The document discusses how collaborative marketing, where brands market with consumers rather than at them, will drive winning companies in the future. It outlines 5 trends driving the shift to collaborative marketing: 1) democratized product development, 2) close, continuous customer relationships, 3) open organizations, 4) peer-powered media, and 5) measuring influence rather than impressions. It also provides 5 steps for embracing collaborative marketing strategies: 1) audit audiences, 2) engage core brand advocates, 3) align content, 4) do things faster, smarter and better, and 5) empower communities.
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Crowdtap collaborative marketing future
1. How co-creation and advocacy will drive winning companies
THE
COLLABORATIVE
MARKETING FUTURE
LEARN 5 TRENDS AND 5 STEPS TO
BUILDING A COLLABORATIVE BRAND
2. 2 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
“A more open and connected world will help
create...more authentic businesses and better
products and services.” – Mark Zuckerberg
Just ten years ago, Facebook did not exist. Communication was primarily one-to-one, and
marketers focused almost exclusively on mass communication to a mass audience. The last
decade saw rapid change and technological growth that marketers are just beginning to
put into perspective; not only change in communications, but in empowerment, permitting
consumers to influence and take co-ownership of brands.
The common theme across all of this change is an evolution towards collaboration.
This whitepaper focuses on the future of marketing – a future where brands must market
“with” consumers, not “at” them, thinking strategically about how to invite consumers
into the marketing process.
A Collaborative Marketing Future is not a pipe dream. It’s a reality already set in motion,
one that is consistent with consumers’ innate tendencies to share and contribute. It’s a
future where the companies that are closest to those who buy, use and advocate for
their products win.
The evolution of marketing towards collaboration
The definition of Collaborative Marketing
Why the time is now to embrace Collaborative Marketing
5 trends driving the shift in Collaborative Marketing
5 keys to success in The Collaborative Marketing Future
THIS PAPER WILL EXPLORE
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
3. The Collaborative Marketing Platform crowdtap.com 3
THE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL MARKETING
The first recorded advertisement was placed in a
Boston newspaper in 1704. For the previous 300
years, the formula was roughly the same – deliver
mass marketing messages to mass audiences.
This was the dominant means through which
consumers discovered new products and services.
In the 1990s and early 2000s, the Internet, and
more recently transformative social technologies,
began to change the underlying fundamentals of
how companies market their products.
In 2006, Facebook opened its doors beyond
college students, and the next year Twitter’s
growth also began to explode. The emergence
of social technologies brought about a new era
of real-time communication where anyone could
share anything with the rest of the world. This
began what we have termed the first phase of
social marketing, Social Listening. Marketers were
able to eavesdrop on consumers’ conversations
about their products for the first time with tools
like Radian6 and Collective Intellect.
In 2008, Facebook launched the brand page and
prompted a race for marketers to acquire fans.
In turn, the second phase of social marketing
was launched: Social Management. Platforms
like Buddy Media, Wildfire and Vitrue emerged
to help brands acquire and manage these fans.
Marketers built large social databases, and the
challenge became how to best leverage social
communities to drive real, bottom-line value.
Today, we are entering the third phase,
Collaborative Marketing. A new group of
platforms, like Crowdtap, will emerge to help
brands market with, not at, their most loyal
customers. By providing these consumers with
a seat at the table with their favorite brands,
consumers will generate an endless supply of
insight, ideas and content on the brands’ behalf.
Perhaps even more importantly, these customers
will serve as a core media channel for delivering
a brand’s message to relevant audiences.
A LOOK AT THE
PAST AND PRESENT
Social Listening
Eavesdropping
on customers Building a following
Marketing with
customers
Social Management Collaborative Marketing
THE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL MARKETING
4. 4 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
In short, collaborative
marketing can be defined as
FROM CONVENTIONAL MARKETING BUILT UPON THREE “I’S”
TO “COLLABORATION MARKETING” DEFINED IN TERMS OF THREE “A’S”
DEFINING THE COLLABROATIVE
MARKETING FUTURE
Target and expose customers
to your message wherever you
can find them
Create incentives for
people to seek you out
Make it as difficult as possible
for the customer to compare
your product or service with
other options
The most powerful way to attract
people is to be as helpful and
engaging with potential customers
as possible; this requires a deep
understanding of the various
contexts in which people might
use your products and a willingness
to “co-create” products with
customers
The practice of marketing
WITH customers
Enter into a direct
relationship with the
customer and, wherever
possible, remove all third
parties from the relationship
Mobilize third parties,
including other customers, to
become even more helpful to
the people you interact with
INERCEPT
ATTRACT
INHIBIT
ASSIST
ISOLATE
AFFILIATE
One of the first definitions of “collaborative marketing” was developed by
top management consultant and author of The Power of Pull, John Hagel.
