MARKETING .... The consumer decision journey PART I
Consumers
are moving outside the marketing funnel by changing the way they research and
buy products. Here's how marketers should respond to the new customer journey.
If marketing has one goal, it’s to reach consumers at the moments that most
influence their decisions. That’s why consumer electronics companies make sure
not only that customers see their televisions in stores but also that those
televisions display vivid high-definition pictures. It’s why Amazon.com, a
decade ago, began offering targeted product recommendations to consumers
already logged in and ready to buy. And it explains P&G’s decision, long
ago, to produce radio and then TV programs to reach the audiences most likely
to buy its products—hence, the term “soap opera.”
Marketing has always
sought those moments, or touch points, when consumers are open to
influence. For years, touch points have been understood through the metaphor of
a “funnel”—consumers start with a number of potential brands in mind (the wide
end of the funnel), marketing is then directed at them as they methodically
reduce that number and move through the funnel, and at the end they emerge with
the one brand they chose to purchase. But today, the funnel concept fails to
capture all the touch points and key buying factors resulting from the
explosion of product choices and digital channels, coupled with the emergence of an
increasingly discerning, well-informed consumer. A more sophisticated approach
is required to help marketers navigate this environment, which is less linear
and more complicated than the funnel suggests. We call this approach the consumer
decision journey. Our thinking is applicable to any geographic market
that has different kinds of media, Internet access, and wide product choice,
including big cities in emerging markets such as China and India.
In the traditional funnel metaphor, consumers
start with a set of potential brands and methodically reduce that number to make
a purchase.
We developed this
approach by examining the purchase decisions of almost 20,000 consumers across
five industries and three continents. Our research showed that the
proliferation of media and products requires marketers to find new ways to get
their brands included in the initial-consideration set that consumers develop
as they begin their decision journey. We also found that because of the shift
away from one-way communication—from marketers to consumers—toward a two-way
conversation, marketers need a more systematic way to satisfy customer demands
and manage word-of-mouth. In addition, the research identified two different
types of customer loyalty, challenging companies to
reinvigorate their loyalty programs and the way they manage the customer
experience.
Finally, the research
reinforced our belief in the importance not only of aligning all elements of
marketing—strategy, spending, channel management, and message—with the journey
that consumers undertake when they make purchasing decisions but also of
integrating those elements across the organization. When marketers understand
this journey and direct their spending and messaging to the moments of maximum
influence, they stand a much greater chance of reaching consumers in the right
place at the right time with the right message.
How consumers make decisions
Every day, people form
impressions of brands from touch points such as advertisements, news reports,
conversations with family and friends, and product experiences. Unless
consumers are actively shopping, much of that exposure appears wasted. But what
happens when something triggers the impulse to buy? Those accumulated
impressions then become crucial because they shape the initial-consideration
set: the small number of brands consumers regard at the outset as potential
purchasing options.
The funnel analogy
suggests that consumers systematically narrow the initial-consideration set as
they weigh options, make decisions, and buy products. Then, the postsale phase
becomes a trial period determining consumer loyalty to brands and the
likelihood of buying their products again. Marketers have been taught to “push”
marketing toward consumers at each stage of the funnel process to influence
their behavior. But our qualitative and quantitative research in the
automobile, skin care, insurance, consumer electronics, and mobile-telecom
industries shows that something quite different now occurs.
Actually, the
decision-making process is a more circular journey, with four primary phases
representing potential battlegrounds where marketers can win or lose: initial
consideration; active evaluation, or the process of researching potential
purchases; closure, when consumers buy brands; and postpurchase, when consumers
experience them. The funnel metaphor does help a good deal—for example, by
providing a way to understand the strength of a brand compared with its
competitors at different stages, highlighting the bottlenecks that stall
adoption, and making it possible to focus on different aspects of the marketing
challenge. Nonetheless, we found that in three areas profound changes in the
way consumers make buying decisions called for a new approach.
The decision-making process is now a circular
journey with four phases: initial consideration; active evaluation, or the
process of researching potential purchases; closure, when consumers buy brands;
and postpurchase, when consumers experience them.
Brand consideration
Imagine that a consumer
has decided to buy a car. As with most kinds of products, the consumer will
immediately be able to name an initial-consideration set of brands to purchase.
