporate communications, nobody likes to be left out of the loop. This breeds disillusionment and disengagement, which can have significant detriments to their motivation and productivity levels.
Instead, by effectively, openly and consistently maintaining communications with your workforce, they become more familiar and engaged with your brand identity. If staff feel that they are being kept informed and that there are communication channels that work in both directions, it creates an environment where staff feel they have a voice and that their opinions carry some worth.
Examples of internal corporate communications
How can you achieve consistency across your internal corporate communications?
Here are a few techniques to achieve best practice with your internal corporate communications:
Encourage the free flow of information
Investing in a branded tool that allows staff to communicate frequently, be it a straightforward messaging app or collective workflow, helps create unity between team members and encourage sharing information, which is valuable to keep your company progressing.
Repurpose your marketing techniques for your workforce
When you create a marketing strategy, you will develop audience personas for your target markets. Why not do the same for your employees? Develop a deeper understanding of their motivations, needs and barriers, and repurpose content already going out in line with these to support your work comms.
Develop branded internal documents
Whether it’s employee feedback forms, staff handbooks or email signatures, make sure your brand values and design elements are consistent internally, so teams quickly become familiar with the tone and personality of your brand.
What are external corporate communications?
External corporate communications are how you choose to share your brand with the world outside of your company. This covers a lot of ground, from how you communicate with your current and prospective customers, to your relationships with government bodies, the media and the wider public. It’s a big part of how your brand identity reaches the masses.
The strategy you implement helps shape the way your audience and the public perceive your company and influences them to interact with your brand on a deeper level.
As such, it is essential that your external corporate communications strategy is well-planned and meticulously followed in accordance with your brand objectives. With such a wide range of channels encompassing these forms of communications, achieving total consistency becomes incredibly difficult without one coherent plan.
Without a unified plan, your external corporate comms can quickly become disjointed and off-piste, painting a confusing picture to your customers and your wider audiences. While how you talk to your customers could differ greatly to how you communicate to your suppliers or investors, these should maintain some distinct similarities in branding as both are founded on your organisation’s objectives.
In essence, your external corporate communications should be geared to support how you:
Inform and educate your customers, media and stakeholders about your brand
Maintain long-term, consistent relationships with your external audiences
Engage customers, partners and more with your brand personality
Market your products and services to customers more personably
Grow your audiences and connections under one, united identity
Examples of external corporate communications
How can you achieve consistency across your external corporate communications?
Like with your internal communications, brand consistency is critical for your external corporate communications. Realising this isn’t always straightforward, even with a coherent strategy in place, but it is crucial to project a uniform, unambiguous message to audiences outside of your inner circle.
Here are a few techniques to achieve best practice with your external corporate communications:
Segment your audiences
While you are likely already doing this as part of your employee marketing efforts, you also need to consider your shareholders, partners, suppliers and other external parties. Creating unique personas for each audience will help you adapt their unique motivations to your overarching brand ambitions, ensuring they never steer too far from your central message.
Saturate markets with messaging
Though we all like to innovate, you should learn to sometimes revel in the repetitive. Focus some of your energies on learning to explain the same things in different ways to make the messages accessible to a range of audiences, while retaining the same core information.
Be responsive
Corporate communications are a two-way street. Listen to how your external audiences are reacting to your communications, and adjust your strategy accordingly. Make sure the decision for amends comes from an executive level, preventing further inconsistencies or team members breaking brand guidelines in a bid to better communicate with customers.
What is the role of your corporate communications department?
Depending on the size and reach of your company, your communications department could be an entire division of your organisation or a role performed by one or two members of your team. However, its significance doesn’t vary whether you’re a start-up or a global brand.
The head of your corporate communications department, be it a manager, director or Chief Communications Officer, should have a seat at the boardroom level of your organisation. Their primary role is to translate your brand’s objectives, news, innovations and developments to both your internal and external audiences. It’s imperative that this is received first-hand to avoid any contradiction or confusion caused by second-hand information.
As well as your executive level, your corporate communications department must be closely connected to other areas of your organisation. It acts as an interpreter for your team, facilitating clear, on-brand communication from top-down as well as bottom-up.
Being in tune with the goings-on across all aspects of your business is vital in maintaining this consistent communication, meeting audience needs and working in collaboration with teams to perform their various responsibilities.
In today’s environment, your corporate communications team must be included in several key functions affecting how your business engages with people both inside and outside of it, including:
Management of your websites and social media channels
Being involved in the planning and creation of blogs and other social content
Organising and hosting networking events
Writing and distributing press releases and maintaining best practice policies for how your company interacts with the media
Representing the company in public settings, or preparing executives for presentations and news conferences
Managing and overseeing marketing materials and campaigns
Sourcing and communicating with relevant parties for advertising opportunities
Handling crisis communications in a swift and effective manner
Overseeing internal company communications, including meetings, training, evaluations and other employee events
Corporate communications and social media
The explosion of social media use in the past decade has completely changed the game for corporate communications. It is both a blessing and a curse for corporate communications departments. It doesn’t cost anything to post on social media, making it a cost-effective option to communicate with your various audiences.
However, the primary drawback is the effort required to keep up with demand. Social media channels present an unrelenting stream of information to users. Delivering fresh, up-to-date content to engage your audience is a time-consuming and often costly task, and maintaining consistency across all these channels when faced with these pressures.
The impact of social media on corporate communications is a double-edged sword, making it critical for brands to consider as part of their strategies. The following approaches can help you stay ahead on your social networks:
Invest in trusted social listening tools to make sure any mention of your company, products or executives is tracked and reacted to where necessary
Bring your corporate communications department into your social media teams, so both sides are united on the messages sent out being in-line with your universal strategy
Focus on social media content that is less sales-orientated, and more focused on delivering value and information, enhancing your brand reputation and increasing its share-ability
Experiment with different media formats and channels, helping you communicate your central brand messages in different styles for varied audiences
If you are seeking support maintaining total consistency across all your social media platforms, we can help you find the solution. Speak to our team today.
How do you measure corporate communications?
With the rise of digital media, the days of measuring the success of your corporate communications policies on column inches and the Advertising Value Equivalent (AVE) are a thing of the past. Instead, there is a greater focus on tracking digital metrics and online engagements as a measure of success, but even these do not paint a clear picture to measure the effectiveness of your corporate communications strategies.
It is unquestionably important to test your messages across your various channels and gauge the responses to these. Impressions, interactions and conversions on your website and digital platforms can be a good indicator of how effectively your communications are connecting with your audiences, as can open and click-through rates for your email campaigns. These can highlight patterns about your messaging that you can learn from and take forward.
However, the goal of corporate communications is something that is difficult to accurately assess – brand perception. Despite the Barcelona Principles helping this industry move away from AVEs and other output-oriented measures, there are still problems with how corporate communications teams can determine how well they are performing.
At this point, there is still no hard-and-fast answer as to how you should effectively measure your corporate communications. Hopefully, as technology evolves and a greater appreciation of how these initiatives help businesses operate is fostered, it will become more straightforward for brands to determine if their corporate communications department is delivering value.
We hope this article has given you a greater understanding and appreciation of the importance of your corporate communications on your overall brand identity. In this increasingly competitive landscape, your brand is what sets you apart – it’s the culture among your employees far and wide, the layer of trust your customers look towards and the motivation that keeps you evolving and moving forward.
If you take anything away from this piece, it’s the importance of achieving brand consistency as part of your corporate communications strategy. Your brand is unique to you, and it’s crucial that its messages, visions and characteristics are maintained across everything you communicate, whether it’s a far-reaching press statement or a meeting between your employees. Every element of your communications should be geared to presenting the ambitions and nature of your brand in accordance with your objectives.
A company’s internal communications can tell you a lot about its culture, organisation and prospects.
Where all team members feel connected and part of a single, unified structure, it suggests a positive, efficient environment. Where they feel detached, it is more likely that deadlines are missed, tensions rise and company culture falls flat.
At a time where just 13% of employees worldwide consider themselves engaged with their employer, it appears that a greater emphasis on improving internal communications is in order.
Our essential guide breaks down the various types of internal communications, best practices for your organisation’s strategy, and how you can build a stronger bond between your workforce and your overarching brand identity.
What is internal communications?
At its core, your internal communications policy is how those in your organisation communicate with each other. The sharinCommon types of internal communicationsg of information for business purposes. The link between your leadership teams and your workforce across the globe.
Unlike your external communications, the other half of your overarching corporate communications, this is not primarily concerned with how your brand is perceived outside of the realms of your company. Instead, the aim of your internal communications strategy should be on fostering a collective culture among your employees through your brand and its core values, from new recruits to seasoned stalwarts.
Internal communications is about keeping employees in-sync and in-the-know within your organisation. Not keeping staff connected or conscious about the direction the company is going or what your brand stands for can quickly lead them to become disillusioned and disinterested at work, as they don’t feel engaged with the bigger picture.
Research conducted in 2015 by Geckoboard illustrates this, with one in four employees leaving their roles as a result of ‘Mushroom Management’, which they defined as a situation where employees are left to perform blindly without any indication of company performance. The priority for your internal business communications should be everyone feels included in what is happening in your organisation.
