Sunday, November 29, 2009
Adapt To Reach Your Audience
If you really want to engage with Moms, you need to adapt your strategies to understand what the influencers are. From spouses to children, health to finances, friends to colleagues, finding the triggers to how a mom engages is not an exercise for the weak, nor is it one that is going to be delegated anytime soon.
I like to watch people and follow trends, including reading research about who is doing what and why. For 20 years, I've been a sales and marketing executive, responsible for creating go-to-market strategies to lower costs with shortened sales cycles to increase sales, so observing and adapting have been vital keys to successful programs.
One of the lessons I learned as a sailor and use often is that you need to constantly be adjusting your sails or you'll end up on the rocks. This lesson holds true for influencers or those wanting to engage with moms. Take this case in point: my son and his method of adapting to engage his mom.
One of my favorite pastimes was spending Sunday mornings going through the newspaper while my son looked through the circulars. He would circle the items he liked (a/k/a wanted) and then share them with me, communicating his desire for specific items especially prior to birthdays and holidays. Over time, this tradition evolved to surfing the Internet and instant messaging the links, subtle hints about items he liked.
Whether I bought them or not, it provoked engagement, conversation and provided me with the information as a call-to-action, making it easy for me to click and buy. As a professional marketer, I couldn't help but be amused at the way my son was learning to adapt and engage me, to influence me so he could get to "yes" (a/k/a mom buying what he wanted).
So, why do brands and agencies still think engagement consists of consumers clicking on banner ads, when a recently released report pointed out that just 8% of Internet users click on 85% of banner ads, and speaking as a mother, moms are not part of the 8% who are clicking on those ads.
Recently, I found a newly released white paper published by Advertising Age, titled the "Rise of the Real Mom." In it, Boston Consulting Group states Moms control $4.3 trillion of the $5.9 trillion in U.S. consumer spending, or 73% of household spend. Hoping to find that the researchers who wrote this paper have hit the Holy Grail in helping marketers engage with the highly coveted "mom" demographic, I instead found parts of it to read more like a scene from "Mad Men."
The most startling paragraph contained suggestions that were offered up to guide marketers, including:
-not to just "communicate goods and services they offer are practical and convenient; they also need to make real moms feel confident and in charge"
-"empower female consumers to delegate to others (spouses, children, brands) so they can have more time to be who they want to be"
-"use new ways to reach a population that rarely has time to sit down and read or watch or enjoy something without simultaneously doing something else"
Wow, okay. I scrolled down the page past lots of impressive pie charts as I had to find out who wrote this 28-page whitepaper and, you guessed it, they were two women who aren't moms.
News Flash: Moms are empowered, confident, and in charge. We are ahead, way ahead, of the curve. We have adapted by embracing technology and are highly functional multi-taskers. We use our smartphones on the go to find products and services, VoIP products to stay in touch with family and friends and to meet and connect with other moms using Twitter, blogs and Facebook. We engage in real-time conversations daily on the Internet using "social TV" that goes beyond what traditional television is trying to morph to today on MomTV.com.
Moms are learning, growing and changing, but that does not mean childcare and household duties shift over to our spouses because of our pursuit of personal goals. It's just not how moms (or dads) are wired. The "mom target market" has moved light years ahead of "Mad Men" mentality. It's time for brands and agencies to get ahead of the curve and adapt their strategies to reach and engage moms with an authentic voice in a two-way conversation.
"The great secret of succeeding in conversation is to admire little, to hear much." Benjamin Franklin
Sunday, October 11, 2009
From MediaPost's Engage Moms: WIIFM: Keeping Up With Moms
This was the lesson I learned early on in my career: If you want to engage the corporate client, you need to start by listening and understanding its workflow and problems before you can provide a better process or technology to streamline its operations. The net result of delivering on the WIIFM model is a happy client who can now do more for less.
As a mom, that's what I've looked for in the partners that I've chosen to shop with, the ones that can help me do more, for less (time and money).
