5 Pre-conditions for Obtaining Opt-In Preference Information

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The Myth: Consumers are no longer willing to share in-depth information with marketers.

The Reality: There are 5 prerequisites that, if addressed by marketers, have proven effective in engaging consumers, (BtoB and BtoC), to share detailed Opt-In self-profiling information.

In a previous blog, we discussed the critical consumer decisions that take place within what I call the Reciprocity of Value Equation. Insights which identified the Reciprocity of Value Equation and the following 5 preconditions are based on numerous Voice of Customer research efforts conducted for companies such as Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, NBC Universal, and HMS National.

Read Ernan’s article in Sales and Service Excellence, titled: “Do You Trust Your Customers?” The article provides 5 steps to help you re-think your marketing.

Research findings indicate that decision makers in both the B-to-B and B-to-C realms have 5 pre-conditions for sharing in-depth information:

1.

Consumers have to trust that the company will adequately safeguard their information and use it in a responsible way.

2.

“Responsible” means that consumers must believe that their information will not be rented or sold to third parties.

3.

“Honor my preferences” reflects the expectation that their Opt-In self-profiled preferences will be used to drive increasingly targeted communications and offers.

To overcome the legacy of receiving untargeted and irrelevant communications, consumers must see an obvious improvement in relevance. If the value is not obvious, consumers will assume you are sending “more of the same old” and feel you betrayed their trust and expectations.

4.

The value consumers receive in exchange for providing in-depth information must be obvious and compelling.

To overcome the legacy of receiving untargeted and irrelevant communications, consumers must see an obvious improvement in relevance. If the value is not obvious, consumers will assume you are sending “more of the same old” and feel you betrayed their trust and expectations.

5.

Consumers must see proof that the company will be able to deliver on requirements 1 through 4 above, not just once, but consistently over time.

If this occurs, they will be motivated to update their ever-changing interests and preferences and thus, ensure that your Opt-In database remains fresh.

Try This:

Ask your prospects and customers how they would define “relevant and targeted” communications and offers from your company…and what information they would be willing to share with you in order to receive that value.

Also, check that you have the support to create the “clearinghouse” function to evaluate all the various communications that different divisions and business units want to send…and that you will be granted the authority to suppress those communications that are not relevant to the expressed preferences of individual customers.

Republished with author's permission from original post.

Ernan Roman
Ernan Roman (@ernanroman) is president of ERDM Corp. and author of Voice of the Customer Marketing. He was inducted into the DMA Marketing Hall of Fame due to the results his VoC research-based CX strategies achieve for clients such as IBM, Microsoft, QVC, Gilt and HP. ERDM conducts deep qualitative research to help companies understand how customers articulate their feelings and expectations for high value CX and personalization. Named one of the Top 40 Digital Luminaries and one of the 100 Most Influential People in Business Marketing.

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