There are several internal communications approaches that help accomplish this goal, including:
Top-down communications
the distribution of information from your upper management through to employees down the chain, typically informing staff of company plans, direction and brand values
Change communications
internal comms that inform employees of any notable changes your organisation is undergoing, such as a new office opening or the emergence of a new policy the company has to adhere to
Information communications
how your company equips your employees to perform their duties in the most effective way, whether that’s through a company handbook, training tools or peer-to-peer discussions
Crisis communication
alerting your teams to any problem or difficulty affecting the organisation, be it dangerous weather affecting travel into work to product recalls and cybersecurity attacks
Two-way communications
often referred to as ‘bottom-up’ comms, this is where your organisation taps into the knowledge, insight and ideas of your employees to discuss potential improvements and get a handle on company culture
Peer-to-peer communications
internal comms where workforces, often spread worldwide, connect and collaborate with each other for a specific project or to lend support, often achieved through email or social networking platforms
Culture communications
an often-overlooked facet of internal communications plans, this is where your organisation shares materials relating to company values, shares upcoming social events, highlights people to your CSR initiatives, congratulates good work and more in the pursuit of creating a collective identity
Common types of internal communications
Employee newsletters or publications
Social intranets, forums and other online portals
Team collaboration apps (e.g. Slack, Trello)
Emails
Letters
Company handbooks or guidelines
Induction processes
Office displays and decorations
Team meetings
Group brainstorming sessions
Staff evaluations
Why is internal communications important?
With the purpose of internal communications centred on giving team members a voice and a strong sense of belonging within their organisation, you’d imagine that the overwhelming majority of businesses would position this high in their priorities. But this sadly isn’t the case.
Instead, up to 60% of companies appear to not have any long-term internal communications strategy or vision.
Just 54% agree that their progress towards communications objectives are researched, measured, and evaluated.
There remains an under-appreciation or lack of understanding as to the importance of internal communications on a day-to-day basis, and an assumption that this is something that does not require any concentrated focus.
This couldn’t be further from the truth. Your internal comms team is imperative to enhancing the culture within your organisation and ensuring the long-term retention of your valued employees.
Keep people calm, informed and engaged
Above all else, your internal communications plan is there to keep your workforce unified and up-to-date with the news, events and information impacting your brand. Whether it’s the launch of a new product, a charity event you’d like people to attend, or an internal issue that needs remedying, your communications keep everyone in the loop.
Nobody likes to be kept in the dark. Good internal communications get your teams involved and invested in the big picture for your brand, even if they are spread throughout the globe.
Boost employee productivity
Internal communications tools have the power to increase employee productivity levels by 20-25%, according to research by The McKinsey Global Institute. When employees feel engaged and connected to the organisation they are working for, they will in turn have a greater emphasis to work hard and pull together to achieve your business objectives.
The best forms of internal communications give your employees a purpose. A drive. A reason to perform for your brand. They are more switched-on and clearer about the direction the company is moving, and an informed, valued employee is a motivated employee.
Establish channels for feedback and discussion
Communication is a two-way street, and an excess of top-down materials could cause strain, or potentially result in employees feeling repressed and undervalued. By managing your internal communications effectively, you can create an environment where your workforce feels empowered to voice any concerns and offer suggestions on company culture and developments.
You may be surprised how much knowledge and insight your global teams can offer when they feel empowered to offer their thoughts. This could not only guide innovations and push your brand toward a brighter future, but giving your team members a voice makes it more likely they will want to stay with your organisation for the long term.
Excite, inspire and empower people
Great news is a great motivator, and it should be shared with all members of your company. It could be congratulating a team member on some excellent customer feedback. Or inspiring them with an effective training session. It could even be that your charity fundraiser got featured in the local paper.
Whatever there is to celebrate, your internal communications strategy helps ensure you celebrate as a unit. People feel more connected and enthused with your brand, and morale is lifted going forward.
Keep your brand message consistent
A major aspect of having a clearly defined internal communications policy is ensuring your messaging remains consistent. Especially where your workforce is spread over countries and continents, maintaining your unique brand voice across these channels can be a real challenge without an organised plan. Your communications should always maintain harmony.
This is the reason why part of our brand management solution is directed to support internal communications teams achieve that all-important consistency, from providing a central location for brand guidelines and handbooks to empowering them to create their own materials for their co-workers at home and further afield.
Limit rumours and increase transparency
Hearsay and rumour can distort the information surrounding your brand. This can come as a result of poor communication, or from a lack of communication full stop. If people aren’t informed of developments, they’ll start filling the blanks with their own interpretations, which could bring down morale, breed unsettled or hostile feelings and create an uncomfortable environment.
By getting a handle on managing your internal comms and fostering a spirit of greater transparency, the rumour mill is slowed and employees replace it with trusted information. For a generation that is increasingly inquisitive and craving details, this is a vital benefit that this plan can offer you.
Be visual and uncomplicated
Words are powerful but too many of them can weaken the impact of your messages. Communicating in a way that people can understand, digest and then reflect on is the key to success.
Internal communications doesn’t mean a 2-hour presentation and a 50-page leave behind full of corporate jargon. It’s getting across the key points in an engaging and simplistic way, because realistically nobody is going to have time to read those lengthy documents with any solid comprehension. If you really do need to give your team a 50-page leave behind, provide them with visuals and summaries.
Who needs to implement best practices in internal communications?
The short answer is everyone. But the internal communications strategy should outline who is responsible for driving each strand forward. At a very basic level, there should be communication from an organisational level, at a managerial level and on an individual level.
Organisational comms
should focus on internal business communication; anything that’s to do with company-wide changes, growth, recognition of long-serving employees or bigger picture initiatives.
Managerial communications
hinge on being able to create relationships with employees that encourage two-way conversation and feedback. It’s not just another layer for top-down directive or announcements. A manager’s role is as much about listening as it is making sure their employees are kept informed and engaged
Individual communications
are as much about communicating problems or issues constructively, as it is in keeping the culture alive in a company. This category could cover everything that’s taken care of by HR, social events, improving working conditions and more.
Every company is different, which means no internal communications plan should look the same. That said, the above points are absolutely pivotal best practices in internal communications.
Creating an internal communications plan
Now that we’ve established the importance your internal communications plan has on keeping your workforce engaged, invested and encouraged, how do you go about structuring this for your organisation? A fully-formed approach means a lot more than just regular email chains and annual performance reviews – it should be a fleshed-out, functioning process that covers all bases.
To help you achieve this, we’ve compiled seven effective tips to consider when developing your internal communications strategy:
Assess your existing tools and approaches
First of all, take an objective look over how you currently communicate with your employees:
What are your most widely used channels? Do you stick primarily to email or offer a more diverse range of internal comms?
Which channel or approach is performing most effectively? Could you sacrifice others in order to place more emphasis on this?
What message are these materials sending to your workforce? Does it encompass the values and emotions you want to invoke?
Are your internal communications consistent? Do they deviate from piece-to-piece or from country-to-country?
Involve your leadership team throughout
Your internal communications team connects your entire workforce – it cannot operate in a vacuum. It is imperative that your senior management team not only buys into the development of a comprehensive plan of action, but is actively involved in this process.
The direct link between your leadership team and your internal communicators helps ensure that the messages that are sent out correlate with your company’s core values and mission statements. That pursuit of consistency starts at the summit, and needs to inform materials that connect your employees to the messages, visions and personality of your brand.
This should be the beginning of a company-wide collaboration to guarantee your internal communications are meeting the needs of everyone it interacts with, from senior leaders and stakeholders to the far reaches of your workforce.
Identify the personalities of your audience
In the same way your external marketing materials will need to be targeted around your ideal customers, your internal marketing communications have to be positioned based on your employee persona. Take the time to analyse and discover what your workforce wants from your communications:
What information are they interested in?
What are their likes and dislikes?
What channels do they interact with outside of work?
What cultural values and beliefs do they hold?
Who is most actively interested in communications?
Develop clear objectives to pursue
What do you want to get out of your internal communications strategy?
It is one of the first questions you will ask yourself, and one of the most challenging to answer. The goals of your internal communications plan will drive the direction you take and set a benchmark to work towards, allowing you to measure performance against these over time.
Objectives will vary from business to business. Maybe you hope to realise better consistency across your global communications? Perhaps your current approach is inefficient, with a heavy reliance on email over more agile, innovative internal communications? Or you potentially are more concerned with driving that deeper connection between your employees worldwide with the values and visions your brand represents.
So take your time settling on the objectives of your strategy, the timeline you’ll be operating within, and remember to think SMART:
Craft your company’s tone of voice
Based on what you’ve learned about the personalities within your team, adjust your organisation’s tone of voice accordingly.
There’s a good chance that this will differ from how your brand communicates its products, services and values to your customers. This tone should be geared toward attracting and welcoming new staff to your ranks, as well as keeping your existing workforce motivated and attached to your brand.
While the nature of your tone of voice will be unique to your business, to reap the full benefits of your internal communications plan, it must:
Present a totally clear and unambiguous message across your various channels
Embody the core values your company stands for
Maintain complete consistency at every touchpoint
Give the right impression to your audience based on the values they hold close
Determine what channels you will utilise
With internal communications, many companies believe the only way is email. In fact, the breadth of channels that these messages can be delivered is vastly different from just a couple of decades ago. Determining which platforms will best reach your employees will depend on your personas, your goals and your budget considerations.
