« Blog Home
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

I do get tired of the frantic “trending” that occurs at the beginning and end of every year. Hence, I tend to sit back, take it all in and try give a summarised, more considered view a month or so later. Call it cutting through the clutter, if you will … So, without any further ado, here are four very simple direction markers for your digital strategy in 2010. They’re not rocket science, but good strategy never was.

1. Congregation and community: the expectance of engagement
In the increasingly fragmented world of brands and messaging, we’re going to see more and more people grouping themselves into niche communities around content and utility that is immediately relevant to them.

The long tail of the internet provides the perfect platform for small groups of people to share their interest in specific topics or services. Look at the growth path of any popular Facebook group to understand the trend: zero to hero overnight, and then wane away slowly as the “next thing” comes along.

Human beings have this strange need to be treated as individuals, more so in the digital age. They want to be heard, they expect you to listen and they want to feel invested in your brand. Otherwise, you may as well be competing with the vegetable aisle. Does that carrot look good? It looks OK. Buy it.

Usually, business has tried to satisfy this need by providing friendly telephone touchpoints (or the beloved old Contact Us form) where traditional engagement can occur. It’s becoming expensive, and we’re starting to realise that when a greater cost is incurred, there damn well better be a bigger bang for buck on the horizon.

For instance: you have a problem with a brand, you phone its call centre, you happen to get a delightful call centre agent who sorts your problem out. It costs the company a fortune in infrastructure and creates a warm, fuzzy feeling between customer and call-centre agent. No one else knows about it. No one else will. Digital rands not working quite as hard as they should?

The true allure of digital engagement (and the most frightening component) is the ability to turn these negative customer experiences into positives ones — in front of the entire world. Seek out the niche communities and engage with your customers on their level. The carrot-loving people with red hats and two cellphones? Yup, there’s a niche community out there waiting for your vegetable brand.

Opening the doors of your brand to transparent community engagement enables a company to create a multitude of additional, relevant touchpoints. Now you’re looking at a bricks-and-mortar office, call centre, online chat room, niche forum presence, social-media presence and more, with the digital components of these touchpoints costing a fraction of the traditional ones.

If there’s one way to cut through the clutter of modern life, it’s to build the infrastructure to have those niche conversations. Not only with your current customers but with the customers of the future. If you can do that while wearing a red hat? All the better!

2. Bricks to clicks (without losing the human touch)
Sigh. Bricks to clicks. Who else is bored of that buzz term? Has it happened? Not really. Blame technology infrastructure, communications infrastructure, the education system or whatever you like … we’re still going to be reliant on traditional structures for a while to come.

That doesn’t mean we have to stop trying. There is something quite special about building up the confidence to purchase a product or service online, entering those credit-card details and having the whole process play out a smoothly as possible. We don’t really use travel agents to book local air tickets any more, do we? Other products will come.

Why aren’t we moving as fast as expected? In my opinion, the biggest problem is that digital channels have lost the human touch. In an immature internet democracy like South Africa, if ANYTHING goes wrong, customers crave the warm body to fall back onto (you can read: shout at, if you like!). That could be a call centre, a one-hour turnaround email assistant or even “live help” on the digital property. Whatever it is, when we feel unsure, we need another human to reassure us.

Until our digital services can get that human touch back, sales will remain small and targeted to the “digital native” space — those geeks and technology adopters who will always be ahead of the pack, but unfortunately don’t pack enough volume to make up good business numbers.

Has your business got its “warm body back-up”?

3. The art of simplicity: complex is no longer cool
A billion websites, a million media messages, thousands of magazines, hundreds of TV channels, a couple of social networks, a plethora of flashing banners, one times partridge … and a pear tree. The digital world we live in is becoming increasingly complex and cluttered. In space, as they say, no-one can hear you scream.

Isn’t it amazing that technology was invented to streamline our lives, making thing easier to cope with. In effect, it has achieved the opposite: making communication and information so easy that we’ve become flooded by the very channels we created.

In this media mess, the modern digital customer strives for simplicity. Task-focused browsing is the name of the game. If a customer comes to you to buy a widget, move everything else aside, leaving only the simplest and easiest way for them to purchase that widget.

Lifestyle, brand, content, added value — these all sit in the engagement space now. Those who want to engage, will. But to keep the sales ticking over, remember what you sell or provide in the first place. And provide that service above all else.

If you’re battling to see how this fits in take yourself through the Amazon purchase process and compare it to yours. There’s room for improvement but Amazon make a pretty good benchmark for online acquisition. And while you’re soaking that in, go challenge your web forms. Do you really need that ID number and the date of birth?

Brave companies will start allowing registration (and eventually purchase) using existing social profiles such as Facebook and Twitter. Why have two usernames when you could have one? All in the name of simplicity!

