The PMN Blog

Building Participation One Interaction At A Time

Michael Della Penna - Monday, July 06, 2009

In June I detailed an innovative participatory marketing program at the Westin Boston Waterfront Hotel. The “running concierge” program demonstrated how leading brands can build a differentiated customer experience through participation and even operationalize it. It also showcased the importance of moving beyond data and using public-facing employees to engage customers in ways that provide a benefit while also reinforcing your core positioning and marketing messages. While I’ve detailed several examples of participatory marketing in this blog over the last 10 months, I think the Westin example and ones like it are among the most powerful. Why? Because they use real people and, like social media, demonstrate the power of getting as many people as you can involved in your brand, particularly those that work for you. 

The Westin program also reminded me of the countless opportunities nearly every brand has to engage customers to participate with their brand on a daily basis - be it your help desk, store personnel, web site or online customer service consultants like Saturn’s -- which was highlighted in my recent eM+C email marketing column. In the Saturn example the online consultant effectively moved me through the purchase process and offered me a special incentive to take a test drive. Where the program unfortunately fell a bit short was its inability to continue the conversation by asking me to subscribe to future emails from Saturn. However, the lessons are clear – every touch point is an opportunity to engage, encourage participation and continue the conversation. For marketers the next steps are clear. 

  • Audit all customer touch points
    • Web site
    • Communications
    • Customer service/help desk
    • In store o Etc.
  • Build a strategy that:
    • Engages the customer by offering value
    • Encourages a desired action and engages the customer to participate with your brand further
    • Attempts to continue the conversation
  • Commit to innovation and open communication
    • Involve employees in the process by sharing winning programs and case studies that encourage brainstorming and idea exchanges among critical consistencies.
  • Train
    • The Saturn program and other successful and notable programs like Comcast CaresZappos and others all demonstrate the importance of training employees and making the commitment to the customer front and center.
  • Execute and evaluate
    • Like any great program, success is in the details and your ability to not only execute but evaluate learnings so the program can evolve and get better.

Last but not least, as the Westin example demonstrated – the ability to operationalize a program can be the ultimate differentiator when it comes to building a truly unique and valued customer experience.

Til Next Time


Recent Posts


Tags

youtube Telemarketing contests NBA eM+C participatory marketing Neiman Marcus Newsletters Frank Eliason BusinessWeek Twitter CAN SPAM Magnetik marketing Toyota Altimeter Bed Bath & Beyond Stefanie Nelson Saturn Fresh Gear JetBlue Withoutabox Nike CVS Virgin America Ernst & Young The Limited Apple WiFi SAP Undercurrent Generation Y Advertising TV Microsoft Wyndam Worldwide Social media Real Simple Pace University 3M Brocade Mint.com Internet Retailer Conference & Exhibition MTV Ad Age NBC Cause Marketing Brandweek wetpaint People Delicious Boeing social internet CRM American Express Conversa Marketing Oracle Aite Research NCL Pepsi Michael Jordan Revision3 Extreme Home Makeover Vitrue facebook Best Buy TV American Airlines Micro Persuasion Brickfish Corporate IP Photosynth BMC Texting Compete Holiday Season Starbucks @comcastcares Online Edison Nation blog Social Networks Youth Noise Prius Time Magazine AMG Charlene Li Forrester RuleThirteen StrongMail Newsvine Do Not Call Zappos @DellOutlet 1-800-Flowers Nielsen ThreadMarketing 15th Annual Gen Art Film Festival Jeff Jarvis HP email TWTRCON Microsoft email marketing The Blog Council Virgin Mobile MySpace CNN What Would Google Do? social CRM Super Bowl IBM Ford Westin Google Fiesta Lifecycle communications Print Vizio Edelman Martha Stewart Semantic Conversations Travel DMA AOL Denny's Agencies Amazon Ron Shevlin Comcast Cares econsultancy WashingtonPost Steve Rubel Dell Paul Allen, Jim Louderback George LeBrun Facebook Social graph Sweepstakes Upromise social shopping Webinars Social Media Marketing Cisco Steve Rubel, TNS Cymfony Audi Hill Holliday Politics eMarketer

Archive






JOIN THE PARTICIPATORY MARKETING NETWORK:
Marketing is in the midst of a paradigm shift. The rise of a semantic and "social" internet is ushering in a new era in marketing defined by consumer participation and control. The PMN was established to give marketers the knowledge and know-how necessary to start marketing with customers rather than at customers. Join Today.
SEARCH THE PMN:

The PMN Conversations
Are you between the ages of 18-22 years old? Do you want to help shape the future of marketing? Join our Panel!
  • Participate as often as you want
  • Win cool prizes
Ready to find out more? Sign up now!


Featured Sponsors







Copyright © 2009 the Participatory Marketing Network (PMN), is a division of Conversa Marketing LLC. All Rights Reserved. The trademarks, service marks and logos of the PMN and others used in this Website (“Trademarks”) are the property of Conversa Marketing LLC and their respective owners.