Examples of good internal communications methods you may wish to consider in your business include:
Intranet forums and chatting tools
applications like Slack, Trello and other Intranet forums offer a great space for co-workers to communicate and announce important information to many people at once, and can often be branded around your organisation.
Face-to-face meetings
your members of staff might prefer a more personal form of communication to inform them of how they’re progressing, areas they can improve on and discuss ideas that can benefit the whole company moving forward.
Videos
highly interactive, easily consumable and accessible for employees, it is no surprise that more businesses are using video for internal communications, whether it’s in the form of helpful tutorials for employees or a way of showcasing your social events and developments across your entire workforce.
Social media
with 53% of people interested in improving their application of digital channels for this purpose, employing social media for your internal communications can present engaging pieces that demonstrate your organisation’s events, values and celebrations to build a stronger bond with your employees.
Workplace displays
many brands are benefitting from incorporating internal displays, posters and designs within the workplace to consistently motivate and inspire employees, as well as keep them constantly engaged with your brand messages.
Align your external and internal communications
Finally, while there is no question that the messages, tone and audience of your external communications will differ from your internal communications, there needs to be a level of consistency between the two. If the communications you are sending between your team vary significantly from the content you are disseminating to your outside audiences, it can cause a disconnect among your employees or your customers, and in some cases both.
Particularly on the channels that you utilise for both forms of communications, such as your website, social media and emails, it is important to assess whether both sides are clearly following the values and personality of your brand. If they diverge too significantly, discuss both concurrently to identify where changes can be made on both sides to bring them in line.
How to measure the effectiveness of internal communications
We have established how important internal comms is, but all the time, effort and money you invest is futile if you can’t see how well your strategy has performed. Being able to assess your plan’s success means you can identify areas that you need to continue to develop and improve.
Identify your internal communications goals
Knowing what success looks like is half the battle. If you don’t know what you’re working towards, it’s near on impossible to make any progress. These particular goals should be company-wide, what is the bigger picture vision? And what’s the internal comms team’s role in supporting this?
Determine goals for your communications
You may choose to break this down by broader goals for your team such as increasing employee engagement, as well as having more targeted individual campaign metrics. Knowing how to define success will help you shape your strategy, and when things don’t quite go to plan, you can refine based on what you’ve learnt.
Optimise your campaigns with data
With each digital channel for your internal communications, there will be many ways to measure their effectiveness. This can be broken down by clicks, likes, comments and shares. It’s important to take a baseline snapshot of your channels before you begin tracking your campaigns, that way you will be able to see how far you have come.
Employee advocacy
Your employees could be one of your most effective marketing strands in terms of brand awareness and outreach. On the other hand, employees will also feel valued having their opinions and involvement within the company being championed.
5 ways to measure employee engagement for your internal communications
1. Conduct a survey Survey monkey allows you to create a free questionnaire where your employees can remain anonymous and not have to worry about being too honest. If they don’t agree with some of the communication messaging or methods, this will give them a platform to openly share their opinions without fear of starting a conflict.
2. Implement ‘desktop notifications’ If you have an intranet system your IT team will be able to introduce something called ‘tickers’ that can display key messages and notifications to selected team members, you can then see how many people clicked on them to see more information or simply dismissed them.
3. Measure email open and click-through rates If your open rates are low, that suggests either your subject lines aren’t relevant enough or your employees don’t care what it is that’s being said. If it’s the latter it’s important to find out why, which is where the survey could come in useful. If engagement is extremely low you may wish to incentivise the survey completion – though this would mean they waive their right to being anonymous. If employees are opening the emails but not clicking through to complete actions or read further then you may want to consider refreshing your tone of voice or getting feedback from a select few.
4. Verbal responses and feedback What you don’t want to be doing is communicating more about feedback than you do actually delivering your campaigns. Ensure any responses or feedback is never mandatory, so that people don’t begin to resent the exercise. If they feel strongly enough about it one way or the other, they will participate.
5. Monitor turnover and have insight on exit interviews Lots of employees leave jobs because they feel alienated or not including in certain communication or developments about the company. If your internal communications plan is solid, it may help contribute to a lower turnover rate. If other factors play a role, then see if you can get a question about internal comms within the exit interview process. If anyone is going to be honest about what they think, it’s when they’re on their way out and have nothing to lose.
What does the future hold for internal communications?
Over the past decade or so, more and more businesses have understood the importance of their internal communications and the scope that this covers. While this is still far from universal, this aspect of most companies’ day-to-day life is now receiving more attention than ever, and it’ll only continue to attract more moving forward.
Long gone are the days where a monthly newsletter passed around the office would suffice. Now, more innovative internal communication ideas and methods are forming with the goal of enhancing brand identity, both among team members and projected to the wider world.
So how will internal communication evolve for the future? Below we’ve picked out some key trends to look out for in 2020 and beyond, as these could play a role in moulding your approach sooner than you expect.
Internal communications teams will cement their seat at an executive level
As employees are increasingly valued for the role they can play in supporting an organisation’s brand identity, the more crucial it will be for internal communication teams to be closely tied to company executives.
In years past, the part played by an internal communications strategy was more rudimentary – to entertain staff and inform them of important announcements. While those are still core components of what internal comms are expected to deliver, today’s more nuanced approach is focused on building a dialogue across team members and creating a collective identity.
And this requires greater buy-in at a boardroom level. The executive team is responsible for setting the brand vision, and working directly with their internal communications team can they be assured that it is executed effectively.
So, if there remains a disconnect in your business between top executives and those responsible for projecting your company-wide communications, you should seek to close this in the coming months and years.
The lines between external and internal communications will blur further
As we’ve alluded to in this guide, the gulf separating external and internal communications is shrinking. In the past, there has been a starker divide – newsletters and surveys for your workforce, blogs, infographics and videos for your customers.
Now, there is a move toward more joined-up thinking. If the messages you are projecting externally to customers, partners and the general public doesn’t coincide with your internal atmosphere, it can cause a disconnect between your team and your brand.
This means they are less likely to champion your brand on their personal channels, or to be retained long-term. Instead, by bringing together your external and internal approaches, you are more motivated to produce communications that satisfy the needs and interests of both.
Of course, this doesn’t mean that everything that goes out externally should also be incorporated into your internal messages, and vice versa. But if for instance your company recently took part in a successful charity initiative or achieved record profits for the year, these can be solid foundations for content delivered to both staff and consumers.
There will a greater emphasis on visual storytelling in internal communications
Connecting with your employees is not an easy task, especially if your workforce is spread worldwide. It becomes infinitely more challenging if the approach you take to share internal news and events doesn’t capture their attention.
Producing internal communications that tells a story and illuminates the impact of the information being shared is infinitely more likely to hit home with team members. As such, it is widely anticipated that storytelling will become a more prized component in these messages than might have been witnessed in the past.
Plus, did you know that employees are 75% more likely to engage with internal communications through video than in text? Driving employee engagement behind your brand should be the primary goal of your internal communications strategy, and anything companies can do to better ensure that should be taken on board.
Using more visual storytelling devices, including videos, infographics and quizzes, will make the messages you aim to project resonate better with employees, and make it more likely that they champion your brand on their various platforms.
Employees will expect internal communications instantly and mobile-first
As workforces worldwide welcome more and more millennials and Generation Z team members, there will be a growing need to make all internal communications mobile-friendly.
These generations have grown up alongside the rapid development of smartphones and tablets. This is how they communicate with friends, family, colleagues and brands – and this trend won’t disappear anytime soon. In fact, as time passes it will no longer be considered a recommendation to take your comms mobile – it will be an expectation.
Introducing helpful communication apps (perhaps even a bespoke one for your own organisation) will be vital to present news, updates and developments in a way that future employees will be accustomed to. If you don’t embrace this trend, your business risks a widening disconnect between your team and your brand in the coming years.
Deeper personalisation and innovation in internal communications
Finally, in a similar way to how marketing is developing ways to provide customers with a unique, personalised experience, there is a growing pressure on internal communications to provide tailored materials that speak to each employee.
While this should not go as far as crafting thousands of unique messages to your global team members whenever there’s an event to share, organisations should look at ways to tailor what content certain employees received so they aren’t overloaded with unnecessary information.
Around 62% of the emails someone receives at work every day are considered unimportant and irrelevant. This not only represents a drain on your employees’ productivity for no good reason, but it damages how connected they feel to your brand if they become accustomed to ignoring company communications, even if they’re relevant to them.
An early investment in internal communication tools can go a long way to streamlining the content your employees receive, so they are kept informed only by the information relevant to them. That way, they are more likely to pay attention when something pops up, and engage with it in the intended manner.
This insight into internal communications best practice is just scratching the surface of what is possible and why they are crucial to the development of any organisation.
Particularly in today’s workplace environment where staff want employers that share the same values as they do and are dedicated to an environment that’s transparent and collaborative, your internal communications policy plays a vital role in bringing everyone together under one unified brand.
For organisations with a worldwide reach, this is an even more pressing matter. Ensuring that the translation of your brand vision is achieved in your internal communications across borders, and that everyone feels a sense of belonging to your organisation regardless of what location they operate in, is a challenge, but not an impossible one.