4. Life on demand: the rise of mobile
Marketers in South Africa are only beginning to scratch the strategic surface of what can be accomplished on our most pervasive digital channel. In 2009 I attended a fascinating conference, Mobile Web Africa, in which I was struck by the unexpected, yet pioneering “we don’t really know but we’re trying” attitude of SA’s mobile experts. Our digital attention hasn’t been fully focused on the mobile channel, but don’t worry — we’re a nation that catches on fast!

The always on, information-on-demand nature of the mobile device is changing the digital scene in ways we have yet to imagine. If I can “Google” an answer to my question in 0.5 seconds, why does your call centre take two days to get back to me? These are the questions the mobile youth are going to start asking as they enter the consumer force. And these are the questions your businesses are going to have to answer as we move into the next era of connectivity.

You’ve heard the back-of-cigarette-box stats? Ten million mobile internet users in SA. Five million internet users in SA. One in six Google searches in SA originate off a mobile device. MXit has 15 million+ users. They go on. All pointing to the fact that the appetising numbers, the glimmer of some real digital “volume” on the horizon, all sit in the mobile space.

What makes it harder is that we’ll need to design mobile content, services and applications to the most fragmented market of all.

* The base-level user with SMS and USSD access.
* The mid-level user with MMS and rudimentary WAP.
* The high-level user with a feature phone (camera and perhaps 3G).
* The smartphone user with a mobile computer in his/her pocket.

And you thought you just needed one website?

Just remember, the reward meets the effort required. Mobile phones are the payment devices of tomorrow and if you can sell, and sell easily on them, those 35 million active SIM cards might just become your customers.




Related Posts

2 Responses to “Trends 2010: Digital strategy in four easy steps”

Between me and my husband we’ve owned more MP3 players over the years than I can count, including Sansas, iRivers, iPods (classic & touch), the Ibiza Rhapsody, etc. But, the last few years I’ve settled down to one line of players. Why? Because I was happy to discover how well-designed and fun to use the Unseen www.kanbujian.net underappreciated (and widely mocked) Zunes are.

(Report abuse)

Hermelinda Revering on June 24th, 2011 at 2:21 pm

Its great as your other posts : D, appreciate it for putting up.

(Report abuse)

balenciaga handbags outlet on November 6th, 2011 at 5:12 pm

Leave a Reply

All comments must be approved by our editors, click here to read the editorial guidelines for comments. Please allow some time for our editors to approve your comment after posting.

Send me the Thought Leader daily newsletter

profile
Andy Hadfield is a digital native (can’t remember life without the Internet) and is fascinated with the impact it is having on our lives and businesses. An entertaining and compelling personality, Andy speaks with authority and insight about the new shape of life, work and play in the digital world.

Importantly though, he’s not a “techie”! Andy understands the hard realities of business, and delivers pragmatic, realistic lessons from the future, which every business will find valuable. His intensive front-line experience underpins these viewpoints.

He has played in every corner of the digital industry, launching his first startup at age 19 - getALife (gAL) was a social network before the word was even invented. The site was a political and community mouthpiece for South African students between 1997 and 2005 and was covered on every major media platform, including Time Magazine. It also has the dubious honour of being sued by Robert Mugabe.

He then spent the next 7 years honing his strategic skills across a range of industries, including finance, professional services, construction and media. With The Virtual Works, this included building the digital platform that underpins “The Deloitte Way”, a real time strategic assessment, staff engagement and reward programme. He was also involved in creating Africa’s first monetised niche social network (www.designmind.co.za) which drives communication and collaboration across the construction industry.

At First National Bank, Andy helped develop a team to manage digital strategy across the consumer banking segment. This included projects such as corporate crowdsourcing, the bank's first official FaceBook presence, a major overhaul of www.fnb.co.za and a world-class “Amazon-style” online sales system for financial products.

Since 2010, he founded and operates www.OneBigWidget.com, a boutique strategic consultancy and stable of pioneering digital projects. You can find him on www.andyhadfield.com or tweeting his love for cricket, wine and the new style of business on www.twitter.com/andyhadfield.
Technorati RSS
Andy's links
AndyHadfield.com
Home of a Digital Native
Real Time Wine
140 character wine reviews for the digital generation.
more posts
The greatest trick Steve Jobs ever pulled was getting us to use his phone as the benchmark for all phones. They make a good benchmark of course: best ...
You're going to hear a lot of talk about "ecosystems" as Windows Phone 7 (Microsoft's new SmartPhone Operating System) starts to gain momentum. An eco...
Ok, I'll admit it. I'm biased against the current crop of Nokia smartphones. I just think they're crap -- and maybe that's because I'm a "power user" ...
BROKEN BRAND PROMISE #1: With claims service so fast, it’ll be as if it never happened. BROKEN BRAND PROMISE #2: We care about you, and we protect ...
Reading an extract of Gary Vaynerchuk's new book, The Thank You Economy. You can grab the same extract here. First thoughts, it looks a lot better wri...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 33508
Total comments 184
Andy's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator