“True personalisation can’t be seen, it’s about building a relationship”.
Personalisation has long been seen as the holy grail of any marketer’s toolkit. Get it right, and you’ll deliver highly targeted and relevant messaging to your customers and prospects, which will drive engagement and conversions:
However, most organisations don’t come anywhere close to getting this right – and recent stats speak volumes:
The challenges of managing personalisation
A lot of companies talk about personalisation, but actually don’t know much about their customers.
When most say “personalisation” they really mean “content personalisation” – which can be tricky and is not often done well. The common pitfalls can be grouped into three areas:
So, what's the future of personalisation?
“The challenge, and opportunity, of ‘Personalisation 2.0’ is about delivering the personalisation customers actually want whilst respecting the privacy they expect.”
Ashley Friedlein, Founder & President, Econsultancy
The first rule of customer experience is still to provide simple, intuitive, friction-free, ‘effortless’ user experiences. However, the future, is also about redefining personalisation – to be more open and transparent, whilst being more intentional with the types of personalisation which will add value to your customers. As customers we want to be recognised without being identified.
Using “zero party data”, where you capture explicit preferences without needing to reveal actual identities is a helpful concept – as is “explicit personalisation”. This way, you actually ask customers what they want you to personalise on, without having to give up any of their personal privacy. So, for example, you could ask survey questions, with the purpose disclosed of course, or disclose that choosing a navigation option, will send you down a particular user journey.
Users also want to feel like they are benefiting from a useful value exchange – therefore, if they agree to give you an email address, it’s on the understanding you will send them a particular segmented whitepaper and view certain messages on the website – the journey is all clear and controlled by the customer.
Above all, keep it simple. The clothing retailer “Very” used a simple but effective example of non-personal customisation on their website. They tailored their home page depending on the user’s geo-location and the weather forecast in that area. Then displayed relevant clothing options to suit the weather – so dresses and sandals in warmer temperatures and jumpers and rain jackets in areas with downpours. Very simple, but very clever – and no personal data disclosed.
Benefits of personalisation 2.0
3 tips to get started with personalisation 2.0
For more details on any aspect, why not listen to the full conversation #WhatIf…your current marketing efforts will never deliver effective personalisation?
Mando Group has a leading team of experts who live and breathe personalisation every day. To discuss any aspect in more detail, and set in place your ideal personalisation strategy, get in touch.