To discover how you can enable your teams to play an active and valuable role in improving your internal communications into something that helps you realise total brand governance, check out our innovative brand management software.
Employer brand team guide: How to attract and retain multiple generations in the workplace
Papirfly
11minutes read
Building a multi-generation workforce can be a powerful advantage for companies across the globe. But with different motivations, goals and expectations driving each generation, there’s mounting pressure and expansive ground to be covered by employer branding teams.
The only way to effectively recruit multiple generations is to have an in-depth understanding of who they are and how they differ in the first place. While the profiles and personas we outline below will help to guide your marketing and communication efforts, it’s always worth remembering that even if candidates fall into one of these categories, each person is an individual. It’s important not to generalise, alienate or make presumptions in your messaging, but instead use this insight as a steer to your various recruitment techniques.
Above all else, your recruitment campaigns and materials should be an honest reflection of what candidates can expect from your brand, your company and their future if they join. No matter which generation you hope to recruit and retain, they will not only want to bring something to your company, but understand what you’re going to do to keep them there.
This is not just about attraction with things that can’t be followed through on; the brand ethos and values needs to run through everything from the job posting itself, the campaigns promoting it and when the successful candidate gets recruited. People want to know what was ‘sold’ to them is going to be consistent and is authentically carried through to the stage of them being an employee, and this extends across multiple generations in the workplace.
With over 10,000 people retiring every day, companies need to ensure their employer brand team can find creative ways to attract employees. Here we provide some guidance when it comes to recruiting the next generation and what you should be considering to reap the most returns for your efforts.
How to recruit Baby Boomers
(Born between 1946 and 1964)
Most articles you’ll typically read discussing baby boomers and recruitment techniques will be talking about ‘how to replace your workforce when baby boomers retire’. But if we’re going to accurately identify how to recruit multiple generations in the workplace, it’s important we’re thorough.
Besides, the assessment that baby boomers are on the way out is an oversimplification. Remember – there are over 14 million baby boomers in the UK currently. Recruiting this generation can provide a number of qualities to benefit your workforce, namely:
Experience
Leadership skills
Unique perspectives
Interpersonal skills
Stability
Credibility
Structure and direction
As a general rule, baby boomers will not shy away from speaking their mind on ways a company can improve structurally. They have likely experienced numerous work environments and can offer valuable insight into the best ways to work they’ve encountered. As such, your recruitment techniques should illustrate that you prioritise two-way communication, and their ideas will be taken on board – perhaps offer opportunities to mentor your younger members of staff as well.
Flexible hours
With 49% of baby boomers dissatisfied with their work-life balance, being able to sell your recruitment on a more flexible timetable will appeal to candidates of this generation. While personalities in this group remain driven, in their later life they will typically tend to prioritise time outside of work. Presenting that as something your brand prioritises will help you stand out over your competitors, either through flexible hours or part-time opportunities.
Stability in the workplace
Baby boomers are especially brand-loyal and team-oriented, and are therefore less likely to move on compared to their younger counterparts. So, if you can present through your recruitment process that your company is moving in a positive direction and you create a positive atmosphere where employees feel motivated and respected, you’ll appeal to this generation’s desire for stability.
Post-work incentives
Money may not the be-all-end-all for baby boomers that it is for the younger generations. Often they are looking for a new experience that they’ll enjoy, and will set them up for a comfortable retirement down the line. Being able to offer good incentives and training opportunities so they can continue to learn and feel wanted could prove more effective in your recruitment strategies than prioritising the salary package.
How to recruit Generation X
(Born between 1965 and 1976)
Offering a high level of experience and expertise, Generation X candidates remain a firm focus for organisations, especially those seeking managerial experience. Among the multiple generations in the workplace, Generation X will often carry the independence, self-reliance and critical thinking necessary to confidently push a company’s trajectory, as well as provide much-needed guidance to the younger recruits in your workforce.
An important note here is, while the online knowledge of baby boomers is often wildly under-appreciated, with 76% of Generation X using online platforms as their first port of call for finding job opportunities, you’ll need to adapt what channels you use to communicate with this group.
With useful abilities like adaptability, problem-solving and leadership available to support your team, how can you convince Generation X talent to join your ranks?
Emphasise a work-life balance
Among all workplace perks, many consider flexibility as the most highly valued among Generation X. Employees at this stage in life will likely need to balance multiple professional and personal responsibilities. It is no surprise that nearly half of all freelancers in the UK are in this age bracket. Demonstrating that you can provide them with this balance through remote working or other flexible incentives, you are in a better position to recruit and retain these team members.
Have a clear direction, but be open to change
This generation not only wants to know where you are now, but where you’re going and how you’re planning to get there. They are wilier and more sceptical than the more idealistic later generations, so you need to be able to demonstrate the path your company is on to convince these recruits to get on board. But, make sure these don’t come across as too rigid – Generation X workers will want to feel they can contribute and suggest changes in the pursuit of your company’s overarching objectives.
Offer growth and learning opportunities
From internal training on key skills to education funding, being able to put these front and centre of your recruitment techniques will help you stand out to these employees, who are often driven to learn as much as they can. They want to know how you will support them on their career path, and reassurance they can achieve their personal aims as part of your organisation. Convince them of this and you could be onto a winner.
Recognise and reward results
Generation X workers are incredibly result-driven and place importance on efficiency. Highlighting your reward programmes and how you celebrate achievements will likely go down well in attracting employees of this generation. All generations like to receive incentives to do well, but this is particularly important to more experienced workers looking to boost their own CVs and climb the ladder.
How to recruit Millennials / Gen Y
(Born between 1977 and 1997)
Of the multiple generations in your workforce, it’s arguable none have been written about more than Millennials, both in a positive and negative light. It’s easy to fall into traps when talking about recruiting Millennials over their naivety or lack of experience in comparison to the older generations we’ve spoken on. But this is far from the reality.
Tech-savvy, achievement-oriented and with a powerful desire to learn, recruiting Gen Y candidates requires a lot more thought and consideration. They expect a lot from brands, but if you deliver on these, you can recruit and retain team members that will carry your company forward for years or even decades.
So, what do Millennials in the workplace look for in an employer?
Encourage diversity and collaboration
Millennials in the workplace tend to place more emphasis on a brand’s values and identity than those in the older generations. Present through your recruitment techniques that you place a firm emphasis on diversity and equality, and that recruits will be part of a collaborative, motivated team that will fulfil their desire to learn and grow. That will speak to them in a far stronger way than salary rates and other traditional incentives.
Concentrate on the here and now
While Generation X workers place a focus on where your company is going, Millennials tend to be only interested in the present day. That’s due to a desire not to be tied down immediately – presenting your 10-year plans as part of your recruitment techniques could scare them off! Instead focus on work-life balance, skills and experience they can gain with your company in the first years with the company to pique their interest.
Present flexible work arrangements
However, like Generation X workers, recruiting Gen Y requires a focus on flexible working hours and conditions. It is of course important to maintain traditional financially-driven perks and benefits, but Millennials’ greater familiarity with technological innovations means that they are more likely to demand remote working opportunities. Your recruiting techniques should illustrate the overall experience your workplace will offer them, beyond the nuts and bolts of the role itself.
Highlight your causes
Finally, it is no secret that Millennials place a much higher value on a potential employer’s CSR values. When they think of perks, they consider employee wellness plans, company charity initiatives, social outings, environmental impact and similar aspects. Appealing to these elements of your brand identity in your recruitment materials gives you a far greater chance of engaging with this generation.
How to recruit Gen Z
(Born after 1997)
The newest of the multiple generations active in the workplace, recruiting Gen Z workers to your team is something all organisations will need to start prioritising.
This generation is as digitally-driven as it gets – it is the first generation that can’t remember life before the Internet was widely available. As such, they are hypervisual, resilient and less entitled than prior generations. They find it more difficult to see the distinctions between the digital and “real” world, and subsequently between work and home.
As this bracket encompasses a big part of the future workforces of all companies, how do you go about recruiting Gen Z?
Highlight your meaningful work
Generation Z carry a powerful, impressive work ethic, and want to know that the work that they’ll do as part of your team is both rewarding and meaningful. Many Gen Z workers would be interested in taking on multiple roles under their employment, due to their desire to learn and grow quickly. Focusing on the ways they will be challenged and how their work makes a difference will be a strong motivator for joining your team.
Present employee experiences
Like Millennials, recruiting Gen Z workers requires you to emphasise perks beyond the traditional workplace incentives. Their demand for a more custom, personalised candidate experience and interest in a brand’s social responsibilities need to be considered as part of your recruitment process, so you can connect with them on a deeper level than simply financial. An inclusive atmosphere is also essential to promote.
Offer training opportunities
Robust professional development opportunities are essential to Gen Z. They are the YouTube generation – they are always looking for ways to feed their craving for on-demand learning. Being able to demonstrate your CPD processes and perks like education-based reimbursements will set your brand above your competitors, so they can fulfil their desire to always learn and grow as part of a workforce.
Focus on flexible working
For Gen Z, the traditional borders between work and home don’t apply as they have in the past. Today, the next generation of recruits are elevating flexibility over stability in their priority list, and your recruitment techniques need to demonstrate that to meet their goals. Being digital natives with a strong appreciation of remote working, this is something that will encourage them to align with your organisation.
