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Consumers crave personalized experiences. In this episode of The Marketing Rapport, Tim Finnigan speaks with Lissa Cupp, Marketing Strategy Consultant & Faculty Lecturer at University of Dayton, about the power of personalization in driving business growth and creating stronger customer relationships. Lissa shares real-world examples and insights from her extensive career, including work with brands like Scott’s Miracle-Gro, Angie’s List, and Facebook.
Lissa emphasizes understanding the consumer beyond standard demographics. She highlights the importance of knowing their interests, motivations, and customer journey. Lissa explains how true personalization goes beyond simply inserting a customer’s name into an email. It requires empathy and curiosity to identify unspoken needs and tailor marketing efforts accordingly.
Lissa shares how she helped transform a declining business at Mead by implementing personalized, empathetic customer interactions. She also discusses her work with news organizations, emphasizing the ongoing need for quality, localized information in the digital age. Lissa believes good marketers can connect with any audience by applying the principles of understanding the customer and their needs.
The Importance of Knowing Your Customer
Timestamp: [00:00:00 – 00:05:00]
Lissa emphasizes that knowing the customer is crucial for effective marketing. It involves understanding their intrinsic motivations, interests, and customer journey, rather than just relying on standard demographics. This deep understanding allows marketers to create personalized experiences that resonate with individuals and build stronger relationships. This knowledge helps anticipate customer desires and deliver more relevant marketing messages.
“Who are they? What do they read? What do they watch? What do they care about? Why are they looking? What’s their customer journey?”
Personalization Drives Growth and Reduces Frustration
Timestamp: [00:05:00 – 00:10:00]
Lissa discusses how personalization drives business growth and reduces customer frustration. She shares a McKinsey study revealing that most consumers expect personalized interactions and become frustrated when companies fail to deliver. Companies that personalize effectively experience faster growth and generate more revenue. Lissa underscores how personalized marketing creates better customer outcomes and fosters stronger connections.
“Companies that grow faster drive 40% more of their revenue from personalization than slower-growing counterparts. Now, we can all agree or disagree, but it seems correct.”
The Power of Empathy in Customer Service
Timestamp: [00:13:00 – 00:18:00]
Lissa highlights the role of empathy in customer service and support. She shares an anecdote about working at Mead, where she transformed their call center approach by focusing on understanding customer needs. By training representatives to have empathetic conversations and truly listen to customer challenges, Lissa’s team was able to provide personalized solutions and drive business growth. This example demonstrates how empathy can turn a declining business around.
“If people are calling us, let’s have a conversation with them and understand what is your system? What are you using? Talk to us about, what do you do to take your notes? Where do you put your appointments?”
The Challenge of Personalization and Targeting the Right Audience
Timestamp: [00:18:00 – 00:27:00]
Tim and Lissa discuss the challenges of personalization, particularly when targeting a broad audience. They emphasize the importance of understanding customer intent and using data to identify those who are actively seeking a product or service. Lissa shares another anecdote about Angie’s List, where her team used data to identify and target customers actively searching for plumbing services. This targeted approach allowed them to provide timely solutions and drive conversions.
“They came to our website. They called our call center. They read an article about plumbing that we did. Then we force-ranked them. What are the ones that show the highest intent?”
[00:07:00] Lissa Cupp: “All of a sudden, it’s not junk mail. Well, why not? Because of personalization. Because a brand that is doing it right, who knows their customer and connects with them at the right time, here’s what the customer comes away feeling: ‘Oh, I love that brand. They get me. They really get me.'”
[00:11:00] Lissa Cupp: “It’ll help you segment the audience a little bit better. It’ll help your marketing have a better ROI because every dollar you spend is going to resonate with them better. And the challenges, this is why I tell my students that you can be the best marketer you can be because even good brands don’t always do this well.”
[00:21:00] Lissa Cupp: “So personalization can indicate, you can set flags, right? When somebody reads an article, consumes some content in your social media page, calls your call center, asks about this or that. What can be automated so that they get their information that they need?”
[00:00:00] Lissa Cupp: “Knowing the consumer, that’s really applying personalization. If we really think about what that means, it’s knowing who they are intrinsically, not just, okay, 18 to 24 year olds.”
[00:06:00] Lissa Cupp: “It’s not just, ‘Hey, we have these products. Do you want to buy them?’ And some brands do that. And then it’s rather obvious and not very effective.”
[00:24:00] Lissa Cupp: “I think it all comes down to personalization. The thing is, I think of it in very, very simple terms: Start with the customer and who’s going to buy it and why.”
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