In 2006, he described the major shifts in business moving:
5. The Collaborative Marketing Platform crowdtap.com 5
Marketing is changing. Consumers are
exposed to more new products than ever
before, and learn about them from a wider
variety of sources. A brief look at new
product development in the beverage
industry helps explain some key forces
driving these shifts:
1. MORE PRODUCT LAUNCHES
Companies surveyed in the Beverage Industry’s
annual Product Development Survey said they
launched nearly twice as many products in 2012
as in 2011, and 64% surveyed plan to launch more
products in 2013 than in 2012. Only 2% intend to
launch fewer products.
2. LONGER LAUNCH TIMES
Perhaps counterintuitive, but BI’s respondents
said that the time to launch new products actually
increased from 9 months to 10 months in 2012.
3. HIGH FAILURE RATE
Booz & Company reports that 66% of new
products fail within two years, and the Doblin
Group finds that 96% of all innovations fail to
return their cost of capital.
4. INCREASE IN NICHE TARGETING
Symphony IRI’s New Product Pacesetter report
shows that year-one sales of major CPG products
decreased over the past decade from $35 million
to $25 million. This decline is largely attributed
to products that are increasingly targeted to
the needs and wants of smaller, more discrete
consumer segments.
5. OVERLOAD OF MESSAGING
The number of marketing messages a consumer
is exposed to per day has increased by as much
as 10x over the last 40 years to 5,000 messages
per day.
6. DECREASE IN TRUST
Surveys continue to find a decline in consumers’
trust of advertising. Conversely, research
finds that consumers regard their peers as the
most trusted source of product information.
Nielsen’s Global Consumer Trust Survey, for
example, showed that 92% of consumers trust
earned media such as word-of-mouth and
recommendations from friends and family
above all other forms of advertising.
THE FUTURE IS NOW
“Users Should Be Passionately Involved in Every
Stage of an Invention” – Famed Futurist and Director
of Engineering at Google, Ray Kurzweil
6. 6 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
These trends point to a strong need for marketers to develop
close relationships with consumers to be able to:
While nearly all Fortune 1,000 companies are now dabbling in some form of collaborative
marketing, perhaps no marketer has embraced it as fully as Pepsi did with its Mountain Dew
DEWmocracy initiative. Far more than a campaign, Pepsi developed a platform and brand for its
passionate base to get involved in creating, voting on and promoting new Mountain Dew flavors.
The consumers’ excitement for the initiative allowed Mountain Dew to generate $85 million in year
one sales for DEWmocracy. In fact, the launch resulted in the highest sales for any new beverage
product across convenience store brands by a wide margin.
“When a brand asks me
to provide feedback on
a product or marketing,
I feel ”
Responses from a Crowdtap
poll to 1,000 men or women
“It is becoming very obvious that this is a trend,
consumers want some control, some power over
the brand that they love.” – Joanne Nicoletti,
Brand Manager, Mountain Dew.
Launch products
faster and more
affordably
Understand niche
segments and meet
their needs
Break through the
clutter via trusted
sources of product
information
7. The Collaborative Marketing Platform crowdtap.com 7
1. DEMOCRATIZED PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
HOW THE FUTURE WILL BE WON
THAT WILL CREATE THE BIGGEST
CHANGES AND ULTIMATELY OFFER THE
BIGGEST REWARDS FOR MARKETERS:5 TRENDS
New models and technologies continue to make it easier and quicker for upstart companies
to create and market products. Brands must keep pace with the speed and crowdsourced
brainpower that these platforms enable across all stages of product development, including:
FUNDING
Crowdsourced funding platforms
like Kickstarter and Indiegogo make
it easy for anyone with a good idea
to raise millions to build a product
with little risk.
DISTRIBUTION
Quirky democratizes invention
by providing a development and
distribution platform for anyone
with an idea. Etsy provides a global
marketplace for designers and
artists to sell their goods to a vibrant
community of buyers.
PRODUCTION
3D printers like Makerbot look
to revolutionize how prototypes
and products are produced
through low-cost printers. Staples
is even introducing in-store 3D
printing later this year.
8. 8 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
3. OPEN ORGANIZATIONS3. OPEN ORGANIZATIONS
2. CLOSE, CONTINOUS CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS2. CLOSE, CONTINOUS CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS
Businesses in the past succeeded with secrecy. Keeping technology, formulas and processes
under wraps often led to a competitive advantage. Today, competitive innovation stems from
open information. Perhaps no company is better known for its “secret formula” than Coca-Cola.