In the mid '90s, I started shopping online to gain time back from my work and travel schedule. The convenience of e-stores saved me time as I could order the items needed on the Internet while away from home and, in return, I had more time for my family.
Many of my family and friends thought I was nuts for buying something that I didn't try on or touch and for putting my credit card out there. Merchants got wise to these fears quickly and engaged security providers to ensure SSL encryption along with great return policies. We've come a long way over the past 12+ years with personalized email marketing for opt-in subscribers, rewards programs, coupon codes, rebates, recurring shipments, and the best of all, free shipping (my favorite).
Now that's how you engage and gain adoption, make it easy to save time, money and reduce waste through electronic communications that I ask for.
As an uber-geek Mom, the adoption of new technology and services that enable me to do more in my day comes with one minor pitfall ... I keep adding more to my day as my productivity increases. But that's what moms do; we adopt new ways to do more in our day.
Looking beyond the social revolution, going mobile is the next frontier for those seeking to engage with the mom on the go.
Why mobile? According to The Nielsen Company (Sept 30, 2009), mobile Internet users are up 34% to over 56.9 million in the U.S. The biggest gain is the 9 percentage points of growth for female users putting them at 47%. Two key things that women are utilizing mobile web access and apps for: shopping and social networking.
A huge benefit of mobile for me is that brands are starting to figure out that moms really don't have hours to clip coupons every week, that's so June Cleaver! As much as we love to save money, more and more of us want to do it on the go.
One of my favorite iPhone apps is called Yowza. It's free and not only does it carry local deals but it counts up the dollars that I save, and that's a huge warm-fuzzy! There are also cool services like Cellfire that store your coupons on your club card. You simply go to the Internet and click on the product coupons that you intend to use (look Ma, no clipping).
Then there are the merchant programs that offer coupon codes for discounts and free shipping along with the ones that pay you back with rebates like Drugstore.com and Ebates.com. I also love sites like K9cuisine.com, where I can set up a regular shipment of the same dog food I buy every month and they will auto ship it.
You have the technology, you can use it to help you engage - WIIFM is not just for B2B marketing ... now more than ever: What's in it for Moms?
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
How To Talk To Moms? Listen.How To Talk To Moms? Listen.
As a mother, a woman, and editor of a magazine for 10 million women and moms like me (and not like me), I find it hard not to be amused by the constant handwringing in the media and advertising worlds about how best to talk to "moms." Because more often than not, they end up talking at us. At times, we feel reduced to a tidy pile of demographics and household statistics that effectively erase all the unique distinction we women are each so proud to possess.
People often ask me who the Redbook reader is. I used to answer, "Which one? There are at least five" - before launching into a breakdown of types: the young professional women balancing work and home in suburban or metropolitan areas; the even younger stay-at-home moms in the exurbs who married out of high school or during college; the aspirational can't-wait-to-marrys all over the country, and so forth.
But as I got better at listening to our audience, and as I got to meet them - on Facebook, through Twitter, through redbookmag.com, through the blogs so many of them keep, in person at mall events and so on - I realized there were millions of different kinds of our readers out there. And, that what made the Harley moms, the stitch-and-bitch moms, the widowed moms, single moms, two-times-married moms, the breast-cancer-survivor moms distinct from each other was a much more vital way of making them feel included in everything we do than what made them the same.
Through my own Facebook page - which I invited our readers to join, as well as the magazine's fan page - I see the daily ups and downs of what we call "grown-up life": the disgruntled posts after a hurry-up morning has gone awry; joyful greetings to friends, who are the lifeboats in busy women's lives; the celebration of small joys, like a sunny day or a cheap pair of shoes, each of these a shout-out to be heard and witnessed before another day jammed to the hilt with "to-dos" flies by.