Dealing with multiple generations in the workplace
Avoid conflict by understanding and being accommodating where possible
We’re sure the people you hire will have at least a basic level of human respect, regardless of generation. But should you notice surfacing issues or legacy employees creating problems, it’s important to nip this in the bud before it escalates. People won’t always be honest about their internal gripes, so it’s essential to give them a confidential platform to air these frustrations.
Let’s take a hypothetical scenario as an example:
Some millennials in the workplace feel frustrated by the older employees refusing to adapt to new technology or them shutting down what the millennials consider to be ‘better ways of working’.
You need to consider a number of factors in this situation:
Are the millennials frustrated by the situation, or the way the person is handling the situation?
Are the claims justified or an overreaction?
Is there a lack of respect from the older employees, and the way they are addressing the younger employees’ suggestions? Conversely, is the younger employees’ approach in line with how you think it should be?
Could the new technology and ‘better ways of working’ save significant time and money? Or is the way the older employees complete the same tasks sufficient?
Do the benefits and skills of having the older employee on your team outweigh this single example of a ‘stuck in their ways’ attitude? And if so, is it worth increasing tensions?
If your verdict is in favour of the millennial employees, then you need to understand why there is resistance from the older employees. Perhaps they don’t fully appreciate that they are qualified to make these kinds of suggestions or just how much time it will save them in the long run. They may be reluctant to learn a new skill because the way they’re doing it works just fine, but perhaps a collaborative, top-down discussion could help them see the light.
Ultimately, if neither parties see the other’s point of view with any clarity, there could be overarching communication issues. It’s important to encourage mutual respect and nurture team dynamics where possible, whether that’s through team-building days, mentoring, CPD sessions or creating unlikely but successful pairings for projects. If problems continue to arise with the same people, you should consider whether it’s actually a generational difference or a case of an employee being difficult for the sake of it.
Break down stereotypes
While we have provided broad personas and attributes of each generation, when it comes down to it, be it baby boomers or millennials in the workplace, not everyone can be tarred with the same brush.
Try to highlight what people have in common, and create initiatives which all generations can thrive and take part in. This might include an internal points leaderboard, giving different people responsibility in planning social events, and creating knowledge sharing sessions where different generations get an opportunity to talk about their experiences and expertise within the industry.
These will all work to melt away barriers and help people start to see their colleagues as equals, as opposed to the things that make them different.
Encourage cross-generation learning and mentoring
Different generations bring with them a vast and far-reaching range of skill sets. Introducing CPD sessions or mentoring partnerships will not only open employees up to new ways of thinking and learning, but also build relationships and help different ages see things through the eyes of their counterparts.
Don’t alienate through the wrong communication channels
Earlier in this article we outlined the various communication methods each generation is more likely to engage with. While it’s important not to generalise, there are different ways you could help accommodate this in your organisation.
Firstly, you could send out a survey to see which methods people prefer, or speak to them in person to gain a general consensus. Once you have this, you can pick the 2 or 3 most popular methods and make sure your team communicates how and why you have chosen to send company updates in this way. They can also be responsible for making sure all specified channels are used to send messages of importance.
Don’t be afraid of mixing generations when building teams
Of course, having the right skill sets in the right teams will take priority over anything else, but should you find yourself unsure about how to split teams, striking a balanced mix of age groups is something that could be beneficial.
Different ages bring different experience, expertise and viewpoints. Broadly speaking, where millennials in the workplace may suffer from a weakness, others may have this as a strength, and vice versa. Seeing mixed-generation groups as an opportunity for growth as opposed to conflict is an important mindset to adopt.
Ask for feedback if things aren’t working
You can bend over backwards and tick all the generational boxes until you’re blue in the face but the reality is that every team is different and you can’t always get it right. If your efforts have become futile, admit defeat but don’t throw in the towel just yet. Speak to a cross-section of employees about the issues that have arisen and the ways in which they could be resolved. Create an open forum of suggestions and encourage peer feedback where possible.
Attracting multiple generations to your workplace
Hopefully this has offered you a useful breakdown of the different generations of workers currently in the job market, and what your brand should be doing to appeal to them. As noted earlier, while this provides a guide across current trends and behaviours, it’s vital to remember each potential recruit is an individual, and will be looking for different qualities in a preferred employer.
However, no matter which generation you are targeting and what benefits you present, one characteristic that must be present across your recruitment techniques is consistency. While your employer branding will be tweaked to address the specific concerns facing every generation, they still need to drive your brand’s vision, personality and objectives authentically and effectively.
Our brand management solution empowers your employer brand teams to create high-quality assets that never compromise on your values, educate members of your team on what the essence of your brand is, and store & share assets to your team members across the globe. All without the need for specialist support.
What is brand management? And how to be great at it
Papirfly
5minutes read
Being a brand manager, in any capacity, can be a demanding job at the best of times. Whether the brand is emerging, established or fighting for its place on the world stage, there are many areas of brand management you must consider to ensure it’s effectively monitored, maintained and driven in the right direction.
What is brand management in marketing?
When you’re in charge of strategic brand management, there are a number of things you need to do to make a real impact on a local and global scale. Implementing brand management best practices can help you retain a unified image, maintain and build brand equity, and shape the way you want your audience to see your brand’s image, products, values and purpose.
Brand reputation management
Establishing how your brand is perceived in various markets is critical to knowing what you’re working towards. Is your brand perceived differently in particular territories? By different audiences? Is there a reason for this, or multiple? Perhaps there’s some evaluation and alignment work to be done to make sure the brand is more widely perceived in a positive way.
The information you collect could be pivotal in shaping your brand strategy moving forward, which is why – if you haven’t already – you must spend time researching and understanding how your customers feel. If there are negative opinions, this could directly impact sales. People may be more inclined to use a competitor if they’ve seen or heard bad things about your brand, or conversely the competitor has a more appealing USP.
There are a number of ways your brand management team can find out what customers are saying, including those listed below:
Reviews – Verified reviews give you an opportunity to open dialogue with customers that are either happy or dissatisfied with your brand. See if you can spot any recurring themes and identify which trends need to be addressed immediately.
Google Alerts – In the absence of a fancy listening tool, Google Alerts is a free service that notifies you when your brand is mentioned in an article or in prominent places online. This is particularly useful if you’ve recently launched a new PR campaign or an improved product/service.
Social media comments – If you have a dedicated social media team, monitoring active social channels on a regular basis can give you an up-to-the-minute view on how a cross-section of people is relating to your content. Shares, comments and likes are all positive indicators of an engaged audience. But if you find that your comments are negative or you’re losing followers, it’s time to do some damage limitation.
Surveys – Speaking directly to your customers and asking them outright what they think of your brand can be a great way to encourage feedback. Often these surveys will need to be incentivised in order to get enough response – particularly if they don’t feel strongly about your brand either way.
Post-communication follow-up – Think about the touchpoints your customers have with your brand; on the phone, via email, customer support messenger platforms. All of these places have the power to positively and negatively impact your brand’s image. Sending automated follow-ups where possible allows you to gauge the quality of the staff representing your brand on a day-to-day basis.
Effective brand management builds awareness
A wider strand of your strategic brand management will no doubt include building brand awareness. This may be to help it stand out from competition, establish it in a new market, or to maintain its already strong position.
Here are three top-line ways brand management can help you build awareness:
The more prevalent your brand is in the minds of consumers, the more familiar they will be with your product or service. A great example of the power of brand awareness is the classic Heinz ‘Invisible Bottle’ TV advert which doesn’t feature the brand or even the product until the very last couple of seconds, when it confidently proclaims ‘It has to be Heinz’.
A brand awareness campaign seeks to put out a message to improve the perception of a brand, whether that’s an enriched offering or product, or a new-found way to separate themselves from their competitors.
Thought-provoking campaigns are more widely spoken about on social media. People tend to share their views on a brand on their channels, and customers are more willing to share a brand’s content if it shares some cultural, topical or humorous value. Social media has become an essential influence in building brand awareness.
What are the principles of brand management?
Effective brand management can look very different for each company and brand depending on their individual goals. That said, an easy way to categorise the basic principles is as follows:
Awareness – having a strategy in place to make sure your potential customers know about you
Reputation – building a positive perception to make sure you are liked and well-respected
Equity – the reason and the value people see in buying from you above your competitors
Loyalty – becoming a staple part of their lives and a household name that is evangelised about
How does Brand Asset Management fit into brand management?
While Brand Asset Management is an incredibly important part of brand management, it’s only one piece of the puzzle. It’s essentially a way of organising, managing and sharing all the assets related to your brand, be it logos, campaign assets, colour palettes or imagery. Managing brand assets can become messy and complicated if there’s not a central place to store and share them.
Ensuring your teams have access to the most up-to-date and approved assets correct for their sub-brand or location, and monitoring that they aren’t misused in any way is a monumental task. Without a birds-eye view, it can be a nightmare to govern. There are solutions out there that offer a central brand portal to do this, but there are many other moving parts to consider before rushing into a purchase.
Is brand management software essential for brand management?
While nothing is essential, investing in a piece of software that will make brand management more effective and save you time and money could turn out to be priceless. Digital Asset Management can be achieved using a comprehensive DAM, and there are plenty on the market to choose from. While they solve the problem of storing and sharing, they don’t provide complete consistency or control of how those assets are being used in different markets.
