Thursday, January 28, 2016

The Five-Step Process for Writing Powerful Call-to-Actions By Reverse-Engineering Customer Mindsets

For me, growth hacking is more than just a mindset. It’s about the desire to take tradition and flip it on its head. It’s about leveraging the way we’ve always done things and manipulating those processes to achieve a much better result. It’s about the various interpretations of data and the creative inspiration we draw from them to solve problems and create opportunities.


If you’re growing a product or a startup, you’re probably already aware of the importance of testing which calls-to-action drive the most adoption. Without supplying a nudge for a user to take action, you might get no traction at all, even though your offering may be outstanding.


A call-to-action is the final frontier, separating the discovery of your product’s value proposition and the actual journey a user will take to experience it. It’s like the starter’s gun on track day. After you have attracted users (i.e., runners) who have found the start line, then you need to motivate them to run the journey to the finish line (being a point at which your business objectives are met, such as making a sale, hopefully repeatedly).


Where to begin, though? You could start with the usual “buy now” or “start today” and keep A/B testing to find the most frictionless point of entry. But that approach, even though it may be effective, assumes what you’ve seen elsewhere is “best practice” and therefore should work.


What if you had a starting point so powerful it was almost an unfair advantage? Enter the psych-dive.


How Did This Come About?


I sat down with a psychologist friend of mine the other day, and after all the pleasantries were exchanged, we got to talking about product growth and human behavior. While I’m sure most psychologists are used to putting people on the spot, it was an interesting sight to see how uncomfortable I made him with the question I posed.


I asked something along the lines of: “Michael (name changed to protect his professional integrity), you deal with people and data sets all the time, and you know all about psychological profiling and making educated assumptions in order to help people overcome compulsions, right?”


“Yes,” he nervously replied.


That was my green light. “What would you need to do to turn the tables? To use profiling and data-driven stereotyping to amplify a compulsion?”


He paused, conflicted, partially by the thought of flipping his power for doing good on its head and partially by the surprise of such a request.


What followed was a discussion of the process one could use to profile, generalize, and deconstruct marketers’ tendencies to create more impulsive calls-to-action.


Flipping the Way a Psychologist Cures Compulsion


The main building blocks for the way a psychologist helps someone out of their compulsive need to do something include the following: helping them understand themselves, their habits, and their psychological needs and helping them understand how they use an addiction to fill those needs in an unhealthy way. A psychologist then helps them find new, healthier ways to address those needs (like using exercise to feel better instead of drugs).


ocd-cognitive-modeling


Cognitive Modeling of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (Source Paul M Salkovskis, Elsevier)


Theoretically, to reverse-engineer that process and increase the likelihood that someone would become compulsive around a product, you would do the opposite. You would try to keep them from being aware of themselves and their habits. You would keep them out of touch with themselves, and encourage them to use an easy, quick-fix solution.


This is already happening in real life. People use Facebook unconsciously. Users have never made an active decision to start spending a lot of their time online looking at other people's posts and photos. It just happens.


People rarely say they LOVE Facebook, or that Farmville is the BEST. They probably say something like, “I waste waaay too much time on Facebook” or “I spend sooo much money on my farm.” This compulsive relationship, albeit seemingly invasive, is a sign the user has been drawn in to the experience and is there to stay.


Ethically, there also are a lot of questions to answer here. Yes, your business needs to make money. That's the bottom line. However, at the same time, each person and business has some decisions to make about "how bad" something is. Most of us wouldn't rob people at gunpoint even if it was rather profitable, because that's just wrong. But most of us wouldn't feel too bad about selling chocolate cakes, even though chocolate cakes are technically bad for people.


Somewhere on that scale is a place where it starts to get a little gray. Is it unethical to deal drugs to poor people who can't afford them? Or, are they the ones who decide to buy the drugs and you're just providing a service? In other words, how comfortable are you with your business model and the extent to which you encourage/market/manipulate people into wanting your product?


With that said, here’s how to immerse yourself in the deep workings of your target audience for better calls-to-action.