Yet, Anthony Newstead, Coca-Cola’s Global Director of Innovation, IT and Interactive states:
“[We are going] through a phase of risk awareness rather than risk aversion [when it comes to
innovation]. You need to have a good way to communicate for that to work and email is not it:
social collaboration is the way to go. You have to move away from a command control top down
secretive model to a more collaborative one.”
One recent example of a consumer crowdsourcing project is the company’s newly launched
Facebook app that asks its 50 million fans to suggest ideas to make the world a happier place.
The winning idea will be funded by Coca-Cola and launched in 2013.
IBM’s Global CEO Study found that 88% of CEOs said “getting closer to customers” was the top
priority for their business over the next 5 years. Given the rapid pace at which businesses need
to develop and market products, maintaining a continual pulse on those consumers that actually
purchase products is critical. Brands who have a genuine, real-time dialogue with customers will
be well positioned in a world of evolving and increasingly niche markets.
Krister Zackari, President of Gum and Candy at Mondelez, has employed a strategy built
around ongoing optimization for its Twist brand to ensure it offers teenagers exactly what they
want from a snack brand. He states: “Because we’re working with teens on the strategy, we’re
developing it as we go along. It means that we’ve had to change how we would normally go about
planning the marketing for a brand. We don’t know what we’ll do next with Twist because we want
to evolve naturally as a result of our work with teens.”
9. The Collaborative Marketing Platform crowdtap.com 9
4. PEER-POWERED MEDIA
From 2006 – 2011, the amount of global information created increased by nine-fold, per the
IDC. Pushing out mass messages simply will not cut through the clutter in this age. One-third of
all display ads that brands pay for are never shown, and 86% of people skip TV ads. Customers
are simply too fragmented, too over-stimulated and have too many distractions for these
conventional marketing strategies to maintain their effectiveness.
Already, 80% of online content is consumer generated, and content will increasingly come from
a customer’s peers. This trend began when Facebook and other social technologies ushered in
The Age of Discovery where consumers discover products from their social graphs. Today, friends
are exposed to one another’s location, mood, music, likes, and more. And with Facebook’s new
graph search, friends can search and discover nearly anything through the lens of their friends.
Marketers need advocates talking about their products as increasingly people receive information
about brands from their social connections.
“When information is cheap, attention
becomes expensive.” – James Glick “Faster”
10. 10 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
5. MEASUREMENT OF INFLUENCE NOT IMPRESSIONS5. MEASUREMENT OF INFLUENCE NOT IMPRESSIONS
Impressions provided a simple metric for a simple, mass marketed world. Success today, however, is not
based on quantity alone; quality of the engagement with a message must be factored in as well. In order to
measure the quality of any customer communication, Crowdtap developed the Brand Influence Metric along
with Joanna Seddon, the former CEO of Millward Brown Optimor.
Brand Influence looks at both quantity and quality of impressions, breaking the latter down into two distinct
factors: proximity and intensity. Proximity measures the trust and relevance of the message’s source; the
influence of a message from a close friend is higher than that of a TV commercial. Intensity measures how
fun and memorable the communication is; engaging with a brand at an event or trying a product has much
greater intensity than viewing a banner ad or billboard.
Marketers should look to implement a measurement system, similar to The Brand Influence Formula (shown
below), so they begin prioritizing the impact and influence of their communications, in addition to the reach
and frequency.
The Brand Influence Metric report can be downloaded here.
QUALITY QUANTITY
INTENSITY X X X =EXPOSUREPROXIMITY REACH
BRAND
INFLUENCE
FORMULA FOR CALCULATING BRAND INFLUENCE
11. The Collaborative Marketing Platform crowdtap.com 11
2. ENGAGE YOUR CORE
1. AUDIT YOUR AUDIENCES
2. ENGAGE YOUR CORE
Look at all of your brand’s existing communities and databases, including CRM, Facebook,
Twitter, and other social sites. Every brand has consumers that want to participate at different
levels. Some love to tell you what they think of your brand, others want to shout from the
rooftops, while many may just want a good deal. Brands need to understand all of these
consumer segments and ensure they have plans to maximize the value of each.
THE COLLABORATIVE WORKOUT
– SIX MONTHS TO A NEW YOU
Just as Barack Obama won a 2nd term due to a strong ground game, marketers must
empower their loyal consumers to amplify their messages for them. In the Harvard Business
Review article, “How Valuable is Word of Mouth?,” the authors state, “A company’s most
valuable customers are customers who are both excellent buyers and marketers.” These brand
advocates actually have a higher lifetime value to your business than do loyal customers who
don’t advocate but purchase more.