Papirfly utilises BAM by Papirfly™, Brand Activation Management to bring all the best bits of traditional brand management software to a more sophisticated platform. Not only is it brand management, it’s brand activation.
Users can access smart templates where they can use predefined content, imagery, colours and layouts which are bespoke to your brand. These templates can be turned into a range of digital and print marketing materials at any time, in any language. Brands work with the onboarding teams to establish parameters so that nobody can deviate from the guidelines.
An all-encompassing piece of software that allows brand managers and their teams to create, educate, manage, store & share all aspects of a brand can play a hugely beneficial role in international brand management.
With the danger of teams working in silos, a solution such as BAM acts as a single source of truth for teams across the world. No need for agency involvement or expertise, significantly reduced turnaround times and guaranteed brand consistency – every time.
An effective strategy for your retail marketing plan
Papirfly
21minutes read
The world of retail marketing is fast paced and ever-changing. Whether it’s at the store or head office level, marketers in this industry often deal with very limited time constraints, constant adaptation to trends and increased pressure on resources. In order to introduce more effective ways to manage campaigns for retail marketing, we must first understand exactly what it is…
What is retail marketing?
Retail marketing is the tactics and strategy of promoting your business and products to consumers.
The traditional retail marketing definition – a product, at a price, being promoted and then sold from a place of business – has given way to a more consumer-focused model. And the retail marketing strategy has changed to keep pace.
Now technology sees an ever-evolving shift in what products are made available and how they’re sold, delivered and promoted. In-store marketing has become more inclusive. And retail brand marketing has developed into a dominant force.
But how do you develop a brand? And get that to market in as crowded a space as retail? Here we look at retail marketing objectives and strategy in more detail.
Why retail marketing is important
Why is retail marketing important? Because quite simply, people want products. Your role as a retail marketer is to get your products to your audience, and how you market them goes a long way to achieving that aim.
You’re not waiting for the consumer to find you. You’re bringing the product to the consumer. And in an increasingly competitive landscape where consumers are spoilt for choice over virtually every product – if you’re not marketing your products effectively, they will find alternatives.
But there are other reasons why retail marketing is valuable for your brand beyond the long-established cycle of buying and selling:
1. It helps you connect with consumers and close the sale
Consumers tend to need multiple touchpoints with a brand, and a decent understanding of the value the product brings to them as an individual before making a purchase. Retail marketing allows you to speak to consumers on a variety of levels, at different stages of the buying cycle. The awareness, education and decision stages can all be directly influenced by campaigns at different touchpoints.
2. It helps categorise products for the consumer
Marketing, like Point of Sale and digital signage, help purchasers find and buy what they need. A customer may not even know what comprises the entire range of products and accessories relating to their needs. Often they’re looking for a solution, sometimes, to see if one exists at all. Categorising products helps satisfy the problem-solution issue, and delivers the options of the right product in an easy way for consumers.
3. Provides a service to the customer
As mentioned earlier, people today can choose from a variety of places to find the goods they’re looking for. Part of what makes retail marketing important is how it presents convenient information and incentives to consumers as to why they should choose you and your products.
4. It improves the standard of living
By making a variety of goods and service available to the people at a reasonable price it improves the standard of living.
Beyond the important part retail marketing plays for individual retailers, it also plays a valuable socio-economic role. From the employment opportunities available to retail marketing managers and similar positions, to the impact the retail industry as a whole has on a country’s GDP, retail and therefore retail marketing is a powerful force in today’s world. That’s why there are university degrees in retail marketing.
Retail marketing creates a constant flow of information between the market, consumers and manufacturers. Each helps encourage the other to produce higher quality and better fitting products and services.
What is a retail marketing strategy?
Traditionally, the core of a retail marketing strategy started with the four Ps. These aspects created the foundation for your future retail marketing efforts and put a heavy focus on your products and your organisation as a whole.
The four Ps
Product:
What is the product you want to sell? The two main types are soft goods (fashion, paper products, etc.) and hard goods (household items, tools, electronics, etc.)
Price:
Pricing is key to any retail strategy. You need to cover the cost of the goods, and weigh these against your potential overheads, such as staff and shop rental. Developing a pricing strategy for your products price will typically involve discount offers and competitor analysis.
Place:
Where will you sell the product? You could operate through a distributor, online or in a catalogue. When deciding this, first understand where your customers will feel most comfortable purchasing from.
Promotion:
This is where you define how you will market your product. Technology has opened up countless new opportunities to promote a product, so it’s essential to understand your objectives and choose the right mix of channels.
That was the traditional approach. However, as time has passed, retail strategy has evolved beyond the four Ps into the four Cs. Where the Four Ps centred around the product and how to get it to market, the four Cs approach instead concentrates on the consumer.
The four Cs
Consumer (Product):
Whereas once the focus was on the product, the focus changed to the needs of consumers. Manufacturers would ask what products do people need? They built products around consumer needs.
Cost (Price):
The basics of cost are the same as in the Four Ps in that you need to cover the costs involved in bringing your product to market. But now you need to consider the customer’s perceived value of what they’re buying matches their expectations. Cost also considers how much it will cost them to switch to a competitor.
Convenience (Place):
The internet has changed what convenience means forever. You can buy online and have something delivered the same day or pick it up from a nearby store at a time that works for you. But you need to be offering your customers options that suit them.
Communication (Promotion):
Instead of one-way advertising – ‘here’s our product. Buy it because it’s great…’ – promotion becomes about having conversations with your customers and building loyalty to your brand. Customer conversations can inform brand and product development and are crucial for a long-term retail marketing strategy.
Overall, developing a well-orchestrated retail marketing plan helps provide a greater return on investment, while attracting more potential customers.
But once you have this strategy, it is vital that it evolves over time in response to the economy, new products and innovations, consumer trends and more. Many of the most enduring and celebrated global brands survived by adapting their strategies and branding over time, be it a change of slogan or logo on their various offerings to customers.
Next-day delivery becomes same-day delivery. Partnerships are created to expand existing sales channels. Your retail marketing strategy must be malleable and capable of adjusting to new behaviours, patterns and developments in order to achieve long-term success.
What are the types of retail marketing?
An extensive range of marketing channels for retailers is available to be utilised, each presenting different advantages in line with your goals. Each should be considered in relation to your means and your overarching retail marketing strategy, particularly when it comes to where your target markets are most likely to see and engage with it.
Here are some of the most common types of retail marketing:
Online and digital marketing
The mix of online marketing tactics includes everything from optimising your site for search engines (SEO), automated abandoned basket emails and utilising social media with organic posts and paid adverts to pay-per-click adverts, affiliates and content marketing.
Direct marketing
Any marketing that is designed to elicit a direct response. This is usually a sale but could be a showroom visit or a request for more information. Direct Marketing includes letters through the post, flyers and email newsletters too. Television ‘infomercials’ are even considered a form of direct response marketing.
Point of sale
In-store promotions such as posters, shelf talkers or samples are known as point of sale. You are grabbing the consumer’s interest at the point of sale.
Public relations
PR relates to managing the perception of your brand, and making positive associations and stories to your company. Digital and traditional PR work to ‘spin’ stories that put your brand in a position of authority, maintain relationships with small and large media outlets and provide expert comment on your industry.
Experiential marketing
If you want to promote your product or brand give consumers a taste of what it’s like in the real world. Samples and test drives are a good example of this, but some marketers have gone to incredible lengths to promote a product. Remember Red Bull’s record-breaking skydive from the edge of space?
Limited-time discounts
Discounts are a common tactic to get shoppers to buy. They’re also a good way to clear stock. Add a time limit to increase the sense of urgency and the fear of missing out.
Catalogues
A catalogue is great for allowing people to browse in their own time. Not only can you present products in an idyllic real-life situation, if they leave your store without buying, just hand them a catalogue on the way out. It maintains that connection, for when they are ready to buy and showcases your entire range.
Word of mouth
Word of mouth is one of the most powerful marketing tools. A good recommendation often leads to a sale, or at the very least a highly qualified lead. As well as great products, deliver great customer service and a strong brand. It will help people spread the word.
Some companies formalise the word of mouth strategy with a referral scheme known as refer-a-friend. These deliver rewards for both referrer and referee.
TV and radio advertising
The more traditional channels of television and radio advertising are still useful in an overall marketing mix. Television adverts are often mirrored online through sites such as YouTube, while some companies choose to create ‘television’ adverts purely for YouTube alone.
Television sponsorships are frequently used too.
Partnerships
These are a good way of reaching another potential audience and might take the form of a promotional flyer that another company inserts into its current orders when they are sent out. Or a fast-food chain might partner with a cab company to provide a door-to-door delivery service.
We’ve looked at some tactics and below are the most common outlets for your retail marketing strategy:
Department stores – these offer high levels of customer service alongside a wide range of products and possibly a shop-in-shop model, where other brands sit within the same area of the department store.
Prices typically vary over time, and discount sales are common. In these environments, a customer has the convenience of many products in one place.
Supermarkets – once the main outlet for food, drink and groceries, the supermarket has diversified into banking, insurance and homewares.