Psych-Dive Analysis for Better CTA Triggers


Different segments of society are compulsive in different ways. You have an aging demographic that was brought up in the era of glorification of cigarettes and alcohol (before cigarette companies started to pay out compensation for smoking-related impairments), just like you have a sector of the technologically-native young adults who take to Snapchat and Candy Crush as if they were the only things keeping them interested in life.


Here are four steps for how to uncover compulsions in your key target audience and craft better calls-to-action from the get-go.


Step 1: Craft a Survey


To craft brilliantly effective calls-to-action laced with compulsion, you need to get a solid idea of how your typical market segment thinks and acts with other things generally considered compulsive behavior. These types of assumptions are easy to guess, especially if you classify yourself as similar to the very users you’re trying to target. But, like most assumptions, it’s easy to get it wrong.


Clarity around how your users become compulsive can only be achieved with research. If someone else has already done the hard work and you find your answers via a research piece on Google, then great. But, chances are, what has worked for someone else might not work for you. If, like 99% of scenarios, existing data just doesn’t cut it, you need to take charge and source these answers yourself.


The most effective (albeit, most annoying to respondents) method is a survey. It’s important to be concise if you intend to get a decent rate of response. I always try to keep my questionnaires to a maximum of 10 questions, and largely base these around behaviors. Behavioral questions are some of the most powerful insights into your target market because they unlock answers about how the user’s mind operates. I also ensure absolute anonymity to increase the likelihood of natural responses.


Questions you ask here should serve the purpose of unlocking insights into the behavior of your target audience. These are questions that, once collated to create an overall persona, tell you exactly what motivates their actions.


With limited bandwidth, each question in your survey needs to count. So how do you decide what to ask? Humans, regardless of demography or psychography, always “want” something. Generally those things include elements of personal, social, and career life. Here are three things to consider when formulating questions for your survey:


Biological Compulsion


It’s easy to understand and relate to biological urges to eat and sleep. Questions that relate to demand-based acquisition of biological needs and desires that truly make us “human” can unlock a lot about what intrinsically motivates a user. Biological compulsions cannot really be switched off, and they drive our very existence.


deliveroo-cta


Primal instinct at its finest. Deliveroo’s “Find Food” call-to-action says it like it is.


Experimental and Social Compulsion


Another great avenue for discovering compulsion is to explore things like relationships, social interactions, and drug and alcohol use. These types of insights can tell you if a user relies on external influences to trigger a decision. A great CTA in this instance would be something like “Join your friends” or “Let’s socialize” because these tap into urges to be “connected.”


meetup-cta


When all you want to do is belong, click Meetup’s “Start a Meetup” call-to-action.


Aspirational Compulsion


Finally, studying attitudes about money, career, and material things can help you understand how a user may be motivated to part with their money to make a pain point go away, as well as what their end goals are in life. This assists with understanding what angle you need to take in order to get a user to believe they “need” your product. If you’re aware that your target audience is driven by the desire to excel in life, you’ll be able to create a CTA that reflects this, like “Make money now.”


uber-earn-cta


By tying in the money aspect, Uber’s call-to-action attracts exactly the type of driver they want.


It’s also a good idea to provide an incentive for completing the survey. This method may be frowned upon by market research experts who argue that an incentive will skew results. But I’m of the belief that, with enough responses, those that are skewed positively or negatively will be outweighed by the respondent majority. SurveyMonkey has a great little guide to calculate how many responses you need for statistical confidence.


The incentive could be as simple as offering use of your product for free for the first year, or a substantial discount, or a limited early access. Alternatively, it could pay to supplement your survey with incentives of products or services that target the same market segment you do (for example, a free three-month trial of a non-competing and popular SaaS product).


The way to do this is to include an optional field at the end of the survey that asks for an email address and stipulates that the email will only be used to notify the person about their eligibility for your incentives.


