Today, brands have many choices about how they can engage the consumer but brands that stand still risk stagnating, reducing customer loyalty, and losing market share. But loyalty provider ICLP has found that there are brands that are pushing the boundaries and trying new and innovative ways to increase customer engagement.
Some brands, it seems, are targeting ever-greater engagement, whether through clever use of emerging technologies, advanced loyalty or marketing techniques, or even building upon their brand values and taking a fresh approach to how they manage the customer experience.
Specific loyalty marketing strategies and reward programmes are just one element of driving customer loyalty. Some brands differentiate at brand level with a focus on embedding loyalty at the heart of their culture and values, whereas others innovate within a loyalty initiative or programme. Whichever route is taken, the key is to challenge how to do things differently to better meet the needs of customers.
Here are just a few of the brands to be watched or even followed for their interesting and innovative approaches to loyalty and engagement today:
Building loyalty at the heart
Brands that have an inherent focus on loyalty from the outset and who strive to create a loyalty ecosystem (such as Apple) are the real pioneers. But should this level of innovation be more about the technology rather than employing advanced techniques, or does the key to success lie in building innovation into business culture? While the technology is an essential component, corporate culture must openly embrace innovation at all levels, along with a strong brand message around the benefits of innovation that will empower staff to produce a more satisfying customer experience. In short, technology has become the key enabler to innovation (i.e. as a platform or mechanism), but innovation should not necessarily be all about the technology itself. Furthermore innovation is not always about being the first or the best; it can be achieved through creating differentiation or improving one aspect of business performance.
Whatever the situation, one thing is clear - if brands do not do the basics really well, then any innovation could be a wasted effort. For example, when Research In Motion's (RIM) servers crashed in October 2011, and millions of Blackberry users were left without email or text services, the last thing on consumers' minds was the company's innovation: their concern immediately came back to the basic element of providing a reliable service.
In today's atmosphere of competitive innovation there is of course a risk that brands will fall behind or even stagnate completely. So, in order for brands to start thinking and acting more innovatively, they should look at what the pioneers and early innovators did right. For example, brand must allow for a customer-centric culture that allows ideas to flow. Brands must also prepare to invest more in innovation while understanding that not all new ideas will produce results, so a results-driven culture is unhelpful to those pushing the boundaries of innovation: a sensible balance must be found between a results-driven focus and an innovation focus.
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