In a competitive industry, supermarkets have huge buying power and will sell at low prices, in exchange for volume.
Warehouse retailers – usually in a no-frills environment, warehouse retailers keep overheads down and can sell a wide range of goods at competitive prices.
Speciality retailers – here expert knowledge is backed up with premium prices. Speciality products are added as part of an added value experience.
Ecommerce retailers – also known as etailers. Products are sold online via a website. These are highly convenient and can pass overhead savings, for example not having a brick-and-mortar store, onto customers. Most can ship products anywhere in the world.
Convenience retailers – smaller localised stores, often found in residential areas. These offer a smaller range of products, but at higher prices due to the nature of convenience.
Discount retailers – a variety of discounted products with low prices. Discounter retailers buy less fashionable and overstocked branded products from a range of suppliers and resell at discounted prices.
All or just some will fit your strategy, depending on where your customer is.
How to develop your retail marketing plan
Now we’ve established the basics and importance of retail marketing. To get your brand, products and services out there, it is important to consider the steps to develop an effective, feasible and unique strategy to achieve this.
Below we’ve incorporated some aspects of retail marketing best practice to consider when constructing your plan.
Develop your brand
Create your brand story and qualities
Align this with your business objectives
Develop the assets needed to communicate your brand
Define your position
Examine what your competitors are doing
Assess your place in the market – where do your products fit in the landscape?
Use customer surveys for feedback
Identify your target market
What are the demographics of your customers?
Where and how do they prefer to shop?
What needs and wants do they have that you can resolve?
The benefits of your product
Determine the USPs of your product against the needs of your customers
Develop your messaging around these key advantages your products offer
Detail your tactics
How will you promote your product?
Which retail marketing channels will you use?
Will you use advertising?
Build a schedule
Create a budget for your retail marketing campaigns
Plan out when the various aspects of your campaign will be delivered, and through which channels
Alongside these best practices, you might also want to consider these other features of effective retail marketing strategies:
Begin with a story
Every great marketing campaign begins and ends with a story.
It’s a hook designed to grab the audience and pull them in and ideally connect with a very personal emotion. When building your story focus on an individual who looks and fits into the organisation’s key demographic.
Highlight the problem, and show how your product can fix it. The stories do not need to be complex, but are there to showcase the unique advantages of your products and your brand’s distinct personality.
Understand the marketing channels available to you
There are dozens of marketing channels, ranging from social media and internet paid advertising to blogging, TV spots, internet video and word of mouth. You shouldn’t be hasty in determining which one is best suited for your ambitions.
You need to understand the particular channel before using it. The better you understand a marketing method, the stronger you become in this particular ecosystem as you learn how to best utilise the benefits offered by the marketing method.
You may decide to go with a specialist advertising firm to assist with this, or you may bring in a professional who knows the ins and outs. Either way, you need to understand the channels you’ll be working with ahead of time.
Unite your messaging
When you advertise across multiple marketing channels and in numerous locations, it’s crucial to have a strong unifying message. Your messaging needs to be consistent down to the individual product level.
How you position your products across all your marketing channels needs to be consistent with regards to pricing, brand logos, technical specifications, as well as additional text and images.
In this connected world, customers will find you out fast if you can’t keep consistent.
Let branding do the selling too
It’s best to focus on branding, and connecting customers with the brand, as well as selling the product. By telling a good brand story too, you’ll be in a stronger position and you’ll get more engaged and loyal customers in the long term.
How to build a retail brand
Brand value increases exposure and goodwill toward your company. As your brand value grows, your business becomes a more valuable commodity, as more people recognise who your company is and what you stand for.
The value of your brand, also referred to in some cases as brand equity, is generally identified as the amount of money the business makes when compared to a similar product with a generic brand. In other words, how much more (or less) money does your company make due to its branding.
What is retail brand activation?
Brand activation is the process of making a brand a popular, trusted household name. It’s crucial in developing a positive connection between your brand and your audiences. First impressions count.
You may find product samples in stores, pop-up shops in high streets or more complex experiential events. It’s as much about an emotional engagement with consumers as it is putting a new product or brand in the hands of potential buyers.
Here you’ll showcase the core features that make you stand out from the competitors. You’re creating your brand positioning. Doing this effectively and consistently results in greater customer loyalty, as long as their values match your own.
Also consider:
Marketing and creative that engages with an audience on an emotional level. Get them to believe in your brand.
Timing – engage your customers at a time that’s right time for them.
Achieving brand consistency
In everything you do, your brand identity should remain consistent throughout the entire company. However, building brand consistency can prove difficult, especially for new companies searching for an audience. Here are several ways brand consistency can be realised as part of your retail strategy.
Create a brand guide
Every brand needs to have a clear voice and identity. It’s what the company stands for and what gives it personality. However, unless you have this clearly defined and established, your company will lack brand consistency. This is why creating a brand guide is necessary.
The brand guide should outline what personality the brand has, the brand’s identity and what sort of character your brand has. All of these traits should receive a clear identification as soon as possible. This way, you can determine your brand’s voice, which will guide a lot of your retail marketing efforts. Generally, your brand guide will fall in line with your key demographic, yet customised for your unique values and objectives.
Once you have created a brand guide, use it for every bit of marketing material, social media post and in-store display. Ask yourself if it fits into the brand guide. If it does, good. This helps build brand consistency. If it doesn’t, adapt the material until it does.
Evolve with the times
It might sound counterintuitive, but your brand needs to evolve. This doesn’t mean dropping all your products and completely changing the services you offer. Instead, evolving your brand identity simply means keeping your company vibrant and current.
Companies evolve their brand identity all the time.
If you look at the history of the Lego logo as one example you’ll find 13 versions since the company began in 1932.
And Lego is certainly not the only brand to reinvent itself – Apple, Burberry and Stella Artois among others have all reinvented their brand. There are many examples and the reasons behind it vary from facing bankruptcy to wanting to appeal to a new generation of consumers.
By constantly revisiting the brand guide and refreshing it when necessary, it is possible to not only stay current, but it allows your business to continue to stand out in your industry. Just make sure everything you produce and all marketing material is consistent with your brand identity.
When you establish a clear brand identity, it allows you to build brand consistency and use this to inform any retail marketing campaign.
Use social media to build a retail brand
Social media has become a powerful way of communicating all elements of a brand to today’s consumers:
The best retail marketing ideas should incorporate a mix of social media techniques:
Don’t stick to a single channel
Customers use more than one channel. You should too.
Use social to support existing campaigns
As well as the obvious advantages of reaching out to new audiences, using social to support existing campaigns will help create a seamless brand experience for your customers.
Use social media for feedback
Social media channels offer great opportunities for gathering feedback about products and testing new ideas.
It’s a great customer service tool
Some customers will only use social media to contact your business. Develop the customer service side of it, to ensure their experience is as good through social as it would be if they phoned.
Get customers to share
A huge advantage of social is the ease with which customers can share their positive experiences. A photo for example, of them happily using a new product. Use them as your advocates.
Listen for trends
Social media channels are where people chat. Look for trends in your market, or about the products you are selling. It’s also a great opportunity to hear what customers are saying about your business.
Use social shopping
People can now buy directly through social media. Make sure you’re on board with this to maximise your business’s sales potential.
Retargeting
If someone comes into your shop or visits your site but doesn’t purchase, it’s possible to retarget them through their social media pages. Like social shopping, it’s all part of the marketing mix.
What does brand equity mean in retail?
The principle here is that well-established brands, those with a good reputation, are more successful.
Brand equity is important. It affects both the user experience and your potential customers’ confidence over making a purchase from your company.
Retail brand value
Brand value allows a business to charge more for the brand name, and it generates more interest as consumers want to be part of your brand. As your own customer brand equity grows, so too does your ability to increase profits over the competition.
However, as a company, you must first identify and agree upon a way to define your own brand value, in addition to how to measure growth.
Define your brand values
Do not confuse brand value with brand values. The values of your brand are what your company stands for.
It is important to have clear brand values established ahead of time. This way, you can define your retail brand’s value while maintaining core values. Core values are often a prime motivation for customers to engage with your organisation. They like that you provided quality products at affordable prices, or that you donate a portion of proceeds to a local charity, or that everything is made with locally sourced materials.
As brand value grows, and you shift your core values, it will affect brand equity. Increasing the prices of your products, as an example, may negatively impact the way customers saw you as an affordable option.
Brand valuation methods
Your business needs to determine not only how to define brand value for the company itself, but also how to measure it.
The income approach brand valuation, also known as in-use approach brand valuation, looks at predicted future net earnings and connects it to the brand in order to establish a retail brand value.
In other words, it forecasts future sales. You’ll also have your forecast to use as a measuring tool.
Market-based brand valuation occurs when you compare your brand against others on the marketplace. You would be looking at, for example, transactions, prices for similar products and client growth.
You then measure brand value in comparison to the competition.
Cost-based brand valuation looks at the costs your business has accumulated since it started. It looks at how much it would cost to replace the brand.
You’d be aiming to have revenue greater than the cost of creating the brand.
Moreretail marketing tips
Have a local appeal – customers want to feel special, and that their unique needs and pain points are being met by your brand and its products. Even if you don’t have a physical store location, you should still be making efforts to localise your marketing to connect on a deeper level with consumers. Employ location-based marketing techniques, such as targeted adverts and discount codes for users in select areas, to drive traffic directly in your local markets.
