Why The ‘Internet of Me’ Is Key To Effective Brand Experience

In the Inter­net of Me, con­sumers tell you who they are and their moti­va­tion at this moment. Is your brand lis­ten­ing and com­pet­ing for them?

Lisa Lacy By Lisa Lacy. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Brace your­self for the next big mar­ket­ing buzz­word: The Inter­net of Me. In the so-called Inter­net of Me, cus­tomers deter­mine when, how often, and through what medi­um they want to inter­act with brands. It isn’t only a real­i­ty for 2016, it’s the lens by which the mar­ket­ing indus­try will reflect upon 2015. That’s accord­ing to Kevin Lind­say, direc­tor of prod­uct mar­ket­ing at Adobe.

As the name implies, in the Inter­net of Me, the cus­tomer is total­ly in con­trol. “They know they can align with a brand or leave one in an instant and con­sumers are savvy enough to know that they have the pow­er to get the best deal,” Lind­say said. “It’s imper­a­tive that brands acknowl­edge that the pur­chase jour­ney is dri­ven by the cus­tomer.” Fur­ther, in the Inter­net of Me, con­sumers don’t care about chan­nels or brand pri­or­i­ties or ads, but rather that brands engage with them. In oth­er words, cus­tomers define their own jour­ney, choos­ing where and how to engage with said brand, and whether they go beyond that ini­tial inter­ac­tion and even­tu­al­ly trans­acts. So it’s not sim­ply about wear­ables and/or IoT – it’s tru­ly about the con­sumer.

Signals

Over the next few years, con­sumers will be send­ing out even more sig­nals and telling brands, “This is who I am. This is my moti­va­tion in this moment,” and they will want brands to lis­ten and com­pete for them, Lind­say said. In oth­er words, a suc­cess­ful expe­ri­ence becomes one that is very per­son­al­ized rather than sim­ply a brand expe­ri­ence. “Look at the num­ber of con­nect­ed devices like wear­ables adopt­ed today,” Lind­say said. “These devices take in and emit sig­nals that brands should be pick­ing up in order to build rel­e­vant expe­ri­ences that con­sumers want.” To wit: Even today, con­sumers leave dig­i­tal foot­prints when they inter­act with brands. Shop­ping for a new car is a good exam­ple. While research­ing car makes and mod­els, a con­sumer may cre­ate a pro­file to explore options. “Then when you log in to the car company’s mobile app, you locate the near­est deal­er­ship and let them know you’re arriv­ing for a test dri­ve,” Lind­say said. “When you arrive at the deal­er­ship, the sales per­son can pull up your pro­file to con­tin­ue help­ing you with the buy­ing process in the show­room.” Hol­i­day shop­ping data indi­cates this is a trend that is well under­way. In fact, accord­ing to a recent Adobe Index Report, mobile has already played a vital role this sea­son with 37 per­cent of online sales com­ing from mobile on Thanks­giv­ing, 33 per­cent on Black Fri­day, and 28 per­cent on Cyber Mon­day, Lind­say said. “It’s also notable that Black Fri­day in-store traf­fic was down quite a bit this year,” he added. “This sug­gests that con­sumer pur­chas­es are not only dri­ven by dis­counts, but also by the mobile expe­ri­ence. If the expe­ri­ence on mobile is poor, it’s lost busi­ness.”

Consumer Expectations

Con­sumer expec­ta­tion is one of the main dri­vers behind the Inter­net of Me. The oth­er is tech­nol­o­gy, includ­ing wear­ables and oth­er Inter­net-con­nect­ed devices, like the smart ther­mo­stat Nest. “All of this tech­nol­o­gy is inno­vat­ing at a rapid rate,” Lind­say said. “At the same time, there are incred­i­ble changes in con­sumer expec­ta­tions. And as con­sumer expec­ta­tions change and demands increase, it puts pres­sure on brands.” Lind­say said Adobe hears from many brands that say they have to find oth­er ways to dif­fer­en­ti­ate them­selves because they can’t sim­ply keep throw­ing offers at con­sumers and leav­ing mon­ey on the table. “‘When [con­sumers] jump to anoth­er site for 25 per­cent off, do we retar­get with 30 per­cent?’” Lind­say says these brands ask. “Brands are being squeezed. The con­sumer is savvy. They know they are some­what in con­trol and how to play brands.”