Yes, we moms want to be witnessed, to spend some time on our "to-be" list, instead of merely living our "to-do" list, to get to be women first sometimes, just for ourselves. We get to be a "mom and" these days, not "just a stay-at-home mom" or a "working mom," but a mom and a yoga teacher, a mom and an entrepreneur, a mom and a community organizer, a mom and a beauty addict, a mom and a church leader, a mom and so much more. And the only way for a marketer to learn the "so much more" is to open your ears (and your email in-box, and your Facebook page, and your whatever else you can imagine) and ask the question: "Hello, who are you?" And then listen.
What I hear back through all these channels - and then publish in the magazine, on the web site, in our mobile phone applications, and everywhere else Redbook is - is the lovely, joyful sound of women finding their way in a complicated world, putting their unique fingerprints on everything they do, and, most inspiring of all, standing by to support other moms and women as they find their own way.
I have learned so much about who this group is by listening in on their individual conversations, and I have been able to make the magazine and all its properties feel more rich and inclusive because of it. But the best part is being included in the conversation: To be a magazine editor and a woman and a mom.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Marketing to Moms
This is a group that wields the kind of clout that marketers covet. They influence 85% of all household purchases, according to experts who study the mom market. They are also the big spenders in the family. By some estimates, mothers in the US alone spend about $2 trillion a year. Some projections suggest that figure could grow to $3 trillion by 2012.
As consumers, women also rely heavily on Web sites and blogs to research everything from diapers to medical issues. That reliance grows when they're planning a family, with some research showing use of the Internet reaches 94% among women expecting to have a child in the next 12 months, says Kitty Kolding, CEO of House Party, a marketing firm specializing in word-of-mouth campaigns.
But the huge volume of information online can be overwhelming and, of course, not entirely reliable. This is where other moms come in.
“The blessing and curse of the Internet is that it exponentially increases the amount of information available to consumers,” she says. “How do you distill or synthesize it down? You ask a friend.”
Mothers, more so than other consumers, depend on pals and peers for product recommendations. “We find moms generally assign a high level of credibility to what they hear through word of mouth,” says Brad Fay, a principal with the Keller Fay Group, a marketing research and consulting firm specializing in word-of-mouth marketing. “They assign more credibility to word of mouth than the average person.”
In the mom segment, word of mouth about shopping, retail and apparel is “highly impactful,” with 69% likely to purchase based on what was heard, according to a 2008 study conducted by Keller Fay and BabyCenter, a leading online resource for expectant and new parents.
The study also found that the Internet beats TV, magazines and outdoor ads in driving word of mouth among pregnant and new moms.
Stacy DeBroff, CEO of MomCentral, a marketing agency that specializes in the mom market, agrees. Traditional advertising, PR and direct mail are not the most effective channels for marketers aiming at mothers, she says.
“Some marketers are very slow to recognize how much moms really don't like traditional, intrusive advertising,” DeBroff says. “We are too busy to pay attention to ads. Moms now want to engage in conversation.”
Research shows what mothers value most is “hearing opinions from other moms,” she explains.
One common mistake marketers make is expecting women to go out of their way to find out about a new product or campaign.
“You can't summon them,” DeBroff says. “You have to find them where they are. You have to find the Web sites they're at, and the community groups they are part of, online and offline.”
For example, Twitter, Facebook and dozens of popular mommy blogging sites provide discussion forums and reviews of products written by other mothers. In particular, video reviews by bloggers are growing in popularity.
As marketing budgets shrink, marketers are looking for cost-effective ways to deliver their message. They can save a bundle and get their message widely distributed through social media sites, says Maria Bailey, CEO of BSM Media, a marketing and media firm that specializes in marketing to mothers. She believes that particularly in a down economy, viral campaigns that incorporate social media will gain favor.
“Marketers are looking for ways to get their message distributed cheaper, faster and, quite honestly, more effectively,” Bailey says. Marketers can use social media to learn more about their target audience, and even start a dialogue, she adds.
“To get the most effective results and maximize your resources, you need to hone in on the mom who suits your brand,” she says. “Get to know her online.”