BRAND ADVOCATES SPEND
2X
AND RECOMMEND OR SHARE
2-4X MORE THAN YOUR
TYPICAL CUSTOMER
AS MUCH AS YOUR
TYPICAL CUSTOMER
TO EMBRACING COLLABORATIVE
MARKETING STRATEGIES.5 STEPS
12. 12 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
4. DO IT FASTER, SMARTER, BETTER
3. ALIGN YOUR CONTENT3. ALIGN YOUR CONTENT
4. DO IT FASTER, SMARTER, BETTER
Earned media is a popular buzzword these days, but most advertising content is still not
developed for the social world. Many marketers now attempt to create the next viral hit, which
often causes them to lose focus on what actually makes content shareable. Creating content
in hopes it will go viral is often laughed off by agencies; virality is an unpredictable thing.
Virality is difficult because sharing occurs in small groups - not via an elite group of
influencers. In fact, the median number of views per share of a piece of viral content is
9 on Facebook and 5 on Twitter. With that in mind, it takes tens or hundreds of thousands
of regular people sharing with their friends to achieve scale. Given how diversified and niche
consumers now are, developing content much more frequently and targeting that content
more accurately to various interest groups will become the new formula for achieving scale
in communications. Having a direct connection to advocates willing to share frequently is
critical to success.
It simply does not make sense to develop a yearlong marketing plan anymore. The fact is,
major platforms like Pinterest and Instagram pop up out of nowhere on a regular basis.
Even with new platforms excluded, attempting to forecast spend and message on a yearly
or even quarterly basis simply doesn’t fit with how content is now consumed or how quickly
culture evolves.
Marketers today must operate more like tech companies than like advertisers. The new model,
according to Steven Cook, former CMO of Samsung, “...is more akin to a startup mentality.
The CMO will need to learn what it’s like to move fast and do things on the cheap. The future
is, after all, about doing more with less.”
Marketers now need to frequently test and optimize messaging, platforms and products.
A mindset that shifts focus away from yearly or quarterly ad campaigns to a structure that
enables brands the ability to continually create, test and repeat is one of the most critical and
difficult changes marketers must make.
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5. COMMIT TO COLLABORATION
Perhaps this sounds contrary to the previous recommendation, but marketers must commit to
marketing with consumers for the long run. Collaboration cannot be thought of or bought as
a campaign. With each success, brands can develop a deeper relationship with consumers and
build a long-term asset that will derive increasing value.
This doesn’t mean brands should commit their full budget to collaborative marketing on
Day 1. Rather, the money they do commit needs to be focused on ongoing initiatives that
start to shift thinking to a collaborative approach. These initiatives can and should be tested,
reviewed and optimized, but success must be evaluated in the context of a long-term solution.
While two-way dialogue and conversation have been popular topics over the past five years,
most social marketing still resembles conventional marketing with the broadcast of messages
coming direct from brand or agency, only on new platforms.
Collaborative Marketing will bring much greater change then enabling consumers to
comment, like or re-tweet posts. Collaborative Marketing will mean that the current barriers
between companies and their consumers will be removed. Successful brands will create and
improve their products and messaging continually, side by side with their consumers. The
brands that do this best will have eager and active advocates championing their products.
Technology will continue to make maintaining consumer relationships easier, more profitable
and more measurable.
Conventional marketing still has value, but that value will continue to decrease every year.
The Collaborative Marketing Future has arrived, and it’s going to be a fun ride.
5. COMMIT TO COLLABORATION
CONCLUSION
14. 14 The Collaborative Marketing Platformcrowdtap.com
With Crowdtap, brands can learn, ideate and market with their
consumers on-demand.
Crowdtap’s Social Advocacy Suite drives deep social conversations and word of mouth
at scale from brands’ most passionate fans.
Crowdtap’s Insights Community Suite allows brands to learn from and ideate with
their social communities in real-time through a branded research community.
Crowdtap helps leading brands including Verizon, Reckitt-Benckiser, Old Navy, AT&T,
Mastercard, Kia and Sony drive deep collaboration with consumers. Headquartered in New
York, Crowdtap has raised $10MM led by leading Venture Capital firms The Foundry Group
and Tribeca Venture Partners.
Learn More at Crowdtap.com or email corp@crowdtap.com
Crowdtap is the Collaborative Marketing Platform
The leading enterprise technology solution that allows marketers to partner
with their most engaged consumers throughout the marketing process.
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