Change the Message for the Medium

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Do people respond better to an offer that promises lower price, higher quality or instant delivery? Yes they do. And that’s why we all need segmentation.

When it comes to segmenting customers by behavior, Bernard Berelson pretty much nailed it in his “Human Behavior: An Inventory of Scientific Findings” (1964) where he said:

  • Some do and some don’t.
  • The differences aren’t that great.
  • It’s more complicated than that.

Granted, people fit nicely into specific categories and any categories will be more appropriate for some markets than for your goods or services. But segmentation is the key to success and here’s another lock it can open: Media mix.

You want to use all the data you can get your hands on to validate your ads and make them more memorable, your links more clickable, your landing pages more actionable and your Net Promoter Scores higher. You also want to tie sales results to marketing spend so you can figure out what portion of your budget to spend on billboards vs. PPC search marketing vs. email blasts vs. social media vs. tattooing your logo on foreheads (That’s just so 1995!)

With hundreds of ways to get your message in front of prospective customers, which ones work best for you? A simple one-to-one relationship would be nice but, of course, life is more complex than that. Banner ads may never have produced a dime in sales for you but if you drop that brand advertising guess what? Your search traffic starts to dwindle. Attribution is a tough game to play, but play it we must.

One way to help in that game is combining attribution with segmentation.

Let’s say Segment A really responds to the message about lower prices, Segment B likes higher quality and Segment C goes gaga for instant gratification. It’s now your job to find out how these groups differ in the channels they consume.

If Segment A watches a lot of television, reads the newspaper and does most of their searches on Yahoo! then it’s clear that your low price offers should be sent off into the world via those channels. Not only are you delivering the right message to the right people, if you integrate your marketing messages and coordinate your distribution, Segment A will see your low cost proposition everywhere they look. You will be ubiquitous. You will be the low cost leader.

The same holds true for your other prospects. Segment B reads lots of online news, spends a lot of time on Facebook and searches primarily on Google. In those channels, your message is all about quality and status. They see you everywhere they look and they come to know you as the superior product.

If you are in complete control of your marketing spend, have the ability to change your message by segment and the means to capture the results to complete the feed-back loop, you will win the game.

This is not an easy task, it is not made easy with effortlessly integratable technology and there are no silver bullets for breaking down the silos between advertising, marketing, sales and public relations, let alone email, search, web site and banner ads. But if you do, you will be getting the right message to the right person at the right time in the right way.

You win.

Republished with author's permission from original post.

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