Create a unique in-store experience – more and more people shop online for its convenience, but nothing beats a friendly face when they come into your store. Get inventive with your retail marketing efforts here, as customers are only a few steps away from a sale. Experiential marketing can be particularly effective, whether it’s sampling sessions or free trials of products, it can greatly enhance their experience and how they view your brand.
Retarget online customers – customers who don’t purchase can be retargeted through advertising and social media
Use online data for agile retail marketing – When your customers shop with you, you build up a profile of information, such as their personal details, buying habits and browsing history. As you amass more insight, your digital marketing and website messaging can be tailored to create a more personalised experience for individual consumers.
How to do retail marketing well – your template
Effective retail marketing requires a good amount of initial research. That would include data that helps you understand the market for your product, including a SWOT analysis, a competitor analysis, understanding the demographics of your audience and where they are buying. Are there any trends? Are there areas where other companies have been successful or failed? The more you have at this stage, the more you have to work with.
Based on the data you’ve acquired, you should have a good idea as to what sort of product or service to highlight in your upcoming marketing campaign. You’ll also uncover other attributes including key demographics and what marketing channels generate the highest return among these audiences.
With a wealth of information provided off the back of your analytical data, you have a strong foundation to produce a functional, successful retail marketing plan.
You just need to generate a template for documenting what works, what doesn’t and how you can evolve the plan over time. Here are a few suggestions on creating that marketing plan template:
Target customers – consumer profiling
There’s a good chance your company has a few different key demographic consumers. Or, you may be interested in attracting a new demographic to the company.
Identify the target customers. Create a customer profile, regarding their age, income level, gender, character traits, interests and everything else you might need to put a real face behind the target customer profile. This step should be an essential part of each of your marketing plans, always placing the consumer, their characteristics and their needs at the heart of everything moving forward.
USP
Your unique selling proposition helps separate your business from the competition. Basically, it’s what special feature your brand delivers that nobody else does. Are you the fastest? Are you first? Whatever it is, say it loud and say it often.
Many companies fall short here, placing their focus on generic benefits over something that genuinely makes their business unique.
Expenses and projections
Where possible make projections for expenses and don’t lose sight of costs. Your budget may be the most crucial part of any retail marketing plan. It will inform where and how you advertise.
Measure success
An often overlooked part of any retail marketing plan is taking time to reflect on the areas that did work, and what fell short of expectations. Testing and refining are crucial in finding the successful formula, so ensure during and after each campaign, you devote time to analysing where improvements can be made.
In addition, define what success means for your company at the start of the process and build milestones throughout to keep you on track. This presents a benchmark for your marketing efforts, so you’re aware if changes are required to achieve the goals you have set out to accomplish.
Great retail marketing ideas for retail stores
In-store events, such as book signings or book clubs, can be promoted through social media and email.
Leveraging employees to share information about the store through their own social media channels.
Taking advantage of channels like Instagram Stories, which allow you to show off certain aspects of your store in an informal manner.
Price discounts are a fast way to increase sales and get people through the door. Most customers these days expect some kind of sale.
Get their attention by creating a brilliant window display. Use it to promote your sale.
Many high-street stores promote loyalty programs. It creates returning customers, but in some cases retailers can even maintain a higher price on their products as customers return to spend their loyalty points.
Stock products made locally. It’s a great selling point and you can align your brand behind supporting your local community.
PIM – Product information management
You’ve developed the brand, created the strategy but your business will still need to implement and managing processes at each stage of your customer’s journey, including the eventual purchase.
Bigger opportunities mean more challenges, especially when it comes to product-related content. The strategic opportunities of new lines may not include the practical reality of getting those products online, into shops or within catalogues.
Who’s making sure that the descriptions are accurate from a technical (and legal) point of view? Perhaps most importantly from a marketing perspective, with so many products to list and lots of people involved in content creation, is your central brand message in danger of becoming muddled or diluted? And how do you make sure your marketing is using the correct pricing?
This is where your product information management (PIM) strategy comes in.
At heart, it describes a set of processes and tools to help you stay in full control of the information linked to your product lines. Getting it right enables you to make your whole content creation process much more efficient, and promotes a stronger, more accurate and more compelling marketing message.
Why do I need PIM?
From your buying or product development department, via marketing and customer queries, and right through to order dispatch, your products are essentially on a ‘journey’ as they pass through your organisation.
Unless the right information about these products is presented to the right people at the right time, that journey can become needlessly protracted. Here’s how:
Governance
Multi-channel marketing and sales are now part of the marketing mix. Tone and content may alter to meet the needs of different channels, but with multiple sales platforms to manage, there’s a risk of straying from important product information. So it’s useful to have a central hub for core information about the product for your people to draw on – along with channel-specific guidelines.
Flow of information through the company
Where information is fed into a single source, you don’t have marketing teams sitting on their hands waiting for technical information from the product development department. They can access these details immediately and independently to greatly reduce turnaround times for marketing to reach consumers. Plus, it offers a valuable platform for collaborative working with employees who may be based remotely.
Flow of information to the customer
Having access to managed product information makes it easier for your marketers to tailor advertising and marketing materials to your various audiences. This allows you to showcase particular features or particular product variants to groups based on how receptive they will be to these aspects, supporting your personalised marketing efforts.
Only 5% of retailers focus on Gen Z. However 60% still target millennials.
Be vocal about social issues. Most retailers think it’s a risk worth taking and that there are inherent risks with sitting on the fence.
Be varied with your use of discounts. People seek deals, especially those shopping on mobile. Retailers will offer exclusive discounts to mobile users.
Invest in voice search. Many retailers believe it’s the way of the future.
Retailers will use more exclusive products and offers to compete in the digital space.
You may also want to improve on the basics
Ensure you comply with GDPR and the EU ePrivacy Directive
Differentiate your brand
Improve the shopping experience
Whether it’s retail digital marketing or in-store marketing, paying attention to these trends while shaping your strategy will make it more likely you see rewards for your retail marketing efforts.
Retail marketing during COVID-19
In the wake of the Coronavirus pandemic, few sectors have felt both extremes brought on by this crisis like the retail industry. From the immense pressure placed onto supermarkets and other essential organisations, to the reduced traffic experienced by high street shops and fashion lines, 2020 has brought unprecedented challenges to this sector.
When discussing the retailers’ response to COVID-19, there’s a greater emphasis than ever on keeping engaged with customers at this time of confusion and misinformation, investing in digital channels and producing content that resonates with audience’s pain points and changing behaviours in these unique circumstances.
While there is the temptation for those with reduced activity to take their foot off the gas, we firmly believe now is the time to focus on innovation and adaptation. By taking these strides, retailers will be in a stronger position to maintain customer loyalty in this difficult period and perhaps form connections with new audiences both now and beyond this crisis.
So, why retail marketing?
In its simplest form retail marketing is the process of getting your product or service in front of the audience. The immediate benefits are more sales, which are crucial for the survival of a business.
Retail is experiencing a transformation too. People want the experiences to be more personal. Providing brilliant customer service distinguishes you. Great branding inspires confidence and it all has the power to result in repeat custom.
Some of the strategies and techniques available to the retailer are listed here, but when it comes down to it, the sky (and budget) is the limit with developing ideas that get your brand to the top in this noisy world.
A well-defined marketing mix, delivering the right message at the right time, to the right people is a recipe for success.
Table of contents:
Brand management, Digital Asset Management / DAM
How to ensure brand consistency with digital asset management
In other words, brand guidelines alone are not enough to secure brand consistency. Fundamentally, central, and local marketing must work in harmony. To do this, marketers must adopt and use a brand platform that makes it possible to have one single source of truth for all marketing and branding efforts. Let’s have a look at how digital asset management is a central piece in this equation.
Collect assets in one single location
It is not a secret that companies are challenged with assets spread all over the place, and remains a hidden secret for most stakeholders. This often results in time and resources spent on looking for assets that are never found, which in itself is unnecessary. Then you have the time and resources spent on re-creating the assets on top of this which is twice the waste.
In other words, brand guidelines alone are not enough to secure brand consistency. Fundamentally, central, and local marketing must work in harmony. To do this, marketers must adopt and use a brand platform that makes it possible to have one single source of truth for all marketing and branding efforts. Let’s have a look at how digital asset management is a central piece in this equation.
Collect assets in one single location
It is not a secret that companies are challenged with assets spread all over the place, and remains a hidden secret for most stakeholders. This often results in time and resources spent on looking for assets that are never found, which in itself is unnecessary. Then you have the time and resources spent on re-creating the assets on top of this which is twice the waste.
In other words, brand guidelines alone are not enough to secure brand consistency. Fundamentally, central, and local marketing must work in harmony. To do this, marketers must adopt and use a brand platform that makes it possible to have one single source of truth for all marketing and branding efforts. Let’s have a look at how digital asset management is a central piece in this equation.
Collect assets in one single location
It is not a secret that companies are challenged with assets spread all over the place, and remains a hidden secret for most stakeholders. This often results in time and resources spent on looking for assets that are never found, which in itself is unnecessary. Then you have the time and resources spent on re-creating the assets on top of this which is twice the waste.