Relationship Marketing Is Coming
By
Mark Cameron

I meet many leaders of large businesses in the course of my job as the CEO of a digital strategy consultancy. Our engagements are revealing an emerging trend. When it comes to understanding customers, big data is becoming a big problem.

Many businesses have more data than they know what to do with. They have customer data, social media data, transactional records and many other forms of data–all being generated at mind-bending speeds. The problem is that nobody is really sure what to do with all of this information.

That is because consumer-facing markets are undergoing a big transition. Gone are the days when real customer satisfaction was something of an afterthought. Customer-centricity is the catch cry of 2013. CEOs are aware that their customers now have more power than they have ever had thanks to the proliferation of mobile and social media technologies. They realize that they must put the customer at the center of the business, and use this shift to transform the way their organization is run, or risk being disrupted from the outside.

But shouldn’t all this data about customers give businesses the insights needed to become customer-centric? The answer to this question is not as obvious as it first seems.

A business can collect huge volumes of data, and use advanced analytics and modeling techniques to create customer profiles that allow for highly specific messages to be sent to customers. This is surveillance marketing—the successor to banner ads and other desperate bids for consumer attention. It may create more “relevance”, but for the user it can quickly seem like someone is spying on them. That’s because it revolves around personal data and customized messages to make the user feel special, but frequently misses the mark and comes across as creepy.

Most of us have experienced this: The Facebook ads that change when your relationship status changes or the email you receive that seems to know just a little bit too much about who you are. We start to ask, “what else do they know about me and where did they get their information?”

These developments underlie the emerging ‘big data, big problem” trend. Business leaders know creepy when they see it. They know that if they use all the data they have about customers to hit the next quarter’s sales targets they may actually harm their brand. The market is shifting again. Both businesses and consumers are looking for a dialogue that focuses on mutual value. They want to move past surveillance marketing. They are looking for relationship-based marketing.

The shape of real relationship-based marketing is yet to be determined. But it is certain that data ‘ownership’ is going to be redefined. A business cannot be truly customer-centric if their customers feel spied upon.

Data will continue to be the focus, but it needs to generate value for consumers and businesses alike.

 


Mark Cameron is CEO and lead strategist of social media conversion and commercialization agency Working Three. While his agency is based in Melbourne, Australia, he works for some of the world’s most innovative and forward-thinking brands. As a regular speaker and writer on social media and digital strategy, Mark stays focused on customers and outcomes, not the technology, leading to simple strategic conclusions.