Step 2: Find Your Market


Once you have your survey and incentives ready, it’s time to get your target audience to actually take your survey. Finding people to complete it can be hard. If your target audience is easy to locate physically, try going there and asking as many people as possible to take it. If you have contacts that are highly influential in your target market, try to leverage them.


Alternatively, you can always post your survey to an online medium that your target audience uses prolifically. Or, you can demographically and geographically target your audience through paid advertising.


For example, we compiled a survey at GRONADE for a recruitment startup. Once the survey was ready to go, we sent it out to the founder’s existing database. We supplemented those responses using LinkedIn’s ad targeting system, targeting by job role, seniority, and geography, for better quality survey results.


linkedin-audience-targeting


Targeting the right audience for a survey using LinkedIn


Step 3: Supplement Your Data


When you’ve collected your responses and have an idea of what the general consensus is about the behavioral activity of your target audience, it helps to get extra context. A good idea is to take your target market criteria and search for census and journal research data that provides supplementary information about your target audience.


For example, if you’ve discovered that your dominant target market is entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley, it might be beneficial to also search for information about what they earn, how uncomfortable their living arrangements are, or even how well they do at mathematics (see page 45 of the 2015 Silicon Valley Index). This helps you build a complete profile of your audience and helps you make better decisions about what might motivate them to click your call-to-action.


compulsion-journal


Searching Google for related journals on the survey topic


With census data, you get a very particular insight into household, employment, financial, and cultural information. Some journals and other market research (which has been made public) might help you understand saturation data around device and app usage, and maybe even motivations for what makes a specific user set purchase.


Step 4: Create Hypotheses about Your Market


So now you have your collected your survey responses and supplementary data. This collection of knowledge about your potential user base is pretty powerful. With this information, you’re able to create hypotheses around what makes your audience “compulsive.”


In any particular demographic, you're not often going to have just one psychological profile, but many. Every person has a pretty unique cocktail of needs, wishes, and desires based on who they are, how they grew up, and what's on their mind.


Here are some example assumptions from previous research we performed at GRONADE. If we were to address a segment of Australian males aged 18 to 21, some common threads we could leverage are:



  • Isolation: They feel lonely and want to be closer or more connected to other people. It’s the same reason people do ecstasy (which promotes feelings of closeness) as a drug and use Facebook – it makes them feel as if they’re bonding, they have friends, and there’s some kind of common ground.

  • Boredom: Life doesn’t seem interesting. Their job is boring and nothing new is happening. They need to find something to keep themselves entertained. This is where the thrill of trying something dangerous, like drugs at a wild party or solo skydiving, comes in to play. It’s also the driver of many television successes like House of Cards and Breaking Bad because they can immerse themselves in something far more exciting as an escape. They live vicariously through television characters.

  • Distraction: Things aren't going well. There is a problem at work, at home, with relationships, or they just doesn't feel good about themselves. They feel anxious, stressed, or worried. Something offers a distraction, often one that numbs or soothes the pain or stress. They’ll use any means to distract and relax, such as scrolling through Instagram, instantly responding to snaps via Snapchat, or they'll smoke. It’s a way to deal with anxiety at the expense of productivity.

  • Lack of purpose/accomplishment: They feel they are not achieving anything and not getting anywhere. Some habits, like playing World of Warcraft, Call of Duty, or Angry Birds make people feel as if they’re really getting somewhere or making a difference (like saving lives and becoming a war hero) and that makes up for the fact that their real lives don’t offer much sense of accomplishment.


Most people aren't very aware of their own psychological needs. If you ask someone why they bought a Ferrari, they will say, "because I have always loved cars" not "because I feel unaccomplished and having an expensive car makes me feel important and powerful" (i.e., it's signaling my status).


You could guess at someone's inner needs through lots of clues (such as appearance, behavior, and purchasing habits). Someone who buys expensive brand name clothing might be giving a clue that they care a lot about looking important. Or, it might be a clue that they care a lot about fitting in, so they buy what all their friends are buying.


