Category Archives: B2B marketing

If it’s easy, it gets used. Mobile makes booking business travel as easy as child’s play.

kids-and-cell-phones

Today a travelling sales executive from Des Moines, Iowa, has the same knowledge and information in the palm of their hand that only the president of the United States did 20 years ago. Smartphones and tablets used to review our business trip details on now have more processing power than the Apollo moon landing spacecraft.

Computing power continues to double every two years – as defined by Moore’s Law – while prices continue to drop. This means that computers are being built twice as powerful but without costing twice as much as before every two years, and this law has already held good for 50 years. Technology today takes what used to be scarce and makes it abundant, over and over again. With knowledge and information so freely available, access to it is less costly and at the fingertips of billions of people the world over. Steve Jobs surely smiled at this particular ‘dent in the universe’.

Low-cost-entry for web-based digital technology coupled with software development cycles and lead times constantly reducing can only mean this accelerated exponential growth is set to continue. As a direct consequence expect a heady stream of disruptive innovation as a constant factor in almost every facet of our business and personal lives.

I’m repeating what plenty of industry commentators have expressed about technology-driven disruption, but focusing on a big shift being seen in the corporate travel sector. Step up disruptors like AirBnB and Uber that target a new generation of business travellers armed with smartphones who are getting more and more comfortable making their own buying decisions, often while on the move and sometimes contrary to their company’s travel purchasing policies.

But to what extent is this behaviour undermining companies with centralised corporate purchasing directives? Examining key trends on what people are actually doing starts to tell the story.

Recent research from xAd (a location-based mobile advertising tech company based in the UK) has shown that 29% of consumers admitted using a smartphone as the only tool they use to make purchasing decisions. And whatever happens in the consumer world soon enough surfaces in the business world too.

29 per cent only use mobile_purchasing

Note also that 56% of consumers buy immediately or within 1-hour after researching. The always on nature of mobile means more attention needs to be paid on how to engage and influence people at the right time and in the right place – wherever in the world they might be.

Drilling down into specific behaviour of business travellers, the trend is clear. Research from Google Ipsos Media on US travellers in 2015 shows that just over half booked travel on their smartphones.

Google Think US travellers book on smartphone

Interestingly too, US business travellers are more inclined to use travel apps on their smartphones to book travel – 63% of them compared to 55% who access a website via their smartphone to book travel.*

Think with Google 2014 US travelers using mobile to book

* Extract from Google Ipsos Media ‘2014 Traveler’s Road to Decision’.

 

A recently published GBTA (Global Business Travel Association) and Carlson Foundation study www.tnooz.com/article/business-travel-mobile has shown that despite the emergence of mobile travel apps around 2009 and the subsequent growth in usage by business travellers, TMCs (Travel Management Companies) and their corporate clients haven’t responded sufficiently or quickly enough to this behavioural shift.

The study highlights that 69% of ‘Travel Professionals’ admit that their programme doesn’t have a mobile strategy in place. Although, most to plan to do so within the next 2 years – 64% of respondents, with another 24% saying they’ll devise a strategy in the next 3 years.

With the growing number of business travellers using smartphones for travel purchases, getting service messages and updates directly from travel suppliers, like airlines and hotels, and using various apps to find their way around a new business destination, it would seem that their company’s travel department and TMC need to apply more haste on this issue.

If not, this generally widespread hesitant approach risks undermining corporate purchasing policies and programmes designed to support an organisation’s business goals while minimising travel-related spend and achieving desired levels of productivity from employees travelling on business.

Or in the future, will organisations just trust their travelling executives to do the right thing – using whatever mobile technology offers to make the right travel buying choices?

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Marketing needs to re-imagine the shop window. Fast.

Shop window display 2

For hundreds of years the High Street shop window has been the perfect place to showcase what’s available inside a shop. The most eye-catching window displays would draw customers in and increase the chance of a purchase. The need to compete by ‘shouting-the-loudest’ transferred into mass-market advertising led by TV, Radio and Print and continues to permeate marketing thinking even in today’s digital world. Despite the technological promise of greater relevancy driven by more sophisticated targeting via digital platforms (web, mobile & social), dark clouds have formed with the growth of ad-blocking ‘killer’ apps that are closing off huge swathes of potential customers* in both consumer and business markets. Maybe once and forever.

*e-Marketer recently reported 30% of U.S. mobile users have ad-blocking apps installed and expect to see 26%+ of internet users running ad-blocking technology this year. These numbers are expected to continue rising.

This continuing erosion of consumer trust in marketing messages that interrupt the user experience on websites and mobiles and irritates people so much they’re motivated to download and activate ad-blocking apps represents a real threat to the ‘holy-grail’ of automated and customised one-to-one marketing that many brands are striving to achieve.

Perhaps what’s needed now more than ever is for marketing practitioners to think about what their ‘shop window’ looks like now that digital platforms offer different ways for people to experience brands; a different way to try on a jacket or a new pair of shoes without actually being in the shop, if you like.

Here’s a great example of this kind of thinking writ large, from Burberry who in re-launching its make-up range in 2013 wanted to reach affluent ‘Milennials’ – an audience the traditional luxury brand didn’t typically appeal to but that sees as its future customers.

YouTube_Burberry Kisses

Watch this video to see Burberry’s Kisses – a global campaign:Burberry Kisses

(Don your headphones or pop ear-buds in, there’s a music track with this video)

And here’s Google explaining the original thinking that went into creating Burberry’s engaging experience without people having to go to one of their retail outlets: Google thinking helps Burberry

Burberry has re-used ‘Kisses’ in different markets and to coincide with seasonal celebrations – like Valentine’s Days and last year in May 2015, it was featured as part of a flagship store launch in Shanghai.

Notonthehighstreet.com?

But what if you’re not part of the ‘High Street’ or in a consumer market? If you provide a business service or don’t need a physical retailing environment, do you even need a ‘shop window’? Hang on a minute though; what are all those company websites meticulously nurtured over the last 20-years, and especially those without ‘View Basket‘? They are, of course, web-based virtual ‘shop windows’. And everyone has one.

This post isn’t just about global marketing campaigns that require high levels of marketing investment though. There are other opportunities even for those in B2B markets to re-imagine (or maybe even imagine for the first time) what their ‘shop window’ looks like.

Think of the last sales pitch you’ve seen, maybe delivered by your own company’s sales team or maybe from a business service supplier selling to you. Did you hear a lot of talk backed up with snazzy infographics or photo-imagery that left you feeling…well, like you’d been ‘shouted at’? Or did the sales person give you a glimpse or an experience of what it would actually be like using their company’s products or services? Did it feel like you were trying on a new jacket or new pair of shoes and seeing how well they fit or whether you looked good in them?

And why wait for formal ‘sales pitch’ moments to arrive? Perhaps more businesses, especially B2B service providers, need to think about how they can create a customer experience of ‘what it would be like if we looked after you’ for their future customers. That will need marketers to step up and help re-imagine the ‘shop window’ changing it from a fixed physical space into something more immersive where people can use, try or play with products or services.