Building a relationship via social media
Marketing and sales is in large part driven by emotion. In today’s world where you are no longer competing on product alone, you are focusing a lot on connecting with customers and building relationships with them. Building relationships with customers can provide a multitude of benefits. It will increase brand awareness, brand reputation, customer loyalty, and customer satisfaction.
The more connected someone feels to your company, the more likely they are to purchase and recommend it. A great way to create an immediate relationship with a customer is through social media. Whether it be in the comments, mentions, or messages it is quick and easy to reach out to people.
Take a look at this article from Marketing Interactive for more information.
If you’re looking to get a start on social media and build relationships with customers, Netsville has your back. Contact us today to get started immediately!
Building a relationship via social media
in Hong Kong by Staff Writer
The industry has come a long way since social media started shaking up the marketing world. Social media is an essential element in digital marketing as it becomes the most effective way to reach customers, in particular the millennials.
Meanwhile, consumers expect to be able to move seamlessly between channels of communication. They are increasingly demanding personalised experiences with consistent and instant engagement.
As marketing and customer service trends move towards improving customer relationship management (CRM), brands must shift their CRM strategy to stay ahead of the game. Social CRM is the game changer – the integration of social media channels into CRM platforms.
This strategy brings in a better customer service, and greater marketing insights gathered from customer social media data.
This Master Report, in collaboration with Prizm, will dig into why social CRM is important; how to move from your traditional CRM tactics to up-to-date social CRM strategies; and how to build customer loyalty by leveraging social media.
From linear to non-linear: How social CRM multiples the personalisation of the customer experience
Customers choose brand names often because of quality, trust and the metaphysical core of a brand name’s “feel-good” sentiment.
To maintain these business variables within the control, brand names often spend endless time and cost in customer relationship management (CRM) to ensure their products receive positive comments and create loyalty among customers, and thus strengthen the brand in targeted markets. In the world of fast moving consumer goods (FMCG), the ultra-level stiffness of market competition will force brand names to take care of the customer experience for every minute.
The birth and popularity of social media allow customers to share or comment on their user experience at any time. It expands the potential market for businesses to engage their customers. It is a double-edged sword as one can easily read both positive and negative comments in a single interface, and in most cases, critical or complaining words draw particular attention.
This is the scenario most brand names are determined to respond to immediately, thus, bringing in the demand for social CRM. Let’s investigate the evolution and the latest trends of social CRM, and present how social CRM can be personalised and efficiently executed with the assistance of chatbots and big data analysis.
The limited linear role of traditional CRM
Before the emergence of social media, either with small or big brand names, the scope of CRM was practically limited to their VIPs and hundreds and thousands of customers who chose to actively follow the updates of new products and services, announcements and events (Image 1). Traditional CRM only allowed brands to reach customers in a single-sided manner such as EDMs, SMS and direct mailing. Moreover, there was hardly any channel for customers to respond to or provide feedback to the merchant on particular products and services.
For merchants, these follow-up CRM tasks were subjected to human and physical resource limits. One could not expect a customer service officer could qualitatively handle enquiry calls or messages case by case every day, given the limited time span and numerous awaiting enquiries. The customer service (CS) desk may have stored tens or hundreds of thousand of pieces of customer information, but in a segregated form.
How social CRM interconnects and shapes non-linear practices
Social media is a user-friendly interface as it is designed to allow users to share freely and numerously words, graphics, videos, images and URLs, among other things. When it combines with CRM practices, the landscape of digital marketing can be widened.
One could simply imagine a customer may file their enquiries on a social media interface, say a Facebook page or a WeChat chatbot, and then the responding CS officer may offer solutions or answers by text or even multi-media formats. Such advancements of CRM is a big step to improving the capacity and efficiency of CS desks.
Furthermore, if we can move a step forward to analysing the basic background and social media habits of customers before they bring enquiries, raise questions or file complaints, we can even turn complaints into a campaign that synergises the social media from merely a tool to one that helps to create interactive linkages between customer and business. (Image 2)
The process of implementing social CRM generates valuable business data such as sales figures converted from social media, customers’ basic profiles and their social media behaviour. (image 3)
By building the linkage between the profile of CRM users and social media followers, supported by the data collected from daily engagement and sentiment, the interactions among the users and the brands are further magnified, thus, enlarging the circle reaching potential users in the outside world through organic growth, thus, lowering the dependency on paid advertising. (image 4)
The following two FMCG cases from Friso and Pony Effect are going to present how enriched CRM practices by our social media chatbots and sentiment analysis tools can customise CS with less time and bigger coverage, and even explore potential market share and generate sales.
Case study one: Friso – The demand for a speedy response
Friso in Hong Kong, like its competitors in the milk powder industry, can enhance a deeper connection with followers or customers at any time. Friso utilises a chatbot on its official Facebook page to provide a self-service that can help its CS desk efficiently allocate its resources.
Ultimately, the CS desk of the brand seamlessly integrates with the Facebook page which offers a personalised customer experience. To reach these goals, Prizm first conducted a social media analysis of Friso’s Facebook CS interaction over the past five years to come up with insights. Afterwards, we summarised the keywords that were often mentioned by customers or followers, hence, following us to create a report to review what the most popular or concerned issues were.
Based on the insights, we then set up a chatbot that prioritises the most frequently asked enquires and information related to recent marketing campaigns. Such an automated and personalised CS-marketing engagement strategy successfully streamlines the experience of the customer interaction and also provides a prompt response to customers 24/7.
Read More at Marketing Interactive
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