Bing Ads Has A Customer Obsession

Lis­ten­ing to crit­i­cism from your cus­tomers can be painful, but it’s a nec­es­sary step if your brand tru­ly wants to embrace cus­tomer-cen­tric­i­ty.

Danny Goodwin By Danny Goodwin from Momentology. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Lis­ten­ing to crit­i­cism from your cus­tomers can be painful, but it’s a nec­es­sary step if your brand tru­ly wants to embrace cus­tomer-cen­tric­i­ty. Know­ing the issues your cus­tomers have with your prod­uct can be worth its weight in gold, and lead to need­ed inno­va­tion and more rev­enue.

Cus­tomer obses­sion isn’t a buzz­word for the Bing Ads team. It’s a state of mind. But it wasn’t always this way. As the under­dog in paid search adver­tis­ing behind the Google AdWords jug­ger­naut, Bing Ads learned that they didn’t have the right to be arro­gant or tell the mar­ket what to do. The mar­ket told them what they had to do, said David Pann, Microsoft gen­er­al man­ag­er, prod­uct mar­ket­ing, online ser­vices divi­sion, speak­ing at the Bing Ads Next event in Red­mond, Wash­ing­ton. Bing Ads learned to start lis­ten­ing and deliv­er­ing what adver­tis­ers were ask­ing for. “I’ve nev­er seen an R&D team lis­ten to cus­tomers bet­ter than our team,” Pann said. “They took [lis­ten­ing to our cus­tomers] to heart, and demon­strat­ed that we’re going to keep lis­ten­ing and react.”

Listen To Your Customers

Steve Sirich, gen­er­al man­ag­er, Bing Ads prod­uct mar­ket­ing, said a big turn­ing point was when the team adopt­ed an out­side-in cul­ture and empow­ered cus­tomers to tell them what does and does­n’t work. “Our cus­tomer obses­sion is very gen­uine,” Sirich said. “We want to make sure peo­ple are hear­ing the mes­sage and see­ing the changes.” Sirich said inno­va­tion and improve­ment are the result of going out and inten­tion­al­ly meet­ing with your cus­tomers face to face, one on one, in their envi­ron­ments, to see what’s fail­ing and under­stand the issues and the pain. Pann echoed Sirich’s thoughts on the impor­tance of talk­ing to cus­tomers, real­ly lis­ten­ing to them, and under­stand­ing how they oper­ate. “It’s the art of lis­ten­ing,” Pann said. “Peo­ple want to solve prob­lems. Well, you may not have actu­al­ly heard the prob­lem. Ask them open-end­ed ques­tions and lis­ten. Try to [fig­ure out] did they actu­al­ly ask for some­thing, or did they actu­al­ly mean some­thing else?” To begin address­ing what mat­ters to con­sumers, Bing Ads focused on four areas:

  • Scale: Bing Ads went from offer­ing adver­tis­ers the abil­i­ty to review 5,000 key­words, to 250,000, to 1 mil­lion.
  • Sim­plic­i­ty: Bing Ads redesigned with a new user inter­face that was more intu­itive and sim­pler.
  • Per­for­mance: Bing Ads Edi­tor got a boost with faster upload, start­up, and bulk upload speeds, and also reduced data lag from 4 hours to 30 min­utes.
  • Data: Bing Ads gave adver­tis­ers the abil­i­ty to see the impact of bid changes on impres­sions with a bid land­scape tool.

3 Ways Bing Ads Learned To Become Customer-Centric

Bing Ads learned three things were impor­tant to its cus­tomers:

  • If you want cus­tomers’ time, you have to be real­ly effi­cient. If cus­tomers say they’ll give you 15 min­utes out of an hour, you bet­ter make it effi­cient. Do in 15 what your com­peti­tor can do in 45.
  • Remove all the fric­tion – stop mak­ing it dif­fi­cult for adver­tis­ers to spend mon­ey with Bing. Strive for par­i­ty, but also offer less fric­tion, Sarich said. Rec­og­nize what your com­peti­tor is doing well, but also look for dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion that brings incre­men­tal val­ue and makes for a bet­ter cus­tomer expe­ri­ence.
  • Give a great buy (ROI). It’s about how to know when to put the best ad in front of the con­sumer so they’ll con­vert, and mak­ing sup­ply and demand as effi­cient as pos­si­ble at the right moment in time, Pann said.

Cus­tomers are always our North Star,” Pann said. “They hold us to a high stan­dard, so we must deliv­er on prod­ucts, con­ver­sions, and effi­cien­cies [adver­tis­ers] desire.” Ulti­mate­ly, Bing Ads learned that any one chan­nel isn’t the answer. A mul­ti-pronged approach will bring the most suc­cess. “You’re see­ing Microsoft be much more present to con­vey our mes­sage of the val­ue we can bring,” Pann said. That mes­sage: “We have a great solu­tion and we’ll deliv­er it to you.” Dur­ing the same event, Bing Ads also announced a new way to define and track per­for­mance goals and con­ver­sions with uni­ver­sal event track­ing.

Danny Goodwin

Written by Danny Goodwin

Managing Editor, Momentology

Danny Goodwin is the former Managing Editor of Momentology. Previously, he was the editor of Search Engine Watch, where he was in charge of editing, content strategy, and writing about search industry news.

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