Forget the Funnel. Enter the Loop. A One North White Paper
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FORGET THE FUNNEL. ENTER THE LOOP.
AN EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO RELATIONSHIP-BASED MARKETING & DIGITAL STRATEGY FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICES FIRMS
By John Simpson and Kalev Peekna
The world around us is changing and evolving every day. We’re all familiar with the concept of survival of the fittest. Well, in business, it’s no different. Evolution forces us, as businesses, to consider our strengths and what makes us unique. It forces us to regard, and cultivate, those things that set us apart from our competitors, so that we can do more than survive, but thrive.
This is particularly interesting in the world of Professional Services—where differentiation is critical, but difficult. How do we find our strengths? And, from there, how do we nurture the evolution of our strategy? We decided to take a deep-dive and gain a better understanding of the DNA of a professional services firm and how that DNA points us to a unique relationship-based business model. We also explore how technology has also evolved, and how the new realities it’s created, coupled with a new framework for relationship development, should influence and affect your firm’s digital strategy.
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Forget the Funnel. Enter the Loop. A One North White Paper
2. Disruption. In modern business, much has
been made of that word. But has the fanfare been
warranted? We’ve certainly seen a rapid pace
of change; new technologies, new channels
and new models have allowed us to reach our
customers in ways never before imagined. But
what if disruption is the wrong word? The wrong
idea? After all, disruption conjures notions of
noise and confusion. Disruption distracts, prevents
us from seeing strategy clearly.
Instead, consider the idea of evolution. The world around us is changing and evolving every
day, if only incrementally, in ways we can’t yet even see. We’re all familiar with the
concept of survival of the fittest. Well, in business, it’s no different. Evolution forces us, as
businesses, to consider our strengths and what makes us unique. It forces us to regard, and
cultivate, those things that set us apart from our competitors, so that we can do more than
survive, but thrive.
This is particularly interesting in the world of Professional Services—where differentiation
is critical, but difficult. How do we find our strengths? And, from there, how do we nurture the
evolution of our strategy? We decided to take a deep-dive and gain a better understanding of
the DNA of a professional services firm and how that DNA points us to a unique relationship-
based business model. We’ll see that, in a relationship, a continuous process of listening,
responding, adjusting, measuring and listening all over again—The Relationship Cycle—must
take place across channels, especially across digital channels. We’ll explore how technology
has also evolved, and how the new realities it’s created, coupled with a new framework for
relationship development, should influence and affect your firm’s digital strategy.
3. TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION I
1 | FORGET THE FUNNEL. ENTER THE LOOP.
3 | OUR DNA: WHY RELATIONSHIP-BASED BUSINESSES ARE DIFFERENT
4 | THE RELATIONSHIP CYCLE: A MODEL BUILT ESPECIALLY FOR
RELATIONSHIP-BASED BUSINESSES
SECTION II
6 | THE INTERACTIVE INFLUENCE: A SIMULTANEOUS EVOLUTION
8 | OPENING NEW DOORS, CHANNELS AND CONTEXTS
• NEW DOORS – TWO-WAY STREETS INTERCONNECTED NETWORKS
• NEW CHANNELS – KEEPING COMMUNICATIONS SOCIAL AND CUSTOMIZED
• NEW CONTEXTS – REACHING USERS BEYOND THEIR DESKS
SECTION III
9 | A STRATEGIC SHIFT: HOW THE RELATIONSHIP CYCLE TRANSFORMS YOUR
APPROACH TO DIGITAL
11 | THE IMPORTANCE OF STARTING AT THE FINISH LINE
12 | WHAT DOES A COMPREHENSIVE DIGITAL STRATEGY LOOK LIKE?
13 | PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: A DIGITAL BLUEPRINT
SIDEBAR
11 | CREATING SUCCESSFUL PERSONAS — THREE HELPFUL STEPS
5. But, here’s the thing: it’s also more
than a century old. It was first
conceived in 1898, along with the
venerable concept of AIDA
(attention, interest, desire, action).
This acronym is well taught, well
learned and well loved, and for
good reason. It has stood the test
of time. Even today, any of us could
apply that model to our own
purchasing decisions.
However, as a model, it does not
hold up for professional services
firms, which are built on long-term
client relationships. The funnel
speaks FROM the marketer TO
the customer, without listening,
adjusting or responding in return.
Its greatest shortcoming is that it is
best for one-way communication.
One-way communication is the last
thing professional services firms
should contemplate. The funnel
has never made sense for a
relationship-based business, for
so many reasons:
• Sometimes reaching the right
audience trumps reaching a
large one.
• Buying decisions don’t represent
the end game of marketing
and business development’s
contribution. More often, it’s only
the beginning.
• There’s no room in the traditional
funnel for loyalty, which marks
the difference between a
“repeat customer” and a true
client or partner.
• Buying decisions aren’t just driven
by the messages you deliver to
clients. They’re also driven by
what clients say to you, and to
each other.
Devising a new model means
abandoning the funnel and
rethinking your approach to
marketing and business
development from the ground up.
Any successful new model must
not only center on your client
relationships, it must also put those
relationships into context with
today’s digital communication
habits. What we need is a loop.