Step 5: Call-To-Action Logic


Brainstorm a list of words that come to mind when you assess the results you have. When you have a healthy list of around 10 to 20 words, use Thesaurus.com to expand the set of keywords to a list of action words you feel will have the greatest impact.


Compulsion-Thesaurus


Use a thesaurus for alternative keywords to impact assumption trigger words


Select five of your favorite, most evocative keywords to kick-start your initial A/B test batch of calls-to-action. This is a good start for your experiment to learn the most effective call-to-action to use.


The best approach to find a CTA that works is to tap in to the fears and attributes you uncovered in your research. If we use the commonalities I mentioned above for middle-class Australian men aged 18 to 21, we could assume the following five calls-to-action would be a good foundation group. Of course, these should be tailored to the actual product you’re offering, though in these examples, I’m representing the most obvious results based on the research:



  1. Be Together, Now (playing on the isolation aspect and the longing for connectedness)

  2. Your Thrills Await (a counter to the boredom aspect)

  3. Escape Today (a ticket away from the mundane)

  4. Make a Difference (a way to satisfy the desire for accomplishment)

  5. Take Control (a real power move in a world where sometimes all seems out of control)


Conclusion


At the end of the day, you still need a compelling offer. If your product sucks, no psychological trickery is going to vacuum fat stacks out of someone’s wallet.


Apple never says, "If you use Apple products, you're smart, creative, and stylish.” It’s just implied.


If you have something people will feel good about using or buying and you can create a compelling action-point for your core target audience to begin the journey and use your product, it’s a much stronger position to be in.


To do that, you need to become intimate with who your target audience really is, how they behave, what makes them feel compelled to take action, and then speak their language to engage their trigger finger. If you can do that enough times and can keep them happy, engaged, and converting repeatedly on specific business objectives, that is a sure-fire recipe for growth.


About the Author: Tomer Garzberg is the CEO and Founder at GRONADE Growth Partnerships. They grow seed- and venture-capital-funded startups and enterprise products. GRONADE is a blend of man and machine on a mission to systematize growth. Say Hi on Twitter @TomerGarzberg.




Top 5 Ways Consumer-Generated Content Is Amazing for SEO

The people writing consumer/user-generated content are the same ones performing search queries. If you can harness their sentences, paragraphs, and ideas, you can crowdsource search optimization. Read the full article at MarketingProfs

Discover the Power of the “Only-Factor” to Drive Conversion


According to the CMO Council, digital ads will lead the way for global media growth in the next two years, accounting for 33% of total advertising revenue and growing from $133 billion to $194.5 billion. This month’s MarketingExperiments Web clinic examined how to make the most of this increasing digital investment by focusing on the “Only-Factor” — the point of your value proposition where your product’s exclusivity and appeal meet.


Check it out here.


The two experiments below illustrate the power of the “Only-Factor.”


In the first experiment, a credit card company wanted to see which PPC ad would produce the most applications.


Version A promoted its affiliation with a popular organization.




Version B noted that it offered the only credit card that supported this particular organization.




The result: Exclusivity matters. 2.34% clicked to apply for their credit card from Version A while 4.07% clicked to apply from Version B. This is a 74% lift that was validated at a 95% level of confidence.


In the second experiment, a software company wanted to drive more visitors to its landing page.


Version A specifically outlined how its product stands apart (number of clients served, worldwide market leader, award-winning). 




Version B mentioned awards, but was far less specific.




The results indicated that specificity converts. Version A reported 1.08% clickthrough while Version B had only .89% clickthrough — a relative difference of 22% that was validated at a 95% level of confidence.


Want an instant test to measure how strong your “Only-Factor” is in your online advertising? Replace your brand’s name with a competitor’s in your online advertising. If the ad still works, you have work to do. You also have work to do if you’re offering exclusive benefits that your market place is ho-hum about.


Exploit your “Only-Factor” by creating and communicating a powerful value proposition: why customers should buy from you rather than anyone else.  The heuristic below illustrates the concept. 




