Thursday, January 27, 2011

Customer Engagement and the Mini-Cooper

Owners of the Mini-Cooper have long been known to be one of the most fanatical and loyal of all owners.  They are likely to custom design their cars online, actively participate in local motoring clubs, and are in general, a passionate and faithful community.  

A new project took me to the mid-west where I finally got a taste of the Mini-Cooper, courtesy of Budget rental cars.   Initially, I was excited by the opportunity to find out what the buzz was about, but after getting in the little red car with white racing stripes, I quickly found myself totally discombobulated.  It was like the car was designed by aliens, nothing was where it is should of been.

I couldn’t operate the windows the first half of the day, drove around with my blinker on for the other half.  The radio settings were in the speedometer, and the tachometer was where the speedometer should have been.  Even the gas gauge wasn’t a gauge at all, but rather a circle of lights.

The “Coop” had all the same instruments any other car has, but they were in different locations and/or in different forms.  I’m still not convinced if the lay out of the dashboard is better, but one thing is true -- I was fully engaged, I had to be.  Even though I’ve been driving for almost 30 years I was a stranger in a strange land.  Suddenly, driving was fun again.

It got me thinking about how we engage customers.  There is a bunch of noise being made about customer engagement; the question for most of us is how to make it happen.  Intuitively it makes sense, but from an execution standpoint, it’s still a bit of a mystery. 

We have seen traditional response rates drop, and have begun experimenting with Social Media with little, to no, payoff.  Although the true upside of customer engagement may still yet to be defined, a Gallup research report points to it as a leading indicator for customer attrition.  In some ways we’re searching for the Holy Grail, but maybe new isn’t the answer, maybe we have what we need.

As I sat at a stoplight and stared at the dashboard trying to make sense out of it, it hit me: It was if the Mini-Cooper engineers intentional redesigned and/or rethought everything, most likely with the intent of keeping the Coop customer base happy and engaged with it’s quirkiness.

It showed me that you could create an engaging experience by leveraging what you already have.  Granted, had I been on a tight schedule, I may not of enjoyed having to “get up to speed."  I was in a city that I had never visited and driving to see a client I’ve never met.  I had my hands full directing the GPS, a stick shift, and a conference call.

I am not suggesting rearranging mission critical assets for key customers but what I am offering is this…maybe we need to rethink how customers engage and interact with our sales people, customer service reps, and the web.  Like the engineers at Mini-Cooper, we need apply our creative thinking skills to reordering our assets to provide customers with what they want, but delivered in new and intriguing ways.

At the end of the day the Mini-Cooper still provides basic transportation - I got from point A to point B, but getting there was uncomfortable, scary, exciting and fun.   Much of what we provide customers is basic "transportation," and "mixing it up" can be scary, but it also may be the key to getting customers’ attention again.   

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Best of the Blog 2010

Last year I put up a “best of” post to buy some time on a career change.   It’s now become one of my favorite post to write.  It gives me a chance to look back over the year and reflect…and it’s been a very interesting year. 

The transition from being a management consultant to an agency guy, caused about half my audience to disappear within the first two months.   Even though I ended the year with slightly more visitors than last year, much of that audience is new (77%).   As new visitors explored the content, time on the site almost double from 1:19 minutes to 2:30 minutes (the average blog visitors stays 1:15 mins.).  Pageviews also increased significantly as well. 

Top blog posts for the year included topics that had social media and customer experience themes.
The Top 6:
  1. B2B Social Media and the Upside Funnel – also named as one of the Top B2B Social Media  post of year.
  2. The Price/Value Equation and the $1 Razor – a classic, written in April 9, 2009 in the midst of the recession.  It’s also the #1 search term for the blog.
  3. Inside the Ritz Customer Experience Model – the most fun I’ve ever had researching a post.
  4. Channel Strategy and the Recession – seems to have hit a nerve. 
  5. Top 10 Laziest Sales Tactics  - by far the most fun to write.  
  6. The Social Manifesto – my “Jerry McQuire” moment, despite being written in December, it managed to make the TOP 6, by having the highest first day and first week views. 
This year I’m using multiple sources of data, and as a result, I've seen the shortcomings of using Google Analytics, more on that later.   My new favorite tool is Post Rank Analytics which ranks the post based on visitor engagement.
Referral sites played a much bigger role, including a media site based in Russia.  The number of visitors from the US declined, but large increases from Europe, especially in Norway and Germany, has pushed up page views up (over 40,000) from the previous year. 

What I’ve learned this year:
  • Personal stories and "frameworks" - I assume readers relate to my situation or the fact that I writing on real world experiences.  Stories where I provide a "framework"or an "approach" also do well.  
  • Perception matters - for the past four years I was a management consultant writing a blog, but I changed my career.  I'm still the same person, with the same experiences, but what I do has changed, and for a portion of my audience that matters.  
  • Commercialization – this is my biggest concern for bloggers, and for the medium as a whole.  Agencies and companies realize the power and influence of blogs, and are out to get involved.  Although bloggers have been approach by these groups in the past to endorse products, new services, like Business 2 Blogger are bringing scale to the “blog for cash” business.   And in this case, you don’t even have to endorse the product and/or have a target audience to get paid.  They just want you to mention the product. 
  • Analytic issues – the blog service I use now offers analytics, and as I mentioned I’ve started to use Post Rank.  For the other bloggers in the audience, triangulate your results data.   Google Analytics under represents page views, especially from those visitors using an Opera browser, in particular visitors from Nordic countries. 
Along the way the blog has received some additional recognition in the B2B space.  In addition to recognition for the Upside Down funnel post, it was named to a Top 15 list, and added to the B2B Social Media landscape, although I have no idea where it is on the map.
    One of my goals last year was to pick up a reader in Wyoming, and despite getting new visitors from Macedonia and Mongolia, that goal still remains elusive.   Maybe it’s an analytics issues, perhaps Opera is the preferred browser in that state.  Oh well, maybe this year.