In our qualitative research, consumers told us that the fragmenting of media
and the proliferation of products have actually made them reduce the number of
brands they consider at the outset. Faced with a plethora of choices and
communications, consumers tend to fall back on the limited set of brands that
have made it through the wilderness of messages. Brand awareness matters:
brands in the initial-consideration set can be up to three times more likely to
be purchased eventually than brands that aren’t in it.
Not all is lost for
brands excluded from this first stage, however. Contrary to the funnel
metaphor, the number of brands under consideration during the active-evaluation
phase may now actually expand rather than narrow as consumers seek information
and shop a category. Brands may “interrupt” the decision-making process by entering
into consideration and even force the exit of rivals. The number of brands
added in later stages differs by industry: our research showed that people
actively evaluating personal computers added an average of 1 brand to their
initial-consideration set of 1.7, while automobile shoppers added 2.2 to their
initial set of 3.8. This change in behavior creates opportunities for marketers
by adding touch points when brands can make an impact. Brands already under
consideration can no longer take that status for granted.
The number of brands added for consideration
in different stages differs by industry.
Empowered consumers
The second profound
change is that outreach of consumers to marketers has become dramatically more
important than marketers’ outreach to consumers. Marketing used to be driven by
companies; “pushed” on consumers through traditional advertising, direct
marketing, sponsorships, and other channels. At each point in the funnel, as
consumers whittled down their brand options, marketers would attempt to sway
their decisions. This imprecise approach often failed to reach the right
consumers at the right time.
In today’s decision
journey, consumer-driven marketing is increasingly important as customers seize
control of the process and actively “pull” information helpful to them. Our
research found that two-thirds of the touch points during the active-evaluation
phase involve consumer-driven marketing activities, such as Internet reviews
and word-of-mouth recommendations from friends and family, as well as in-store
interactions and recollections of past experiences. A third of the touch points
involve company-driven marketing. Traditional marketing remains important, but
the change in the way consumers make decisions means that marketers must move aggressively
beyond purely push-style communication and learn to influence consumer-driven touch points, such as word-of-mouth and Internet information sites.
Two-thirds of the touch points during the
active-evaluation phase involve consumer-driven activities such as Internet
reviews and word-of-mouth recommendations from friends and family.
The experience of US automobile
manufacturers shows why marketers must master these new touch points. Companies
like Chrysler and GM have long focused on using strong sales incentives and
in-dealer programs to win during the active-evaluation and moment-of-purchase
phases. These companies have been fighting the wrong battle: the real
challenges for them are the initial-consideration and postpurchase phases,
which Asian brands such as Toyota Motor and Honda dominate with their brand
strength and product quality. Positive experiences with Asian vehicles have
made purchasers loyal to them, and that in turn generates positive
word-of-mouth that increases the likelihood of their making it into the
initial-consideration set. Not even constant sales incentives by US
manufacturers can overcome this virtuous cycle.
Two types of loyalty
When consumers reach a
decision at the moment of purchase, the marketer’s work has just begun: the
postpurchase experience shapes their opinion for every subsequent decision in
the category, so the journey is an ongoing cycle. More than 60 percent of
consumers of facial skin care products, for example, go online to conduct
further research after the purchase—a touch point unimaginable when the funnel
was conceived.
Although the need to
provide an after-sales experience that inspires loyalty and therefore repeat
purchases isn’t new, not all loyalty is equal in today’s increasingly
competitive, complex world. Of consumers who profess loyalty to a brand, some
are active loyalists, who not only stick with it but also recommend it. Others
are passive loyalists who, whether from laziness or confusion caused by the
dizzying array of choices, stay with a brand without being committed to it.
Despite their claims of allegiance, passive consumers are open to messages from
competitors who give them a reason to switch.
Take the
automotive-insurance industry, in which most companies have a large base of
seemingly loyal customers who renew every year. Our research found as much as a
sixfold difference in the ratio of active to passive loyalists among major
brands, so companies have opportunities to interrupt the loyalty loop. The US
insurers GEICO and Progressive are doing just that, snaring the passively loyal
customers of other companies by making comparison shopping and switching easy.
They are giving consumers reasons to leave, not excuses to stay.
All marketers should
make expanding the base of active loyalists a priority, and to do so they must
focus their spending on the new touch points. That will require entirely new
marketing efforts, not just investments in Internet sites and efforts to drive
word-of-mouth or a renewed commitment to customer satisfaction.
CONTINUES IN PART II
No comments:
Post a Comment