When you subtract the cost force (Cf — the perceived cost of taking an action, like buying your product), from the Value Force (Vf — the perceived value of what you’re offering), you will get the net force (Nf). The higher the net force, the higher your conversions. Value force is made up of appeal (Ap) and exclusivity (Ex). Therefore, the higher your exclusive appeal, the higher your value force. So, to achieve the most conversions, you want the highest appeal and exclusivity possible. That’s the “Only-Factor. ”


To identify and communicate your strongest value force and the “Only-Factor” that comes with it, you’ll want to download and fill out the free value proposition worksheet here. This isn’t a solo activity; involve as many of your colleagues in as many departments as possible. You may even want to talk to your customers as well to attain the most accurate perceptions. It will be well worth the time invested as you’ll have the knowledge you need to pinpoint your "Only-Factor" and use it to drive more conversions.



You might also like


How to Avoid Losing the Value of Your Value Proposition


Value Proposition: How do you create an effective value prop?


Value Proposition: A simple spreadsheet to help you categorize your products’ value


Discovering Your Value Proposition: 6 ways to stand out in a crowded marketplace [MarketingExperiments Web clinic replay]


Sign up for the MECLABS Value Proposition online course [MECLABS is MarketingExperiments' parent research company]



Top 5 Ways Consumer-Generated Content Is Amazing for SEO

The people writing consumer/user-generated content are the same ones performing search queries. If you can harness their sentences, paragraphs, and ideas, you can crowdsource search optimization. Read the full article at MarketingProfs

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

How to Decode The Connection Between Organic & Paid Content Promotion

Organic-and-paid-content-promotion


We often have new customers ask us what the best approach is for breaking the code of content promotion. Is it purely organic reach, social amplification or is paid promotion the way to go?


The short answer is, all of these and more.


When content marketing first hit the market, brands used it as an opportunity to follow a formula for something they already knew, online advertising. Banner ads, spam emails and other forms of advertising were a precursor to the more recognized forms that we see today. In the mid-nineties, brands were spending upwards of $11,000 a week for banner advertisements.


Much later, once brands began to understand the potential of content marketing as an actual way to build value and credibility (without spamming), marketing investments began to shift. Suddenly everyone was investing a large portion of their funds into creating quality content and advertising investments began to wane.


That brings us to today. Brands large and small have become savvy to the fact that quality content is a must. However, the competition for the attention of consumers is becoming increasingly difficult. The mere creation of top-notch content will no longer suffice.


To help you decode the proper mix of organic and paid content promotion to make your content reach new heights, consider the connections below.


Understanding your end objective is an essential step in determining what mix of organic and paid promotion you should pursue. For example, if your content is top of funnel and the goal is to get an influx of shares and view, you’ll likely want to invest the paid portion of your promotion in social boosting.


However, if you’ve developed a great middle or bottom of funnel content asset, then you can begin incorporating pay-per-click (PPC) and other forms of advertising to convert prospects that are ready to buy.


Your hub and spoke can include paid promotion. A traditional hub and spoke publishing model centers around a larger content asset and shows the different ways to drive traffic to that asset using earned, owned and some paid media. The next iteration of the hub and spoke might look something like this:


organic and paid hub and spoke publishing


Create and promote targeted content. First of all, your content should be optimized for the humans that you want to consume, share and act on the information, as well as the search engines that you want to crawl your content.


Additionally, there are both paid and organic methods to target your content promotion.


For example, your Facebook and Twitter profiles may have slightly different audiences. In order to target your organic message appropriately, you’ll want to use messaging, visuals and calls to action that make the most sense for that audience.



The targeting options available within search and social advertising platforms has grown leaps and bounds within the last few years. In addition to the capability of uploading actual lead lists, you can target everything from location and job title, down to the smallest detail about user habits, income and more.


Need Additional Help Decoding Organic & Paid Content Promotion?


Finding the exact right mix of organic and paid promotion for your content strategy doesn't happen overnight. It is process that includes testing, some investment and often, relying on the experts to help guide you. If you need help uncovering your biggest content marketing opportunities and finding ways to make it support your business objectives, contact us today.