As an example, she suggests heading to Summize.com, and entering your brand or a keyword to find all the women on Twitter who are talking about your brand already. “It's so simple to go to Twitter and say, ‘Hey, what do you think of this campaign?'” she says.
Companies are starting to team up with mom “influencers” — mothers whose opinions carry weight with lots of other moms. Marketers are putting their products into the hands of mommy bloggers whose video product reviews are seen by hundreds or thousands of other women.
“We've seen a huge change in the last year in marketers turning to influencer marketing,” Kolding said. “People have so much information available. They want a recommendation from someone they know or trust.”
Some companies are establishing panels made up of mothers who act as advocates for a brand. As an example, Bailey pointed to the Walt Disney World's mom panel, a group of Disney World enthusiasts selected by the company based on their positive impressions and knowledge of the Disney World Resort. Parents planning a vacation can go to a Disney World Web site and get questions about restaurants, hotels and other attractions answered by the mom “experts.”
“Thousands of moms applied for 20 positions [on the panel] last year — it's a coveted position among moms.” she says. One of the biggest trends in marketing to moms, she explains, is that “you don't market to moms anymore, you market with them. It's about that empowerment. It's saying we trust your opinion and want you to be part of our product development.”
CAMPAIGNS
Fisher-Price wanted to introduce its My Little Lamb Cradle ‘n Swing to mom bloggers with infants ages three to 12 weeks. Marketing firm BSM Media enlisted 15 bloggers whose blogs receive at least 2,000 unique visitors per week. Each mom received a swing to use at home. The bloggers gave feedback to a Fisher-Price product designer at a virtual play lab session. Nine moms posted positive reviews of the swing on their blogs, and some included video reviews that were viewed by more than 300 people. BSM calculated the campaign resulted in more than 500,000 online impressions, based on factors including the size of the bloggers' monthly audience, monthly page views, number of subscribers, Twitter following and newsletters.
Kraft sought to increase brand awareness and trial of its Hispanic focus food brands with mothers. The company, working with marketing firm House Party, recruited 1,000 Hispanic consumers with favorable opinions of Kraft's brands to host parties in their homes where nine Kraft brands were sampled. House Party provided a free, party-planning, media-sharing Web site and Kraft provided free product samples, coupons and copies of the Comida y Familia magazine, to hosts. An estimated 13,000 people attended the parties. According to Kraft's surveys, the intent to purchase the featured products increased among partygoers and hosts. Half of the hosts said they believed their guests told others about the party, while 30% of guests said they told at least 21 people about the event.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Marketing to Moms? Read the Digital Mom Report
Marketing to Moms? Read the Digital Mom Report
Razorfish and CafeMom issued a “Digital Mom” report that examines the role of digital technology in modern moms. (Do yourself a favor and click on the download PDF icon to read the report. It’s the second to the last icon in the navigation bar.)
Here is a quick summary to entice you to read the whole thing. Anyone who is trying to market products or services for moms should read this exellent report.
1.
“Social media and text messaging, instant messaging, and gaming, now used by the majority of digital moms, are no longer niche activities.”
2.
“At the same time, moms with children 12 or older are more likely than moms of children under 12 to use gaming and video. Marketers have an opportunity to respond to these trends by acknowledging that a ‘one-size-fits-all’ strategy against moms may not work.”
3.
“Marketers should recognize the dual purposes (communicating with peers and monitoring their kids) moms of older children have for engaging with emerging technologies, particularly social channels. They should learn more about the challenges moms face when embracing technology, and provide them with better resources and information to help them guide their children.”
4.
“Marketers have an opportunity to utilize communications channels like social networking, text messaging and gaming to facilitate conversation among moms and influence decision making.”
5.
“Marketers should consider marketing to mom as both an interconnected woman and a mom, as her interests extend beyond parenting.”
6.
“Among digital moms, the gap is closing between TV and other channels in creating initial awareness about products. Marketers should consider the penetration level and relative influence of each channel when determining how, when, and where to reach digital moms along the purchase funnel.”