SECTION HIGHLIGHTS
• The one-way marketing
funnel is impractical
for relationship-based
businesses.
• More fitting is a loop: a
repeating process that
allows communications
to flow from one party to
another and back again.
• Introducing the
Relationship Cycle:
an evolutionary shift
in perspective.
ForgetTheFunnel.
EnterTheLoop.
SECTION I
Who hasn’t crossed paths with the ubiquitous marketing funnel? More to the
point, how many of us actually have applied it to our businesses? It’s easy to
visualize, easily understood and fairly intuitive in depicting a large audience of
prospects narrowing down to a small audience of clients or customers. All in
all, it’s an extremely useful construct.
2
6. We’ve introduced the term relationship-based business. But what exactly does
that mean? Don’t all companies have a relationship with their customers, even
those selling toothpaste or peanut butter?
Our DNA: Why
Relationship-Based
Businesses Are Different
HERE’S THE SIMPLE DEFINITION:
A relationship-based
business is one that is
driven almost entirely by
whom you know or, more
importantly, by who knows
you. Both new deals and
ongoing revenue come
primarily from networks,
connections and referrals.
Without question, the business model of
any professional services firm depends
on relationships. Not just a transactional
relationship, but also a long-term,
ever-changing relationship that
encompasses non-transactional activities. For example,
you know that winning new business depends on what
your clients have to say about you within their professional
networks. Their advice and recommendations to friends and
colleagues can make or break the reputation of your firm.
What else in the DNA of relationship-based businesses
sets us apart from other kinds of businesses? What are
the specific conditions of our survival that must be met
in order to profit, prosper and evolve? For starters, in a
relationship-based business:
• Revenue generation is not transactional.
• Thebuyingdecisionisalongprocess—sometimestaking
weeks,monthsorevenyearsofmutualevaluation.
• Your value to clients isn’t easily or quickly replaced.
• Client relationships are complex, involving multiple
touch points between several individuals.
• Current clients are an important source of new
revenue, often more important than new clients.
• Buying decisions are collective and collaborative.
There are multiple decision makers and influencers.
• Whatyourclientsfeelabout(andsayabout)your
businessstronglyimpactsthedecisionsofotherclients.
The relationship perspective also allows comparisons
between many types of professional services firms. Just as
there are connections between species of the same genus
in the natural world—cats and dogs are both mammals, for
example—professional services firms may find themselves
looking outside of their own categories for new learning and
new ideas. A law firm may find intriguing and unexpected
links to an advertising agency or architecture practice. A
consulting firm may draw parallels to a financial services
firm. The relationship-based business model provides both
greater focus and more inspiration.
3
SECTION I: FORGET THE FUNNEL. ENTER THE LOOP.
7. The Relationship Cycle:
A Model Built Especially
For Relationship-Based
Businesses
So, you may have taken the first step and can now embrace the fact that your business is
relationship-based. But, this realization is only helpful if you can connect it to your marketing and
business development activities and (even more importantly) to how your clients make buying decisions.
This brings us to a new, two-way model.
As mentioned previously, what we need is a loop.
A loop implies a repeating process that allows
communication to move from one party to another
party and vice versa. It also implies a cycle that
has no end. It simply begins again, always working
to nurture the relationship.
Recent McKinsey Company research points to
this cyclical process. The model that emerges
is called the Consumer Decision Journey.1
The Relationship Cycle is our adaptation of this
model, specifically tuned to the perspective of
relationship-based businesses.
In the diagram, we see how your firm’s interests and
business development activities meet your clients’
needs and objectives. The Relationship Cycle
directly connects your goals to each stage of your
clients’ decision-making experience. It provides a
comprehensive view of how your interactions can help
influence and strengthen your connection with those
you partner with, and how those relationships impact the
development of your business:
What Your Client Does
(in boxes)
• Identify Need
• Research Solution
• Active Evaluation
• Formalize Relationship
What Your Firm Does
(in red)
• Generate Awareness
• Drive Consideration
• Follow Up
• Establish Trust Advocacy
One North Interactive’s Adaptation of the McKinsey
Company Consumer Decision Journey
SECTION I: FORGET THE FUNNEL. ENTER THE LOOP.
1
Consumer Decision Journey is available at: www.mckinsey.com/insights/marketing_sales/the_consumer_decision_journey
THE RELATIONSHIP CYCLE
Loyalty Loop
Drive Consideration
FollowUp
Establish Trust. Advocacy.
GenerateAwareness
FORMALIZE
RELATIONSHIP
ACTIVE
EVALUATION
RESEARCH
SOLUTION
IDENTIFY
NEED
Loyalty. Influence.
4
8. 2
Zero Moment of Truth (ZMOT) is available at: www.thinkwithgoogle.com/collections/zero-moment-truth.html
The diagram also illustrates the idea of balance
between what you want your clients to do and
what they want you to do. It’s important to
understand both, to meet in the middle and to
acknowledge shared goals. The dimension of time
is also critical because all relationships evolve
over time. Your experience with each client will
be different, depending on how and where you
make initial contact, your contact’s level within the
company and other factors. Your job is to guide
your client through the Relationship Cycle and,
ultimately, to its inner circle. This is the Loyalty
Loop, and this is where your relationships truly
start to evolve. It’s easy to see how positive
experiences can fast-track future buying
decisions for your existing clients.