Header image via Shutterstock




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Why Your Team Can’t Afford to Ignore the Data

A Teradata survey unveiled that 87% of marketers see data as the most underused asset in their cohorts, and 50% desire to extend the use of big data to support their digital marketing efforts.


However, ecommerce marketers are still experiencing difficulty with gaining insights from analytics. They struggle with integrating data into their everyday operations, like competitor analysis, branding strategies, and sales techniques.


Instead of suffering from analysis paralysis, marketing teams should focus on the bigger picture. Major gains are made when marketers concentrate on creating a better customer experience.


So, stop disregarding the data. Move forward by sharpening the following four key areas:


1. Monitor the Competition


Data gives SaaS teams an inside track of how to strategically outdo the competition. With keyword tools, you can measure your methods amongst other market leaders.


SEMrush monitors your competitors’ strategies in display advertising, organic and paid search, and link building. Knowing the competition’s unique keywords will help you discover unknown search terms.


Moreover, by improving your content with new keywords, there’s a greater chance to emerge in the SERP next to your competitors.


keyword-competition-research


Image Source


Social data also offers an inside track of how competitors interact with customers. Platforms like Rival IQ and Mention can help you size up the competition.


rival-iq-Twitter-Engagement


Image Source


For example, on Twitter, observe other brands’ mentions, followers, and engagement rates. Know when they outperform you, and vice versa. Then, analyze the content promoted.


What content stands out? How many times was it promoted? How did customers respond?


The purpose is not to mimic your competitors but to learn from their successes and failures. If a particular tweet does well for them, it may have a similar result for your business.


Keep the following points in mind when measuring your brand’s presence:



  • Identify insights that can contribute to your plan.

  • Learn what and when to post to produce more engagement.

  • Pinpoint substantial spikes in impressions.

  • Distinguish between what’s working and what’s not.


Mold your strategy with benchmarks, and build marketing campaigns that outwit your competitors.


2. Craft a Personalized Brand Message


Data helps ecommerce marketers create customized buyer personas. Knowing your audience means more personalized messages to segmented groups.


Forrester’s report on Competitive Strategy in the Age of the Consumer emphasizes moving away from consumer historical data. Rather, focus on the here and now.


Try conducting customer surveys, and use open-ended questions. That way, you gain actionable insight beyond the constraints of yes/no questions.


The goal is to understand customer behavior, including the roadblocks that hinder them from making a purchase. So, seek outside the usual interests and needs, and aim for actions and reactions.


Conversion copywriter Jennifer Havice suggests asking these survey questions:



  • When did you realize you needed a product/service like ours?

  • What problem does our product/service solve in your life?

  • What doubts or hesitations did you have before buying?


Your team also may want to gather data from phone interviews. While time-consuming, you will capture specific keywords from your customers. And that may be worth your efforts.


Just be mindful that these customer interviews aren’t sales calls. Instead, listen attentively.


“This is an opportunity to gather symptoms and a prospective customer’s perspective on their needs with respect to a specific problem or capability,” says Sean Murphy, CEO of SKMurphy.


In addition, enlist aid from your online community managers. These folks are pros at finding the most important conversations. Your community forums could uncover new clues about your consumers.


It’s up to brands to offer experiences that cater to their customers. To do so, businesses must look at the real-time data to match customer motivations with personalized products.


Get inside your customer’s heads. Create accurate buyer personas.


3. Acquire Sales Leads


Want to fill your sales pipeline with qualified leads? Use data to produce targeted lead generation campaigns.


But in order to do that, sales and marketing teams must be aligned. A common issue amongst these departments is disagreement about lead qualification. Without a set definition, some organizations witness a stunt in their growth.


Research tells us that “highly aligned organizations achieved an average of 32% year-over-year revenue growth – while their less aligned competitors saw a 7% decrease in revenue.”


collaboration-with-Sales


Image Source


Marketing and sales centers around lead quality. So, to start a rewarding partnership, use consumer behavior data.


