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Smart marketing trends: 2016 is the Year of Emotion

by | Mar 18, 2016 | Advice & Tips

Year of Emotion

How you market to your customers, as well as what you say in that marketing, is part of the all-important customer experience. Customer experience leaders have dubbed 2016, the Year of Emotion. There are strong financial incentives to seeing your business from the customers’ emotional vantage point. Properly designed research can enable you to use this knowledge to improve your marketing’s effectiveness. It will help you understand how people want to engage with you, and identify key areas of improvement that could bring in more sales.

Why loyal customers may walk away

Someone may tell you that they’re a life-long customer. But a week later, they’re buying from your competitor. What’s going on? People buy on emotion. And emotion has one of the greatest impacts on customer loyalty.

Emotion is becoming an even bigger factor on sales because people are making smaller but more frequent purchases. They are buying things only as they need them. You can’t get complacent; you need to re-earn your customers’ business every time. That’s why this year, we’re expecting to see a major leap in the number of companies wanting to measure and account for customers’ emotion as part of the overall buying experience.

Make them consistently feel good about buying from you

Examining the emotions tied to every purchase decision can help you elevate your customers’ experience to the next level. Consider what causes them to feel good or bad about doing business with you. Start with your website: Does it contain too much confusing jargon? Can you simplify its layout? Improve its readability?

Evaluate your Customer Effort Score (CES), which measures a customer’s satisfaction with how easy it is to do business with you, whether that is to browse your products, make a purchase or resolve an issue.  A higher score means a more satisfied customer, which means higher probability of repeat purchases.

Consider how you might feel when going to return an item and this happens:  you approach a cashier and are redirected to a kiosk, but the kiosk does not work.  So you have to return to the cashier or find a sales rep to assist you.  You’re given store credit for your purchase, except you never want to shop there again because returning the original item was such a hassle.  You might even be inclined to share your bad experience with others and warn them against doing business with the store.  CES can help you predict whether your processes are harming not only current customers, but prospective ones as well.

Studies have found that low customer effort results in a higher percentage of repurchases. People are even more likely to increase their spending. But customers who have difficulty resolving a problem are likely to share their negative word-of-mouth review.

Additional considerations worth tracking

Whether an interaction ends on a high or a low can be the difference between keeping or losing a customer. In addition to emotional drivers and CES, it makes sense to measure and assess other points along your customers’ journey, such as:

  • Mobile technology. Mobile-friendly websites and apps have become the norm. This year, evaluate mobile tools to easily connect your customers with the right employees.
  • Speech analytics. Understand the tipping points at call centers and help desks. What typically causes conversations to end well or poorly? Knowing this may help you to develop a more customer-centric culture.
  • Intelligent analysis of customer comments. Voice of the customer experts can analyze comments from social media and other sources. They can identify themes, topics and emotional keywords to quickly analyze what customers are saying about you and why.  

These types of analyses require expert qualitative techniques to evaluate what’s happening with your customers so that action steps can be recommended. Monitoring, measuring and understanding customers’ emotions will touch every part of your business from product development to marketing and frontline operations. Utilizing these metrics will enable you to improve your responsiveness, the consistency of your interactions and ultimately your sales.

Written by Media Relations Agency

Written by Media Relations Agency

Media Relations Agency is a full-service, hybrid agency that specializes in helping businesses tell their stories. Our 30+ years of experience in generating media-grade content gives us an edge. Who better to help you market your product than the agency whose work consistently passes the media’s stringent litmus test? It’s not always easy, but our content vaults over the media’s high bar several times a day.

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