By Bill McCloskey on Tuesday, 05 April 2011
Category: Email Strategy

Do you Really Know Your Customers? Marketing to a Rapidly Diversifying Population

The U.S. Census Bureau releases the results of its 2010 census this summer and marketers are advised to prepare for some major demographic shifts. In a recent interview I read of Peter Francese, consultant to advertising megalith Ogilvy & Mather and author of the research report 2010 America, I was surprised to learn:

What this means for your marketing is obvious: one-size-fits-all messaging isn’t going to cut it. It will seem wildly off-base and irrelevant especially if you attempt it in your email and social media marketing – avenues where instantaneous feedback and listening is expected. So especially when it comes to your online messaging, I recommend adopting these three approaches in creating a new relevancy mindset for your email, mobile and social marketing programs:

Until you dig deep into your customer data – demographics, offer responses, media preferences, survey answers and more – you may have assumptions about your customers that are entirely untrue. Your customers are probably a far more diverse group than you imagined, and unique segments deserve unique treatment. Make it standard practice to revisit your segmentation methods and re-assign individuals to new segments as their behaviors – or demographics (like age) – change.

Continually re-balancing how and if you can group customers into like segments increases your ability for super-specific marketing that resonates, engages, and aximizes response. Market to “the average” and you’re marketing to a myth. Instead, get to know who your customers really are and be prepared to invest the time and resources needed to connect with them as individually as you can. The companies that do already have a clear competitive advantage in diversifying America.

 

Karen Talavera runs Synchronicity Marketing and writes about email, social media and other online marketing conversation channels on her blog Enlightened Emarketing. Follow her on Twitter (@SyncMarketing) or Facebook for daily tips on digital marketing trends, facts and new ideas.

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