Data

The stakes are even high­er as con­sumers give up data about them­selves and their expec­ta­tions for rel­e­vant con­tent and expe­ri­ences grows. But that sim­ply means brands and mar­keters must make good use of the data that comes from devices and to use inter­ac­tions to under­stand cus­tomer behav­ior and to per­son­al­ize and deliv­er expe­ri­ences. Take, for exam­ple, an Inter­net-con­nect­ed gar­ment. The con­sumer wear­ing said arti­cle of cloth­ing or shoes knows the brand can track his or her vitals. So in order to appease the per­son wear­ing this, say, pair of shoes, who is won­der­ing, “What’s in it for me?” from the brand, mar­keters could poten­tial­ly look at the num­ber of miles that per­son is clock­ing to gauge when the shoes are wear­ing out and when it might be ide­al to send an offer for anoth­er pair. “We under­stand usage and that there’s a real need,” Lind­say said. “That’s when it becomes more about me and less about the device and it becomes about putting the con­sumer, me, at the cen­ter of the expe­ri­ence.” This, in turn, means mar­ket­ing has to infil­trate oth­er parts of the orga­ni­za­tion respon­si­ble for cus­tomer expe­ri­ence. “The health­i­est of mar­keters say they are mar­ket­ing through­out the life­cy­cle to make sure the brand deliv­ers on its promise,” Lind­say said. Mar­keters have so much data to help them do their jobs bet­ter now. They know when a con­sumer buys a prod­uct, where and how often. Fur­ther, with app engage­ment, they know how fre­quent­ly con­sumers are using apps and how long they are in apps, but the pit­fall fac­ing brands today is hav­ing too many mar­ket­ing prod­ucts to ana­lyze this data and try­ing to tie them togeth­er, Lind­say said. “What they need to invest in is a dig­i­tal foun­da­tion that allows them to assem­ble real-time and rel­e­vant con­sumer expe­ri­ences as agile as their mar­ket­ing cam­paigns change with­out com­pro­mis­ing on con­cerns like secu­ri­ty,” Lind­say said.

Brand Examples

Fur­ther, he points to a brand like men’s cloth­ing web­site Trunk Club as an exam­ple of a brand that has this fig­ured out and envi­sions seam­less expe­ri­ences as curat­ed expe­ri­ences. “Trunk Club takes inputs from its cus­tomers on their size, col­or and bud­get pref­er­ences for instance,” Lind­say said. “They then send clothes based on those guide­lines. This is a seam­less expe­ri­ence because rather than me store hop­ping and sift­ing through aisles upon aisles of clothes, Trunk Club is able to decide and curate the right expe­ri­ences – clothes – for me based on the data that I pro­vide.” Ath­let­ic brand Under Armour is anoth­er exam­ple. “It’s not just an appar­el com­pa­ny any­more,” Lind­say said. “They’ve spent some­thing like $300 to $400 mil­lion on data and tech com­pa­nies to enhance that whole cus­tomer expe­ri­ence and they use data from their Inter­net-con­nect­ed wear­ers.” In addi­tion, Lind­say says gam­ing con­sole PlaySta­tion is an inter­est­ing exam­ple because it was an inher­ent­ly Inter­net-con­nect­ed device intend­ed to con­nect users with each oth­er. “As you’re play­ing games, it’s about being able to com­pete with or play against oth­er indi­vid­u­als, which is real­ly kind of a cool thing,” Lind­say said. “So they have the infra­struc­ture already there, which lent itself to going to the next step, which is using the in-prod­uct expe­ri­ence as a mar­ket­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty.”

Data-Informed Interactions

There’s only going to be more con­ver­gence between human and dig­i­tal inter­ac­tions. “More and more human inter­ac­tions will, in fact, be data informed,” Lind­say said. “For exam­ple, I recent­ly talked to a Ver­i­zon Wire­less cus­tomer care rep who knew my data usage, min­utes to Cana­da and upgrade oppor­tu­ni­ties at the moment I called. Every inter­ac­tion — includ­ing ones with cus­tomer care reps — will be a role in the cus­tomer jour­ney.” This is not to say brand expe­ri­ences will no longer be rel­e­vant. Brands will always play a role because they build the goods that end up in the mar­ket, Lind­say said. “Ulti­mate­ly it’s about know­ing who’s in the driver’s seat – the cus­tomer,” he said. “Com­pa­nies need to deter­mine how the brand com­ple­ments the customer’s jour­ney, not the oth­er way around.”

Lisa Lacy

Written by Lisa Lacy

Lisa is a senior features writer for Inked. She also previously covered digital marketing for Incisive Media. Her background includes editorial positions at Dow Jones, the Financial Times, the Huffington Post, AOL, Amazon, Hearst, Martha Stewart Living and the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

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