Marketing automation tools were essentially created for this purpose. Work with sales to select which leads deserve a follow up. The data will determine which prospects need to be nurtured and handed to the sales team.


The key is to eliminate missed opportunities. The collaboration should help both teams address the right leads at the right time.


Also, remember to clean your databases. Archive or delete prospects that don’t meet the lead qualification criteria.


Quality trumps quantity. Three super-qualified leads will always surpass 20 disinterested leads.


Set up your parameters. Then, filter for things like:



  • Fake email addresses and phone numbers,

  • Information-seeking job titles, like “student,” and

  • Low annual revenues.


Failure to properly process data is one reason companies don’t generate more leads. Be better. Move data to the forefront to boost sales leads.


4. Retain More Customers


Data identifies holes in the customer experience that may lead to high churn rates. Extend your customer lifetime value by predicting consumer behavior patterns.


By analyzing data, marketers learn their customers’ needs and preferences. Leverage those insights to understand why customers discontinue their services or try other brands.


Is there a disconnect in customer service? Or is your onboarding process complicated? Look for patterns and discover the reasons for your churn issues.


Researchers found that “96% of unhappy customers don’t complain; however, 91% of those will simply leave and never come back.” That’s why it’s so important for your team to be proactive.


Keep an open line of communication between your company and customers. This means promptly addressing concerns and following conversations via social media.


Effective data-gathering doesn’t have to be difficult. Below is an example of how new users sign up for Pusher. The company received a 16% reply rate.


pusher-signup


Image Source


The real challenge begins when your customers start responding. How will your team correct mistakes? Will you add more value to your services?


Incorporate customer comments into your retention strategy. Find new ways to deliver on your promises, like initiating a rewards program.


Examine the data points that increase your churn rates. Then, develop programs to exceed customer expectations. Build a brand loyal customer base.


Heed the Data


Data is your friend. Shying away from analytics will do more harm than good.


Use keyword tools to monitor your competitors. Develop customer surveys to help with buyer personas, and align marketing and sales to create more qualified leads.


Data is valuable. Think twice before you ignore it.


About the Author: Shayla Price lives at the intersection of digital marketing, technology and social responsibility. Connect with her on Twitter @shaylaprice.




Manufacturing Serendipity: How to Create Content that Captivates Your Audience

Posted by Isla_McKetta

Fifteen minutes into my first ever flight with my newborn son — a flight that had been delayed for an hour and a half, during which we'd held off feeding him so he could eat on the way up to make sure his little ears wouldn't pop from the pressure and he wouldn't start the flight screeching — fifteen minutes in, we were still ascending and even with his little head concealed beneath a nursing scarf, I could tell he was starting to get full.

I was terrified.

If he started screaming I had no idea how we would survive the four hours left in the flight. My husband and I were not the cool couple who had brought earplugs and coffee cards for all the passengers around us. I was certain everyone would hate us and, even worse, we'd never, ever fly again. I was the worst mother in the history of mothers.

As I was readjusting my son and trying to keep him calm, I noticed this phrase on the back of the nursing scarf's label:


"You're doing a great job!" Were there any words I needed more to hear in that moment? Would anything less perfect have incited me to expose this very personal, vulnerable moment to the vast readership of the Moz Blog? If the makers of the Itzy Ritzy nursing scarf hadn't reached deep into my soul and sent me a message across the universe, would you have ever heard of their product?

You, too, can grab your audience by the heartstrings and build a lasting connection that gets them to come back to you time and again while also evangelizing your business to all their friends. Because while the designers of the Itzy Ritzy nursing scarf did not know specifically when or how this new mom was going to need encouragement and, yes, the kindness of strangers, it was an easy guess to say that every one of their customers would at some point. And with a cheap, but creative, insertion of content on the back side of their label, they won my heart and loyalty.

This is called manufacturing serendipity and here's how you do it.

