Engagement marketing

Engagement marketing, sometimes called "experiential marketing," "event marketing," "on-ground marketing," "live marketing," or "participation marketing," is a marketing strategy that directly engages consumers and invites and encourages them to participate in the evolution of a brand. Rather than looking at consumers as passive receivers of messages, engagement marketers believe that consumers should be actively involved in the production and co-creation of marketing programs, developing a relationship with the brand.

Consumer Engagement is when a brand and a consumer connect. According to Brad Nierenberg, experiential marketing is the live, one-on-one interactions that allow consumers to create connections with brands.[1] Consumers will continue to seek and demand one-on-one, shareable interaction with a brand.[2]

Engagement

Engagement measures the extent to which a consumer has a meaningful brand experience when exposed to commercial advertising, sponsorship, television contact, or other experience. In March 2006 the Advertising Research Foundation defined Engagement as "turning on a prospect to a brand idea enhanced by the surrounding context".[3] The ARF has also defined the function whereby engagement impacts a brand:

According to a study by Jack Morton Worldwide, 11 out of 14 consumers reported preferring to learn about new products and services by experiencing them personally or hearing about them from an acquaintance.[4]

Engagement is complex because a variety of exposure and relationship factors affect engagement, making simplified rankings misleading. Typically, engagement with a medium often differs from engagement with advertising, according to an analysis conducted by the Magazine Publishers of America.

Related to this notion is the term program engagement, which is the extent to which consumers recall specific content after exposure to a program and advertising. Starting in 2006 U.S. broadcast networks began guaranteeing specific levels of program engagement to large corporate advertisers.[5]

Multi-dimensional communication

Engagement marketing attempts to connect more strongly consumers with brands by "engaging" them in a dialogue and two-way, cooperative interaction. Creative director Robert Gourley summed up the idea: "People don't talk to brands, they talk to people."[6]

Keith Ferrazzi wrote in 2009 that Information Age was transitioning into what he termed the Relationship Age, "in which emotion, empathy, and cooperation are critical success traits" and where "technology and human interaction are intersecting and trust, conversation, and collaboration are top of mind and top of agenda."[7]

In 2006, researchers from market research company Gallup identified two-dimensional (two-way) communication where consumers participate, share, and interact with a brand as a creator of the engagement crucial to business and personal success.[8]

Two-dimensional (2D) communication and engagement is where "both giver and receiver are listening to each other, interacting, learning and growing from the process."[9]

Three-dimensional engagement ("3DE")[10] has "not only length and width, but depth, where both giver and receiver connect to a higher power and are changed in the experience. Not just a conversation, but connection to a purpose that transforms all in the process."[11]

Engagement marketing as philosophy

Greg Ippolito, former creative director of engagement marketing agency Annodyne, wrote that the key point of differentiation between engagement marketing and other forms is that the former "is anchored by a philosophy, rather than a focus on specific marketing tools."[12] That philosophy is that audiences should be engaged in the sales process when they want, and by which channels they prefer.

He argues that traditional top-down marketing results, largely, in the production and communication of white noise. Whereas engagement marketing assumes a different approach:

Think of a salesperson who walks up to you in a store. You tell him thanks, you’re okay, you’re just looking. But he hovers and looms, finds ways to insert himself into your activity, and is a general annoyance. That’s what typical marketing feels like: intrusive and disruptive. Engagement Marketing is the opposite. It’s a salesperson who hangs back and engages you if/when you need help. Who can sense what you want to do, and help you arrive at that decision. Who will contact you directly with exclusive sales information, if—and only if—you request it.
Engagement Marketing, done well, means connecting with audiences who want to hear from you, in relevant, meaningful, interesting ways. If you can pull that off, everything changes.[12]

After launching IMA in 2013, Ippolito shifted his focus to momentum marketing—described as "the next evolution of engagement marketing"—which shares the same customer-centric philosophy, but places a greater emphasis on leveraging data to reach target audiences online via their most well-traveled channels:

[M]odern consumers are hard to pin down; they're constantly in motion—traversing different spaces, utilizing different media, and as always, experiencing a range of different thoughts and feelings throughout any given day ... [The key is to] leverage the existing momentum of target consumers. By doing so, we can ... guide them where we want them to go—with minimum waste and maximum efficiency.[13]

Early examples of successful engagement marketing campaigns

PROMO magazine has credited Gary M. Reynolds, founder of GMR Marketing, with being the pioneer in the practice of engagement marketing. It has cited Reynolds' formation of the Miller Band Network in 1979 as the seminal engagement marketing moment. In Japan, Tohato launched two new snacks brands, "Tyrant Habanero Burning Hell Hot" and "Satan Jorquia Bazooka Deadly Hot" in 2007 in an award-winning campaign which broke new ground in engagement marketing by combining multiplayer online gaming with advertising, on a mobile phone. Customers were encouraged to join nightly battles in a virtual game, on behalf of either snack brand, to determine the winner of the "World's Worst War". The games ran at 4 AM. The campaign was designed by Japanese ad agency Hakuhodo and won the Yellow Pencil award at the annual D&AD advertising awards ceremony where mobile ads were recognized for the first time in May 2008.

Another example of engagement marketing is seen in the marketing strategy of Jones Soda. At the company's website, regular customers are allowed to send in photos that will then be printed on bottles of the soda. These photos can be put on a small order of custom-made soda, or, if the photos are interesting enough, they can be put into production and used as labels for a whole production run.[14] This strategy is effective at getting customers to co-create the product, and engaging customers with the brand.

Another example of engagement marketing is seen in the marketing strategy of Jaihind Collection Pune for their paraplegic fashion Show.[15]

In the 21st century, engagement marketing has taken a new turn with the advent of different technologies. The effect of smartphones, touchscreens and virtual reality has become prominent. Examples of such engagement marketing can be found online. It is to be noted that though technological advancement made such campaigns possible, innovative ideas remain as important as ever.

Common offline engagement marketing tools

Common online engagement marketing tools

See also

References

  1. Best Bosses April, 2006
  2. What’s Next in Branding Is Ready to Go. Are You? February 19, 2007
  3. Advertising Research Foundation Press Release on Program Engagement, March 21, 2006
  4. Kim Gordon. "Make Live Events Part of Your Marketing". Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  5. Steinberg, Brian. "NBC Bets Its Viewers Pay Attention." The Wall Street Journal, online edition.
  6. "7 Tips for Effective Marketing with Twitter". Mojave Interactive.
  7. Shawbel, Dan (26 May 2009). "Personal Branding Interview: Keith Ferrazzi". Personal Branding Blog. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  8. "Who's Driving Innovation at Your Company?" Gallup.com September 14, 2006
  9. "The Relationship Age" Mari Smith and leading social media experts from around the world (2010) p222 ISBN 0-9829083-1-8
  10. Katrina Kavvalos (2010). The Relationship Age. Celebrity Press. ISBN 978-0982908310.
  11. Katrina Kavvalos (2010). The Relationship Age. Celebrity Press. p. 222. ISBN 978-0982908310.
  12. 1 2 "Engagement Marketing 101 (Redux)", Marketing Daily, April 18, 2012
  13. "Momentum Marketing", Marketing Daily, August 8, 2013
  14. "Businessweek". Bloomberg.com.
  15. "Jaihind Paraplegic Fashion Show organised for the brave soldiers rendered physically challenged while protecting the nation". The Times of India.
  16. Davidge, Joss. "AR, VR and the art of immersive storytelling". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2016-09-28.

Further reading


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