Understand your audience's needs

We talk a lot about empathy at Moz, and that's because the value of empathy cannot be overstated — in marketing or in life. Empathy is a super power. Dr. BrenĂ© Brown describes that super power as "feeling with people," and it creates a spark of connection for the person being empathized with. That spark can be fanned into the burning passion of a long-lasting relationship — in business and in life.

To understand how to empathize with your customer, first create personas. Find out where your audience is emotionally. Figure out what they're insecure about, what scares them, what they most need in the moment that they're visiting your site. It's not rocket science to understand that a new mom might be feeling insecure about nursing her child in public, and if that's what your product is designed to help her with... go that extra mile to connect.

Ways to reach into your customer's soul and speak to their needs include:


  • A car insurance company that caters to the accident prone starting their rate page with copy that assures the customer the company will be there no matter what happens.

  • Creating an ROI calculator after uncovering that your customer needs your software to generate client reports, sure, but she also needs to be able to show her boss the value she's adding to the company with her daily work.

  • Understanding that everyone's time is limited, ask the most essential survey question first and then give your customer the chance to expound if he wants to. Like Sears does at the bottom of their two-question satisfaction survey:

Put content in the right places

Are you using all the content opportunities available to you? Reeling from the sniffles, fussiness, and, yes, boogies, that came with my son's first cold, I opened up the lid on a package of Boogie Wipes to find this:


The wise marketers at Boogie Wipes know that many parents will buy almost anything to make their child feel better. So they seized the opportunity to let me know that they have even more products to help me. Serendipity? It sure felt like it. And you can bet someone (not it!) dashed off to the drug store to buy some saline spray.

You don't have to turn your site into the Times Square of the Internet to put content in the right places. Instead:


  • Include a call to action at the end of product-related blog posts for a free trial or other promo.

  • Send a reminder email to a customer who's filled their cart and then left your site. Bonus points if you can pinpoint and speak to why they might not have finished the transaction. Comparison shopping? Offer a discount. Too busy to finish? Suggest a recurring delivery option.

  • Use the mobile version of your site or app to direct customers to your nearest storefront.

  • Make sure the link to your next webinar or event is on your homepage so no one has to dig for it.

  • Or, like clothing retailer Boden, put an order widget at the bottom of all those reviews so it's super easy to order the item after doing your due diligence:

It doesn't always take a large change to connect your customer with the content they need.

Surprise, delight, inform

Serendipity is the feeling of happy coincidence. If your content sparks surprise, incites delight, and manages to inform along the way, you're more likely to get the response you're looking for from a potential customer. According to Dr. Read Montague, a neuroscientist at Baylor, surprise lights up the brain's reward pathways. And, unfortunately, delight in marketing is still surprising to most people, so by delighting your customer, you're creating a positive association with your brand in two ways.

Some favorite examples of content that's surprised, delighted, and informed me are:


  • The way The Land of Nod positions a website error is both amusing and perfectly tailored to their audience:

  • A "Moments" announcement email from Twitter. Instead of telling me about their new feature, they clued into what I use this account for (live-tweeting The Bachelor) and surfaced content that's specific to my interests:

  • The image on AirBNB's 503 error page captures that feeling we have when something gets between us and that sweet treat (or vacation reservation) we've been dreaming about:

  • And, finally, because not all content is online, I love the way yogurt maker Brown Cow uses the lids of their yogurt to playfully highlight the many ways a customer could eat the yogurt's cream top. This both signals to me that the yogurt has a cream top (not everyone's favorite) and shows me new ways to experience it:

Serendipity isn't new. Rand's been talking about it for a long time. But it's important to remember that serendipity sometimes needs a little help.

Now that you understand your customer's needs, are looking at creative content placement, and understand how important it is to surprise, delight, and inform your audience, you have the tools you need to help serendipity along.

So if you're ready to build a lasting connection with your customers, go manufacture some serendipity already. You might just soothe the nerves of a new mom so well that she'll start evangelizing your products the minute she safely steps off the plane with her calm, jet-setting son.

The title for this post may have subconsciously been inspired by an earlier (but much different) post by Rand. Serendipity? You decide.

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