What is sometimes less obvious is how those
same positive experiences can influence the
purchasing decisions of other clients. This is
about more than just reputation. Your clients
have never been better equipped to share
specific details about their experiences across
their entire professional and social network. For
better or worse, the most effective marketers of
a relationship-based business are your clients.
And the Internet only amplifies this impact. Now
the collective experiences of those you’ve served
in the past very easily and frequently make their
way to future buyers as they embark on their own
journey of organic discovery. Google calls this the
Zero Moment of Truth2
, and marketers are now
doing everything in their power to ensure they’re
delivering the right content—testimonials and case
studies, for example—in the right places,
at the right time.
The Relationship Cycle is that
evolutionary shift in perspective
that can keep your firm surviving
and thriving in the post-digital world.
Navigating this journey with each client is
more challenging, requires more care and
thoughtfulness, more constant visibility and more
responsiveness within your marketing and
business development efforts than ever before.
It puts a new emphasis, even a priority, on
cultivating relationships with existing clients.
Though the search for new clients remains
important, the Relationship Cycle exists to bring
your current relationships to their full potential.
SECTION I: FORGET THE FUNNEL. ENTER THE LOOP.
5
10. The truth is,
digital now
pervades so
much of our
everyday lives
and relationships that an
experience lacking even the
smallest interactive component
feels foreign or backwards,
almost untrustworthy. We’ve
even started making jokes about
the difference between digital
natives and digital immigrants.
Ultimately, those who choose to
ignore digital in this day and age
will be left behind.
Fortunately, many marketers
have come to recognize
the importance of digital
experiences. According to
Accenture’s CMO Insights 20143
,
more than one-third of the global
senior marketing executives
surveyed believe digital budgets
will account for more than 75% of
the marketing budget within the
next five years, with mobile alone
accounting for more than half
of the marketing budget. And
though only one in five CMOs
surveyed believe their company
will be known as a digital
business within the next five
years, 49% understand the
importance of triggering or
encouraging that transformation.
There’s no doubt that the relationship-based nature of professional
services organizations inspired us to ditch the funnel and instead adopt
the Relationship Cycle as our evolutionary framework for relationship and
business development. But a funny thing called technology was also rapidly
evolving and quickly influenced both the impact and the possibilities a
model like this could provide professional services marketers in their quest
to form meaningful connections with clients and prospects.
SECTION II
The Interactive Influence:
A Simultaneous Evolution
3
CMO Insights 2014 is available at:
www.accenture.com/us-en/Pages/insight-cmo-digital-transformation-summary.aspx
SECTION HIGHLIGHTS
• The onset of digital has
permanently altered the
marketing landscape.
• Social media empowers
customers to discuss
their experiences with
your firm among their
own networks.
• Mobile affects the
context of your
interactions with clients,
providing an opportunity
to prioritize the content
and messages you’re
delivering.
7
11. SECTION II: THE INTERACTIVE INFLUENCE: A SIMULTANEOUS EVOLUTION
Opening New Doors,
Channels And Contexts
Digital has opened up endless opportunities to truly engage and build relationships with your audiences. For one
thing, the experiences you share along the Relationship Cycle can now be just that – experiences. Marketers have
never been better equipped to network and connect, interact with and/or reach their audiences, even outside of
the typical 9-to-5 workday.
New Doors—Two-Way Streets and
Interconnected Networks
Gone are the days of “spray and pray,” hoping your
one-way communication blasts somehow make an
impression on your audiences (think TV or print ads).
Social media has done much to open the floodgates,
allowing audiences to talk both with you and about you.
This can have a powerful impact on how clients move
along the Relationship Cycle, especially within the
Loyalty Loop. Clients now have the ability to promote
their experiences with your firm, with or without your
knowledge, within their own networks. This allows
you the potential to reach and be considered by new
prospects or markets when shared experiences are
positive. However, it’s important to keep in mind that
negative experiences are just as easily shared and
influential. Understanding the power of two-way
communication and adding value at every stage of the
Cycle can help you shape the messages in your favor,
even when you aren’t writing or sharing them yourself.
New Channels—Keeping
Communications Social Customized
Social media and email marketing are two digital
communication tools that help open the doors and allow
you to listen and cater to the specific interests of your
audiences. Whether it’s tracking trending hashtags or
following clients on Twitter, joining the conversations
happening on LinkedIn or boosting SEO by engaging on
Google+, you can gain great insight into what your
audiences are talking about, searching for or wishing
they knew more about by taking advantage of these
new digital channels. Email blasts demonstrating you can
provide valuable insight into what they’re looking for
can help build awareness, drive consideration and
continuously provide additional value.
Analyzing engagement levels (retweets, shares, opens,
clicks, etc.) can help provide real-time feedback on the
effectiveness of your efforts, and guide you in adjusting
your content or commitment to a particular trend or
channel in order to make communications more relevant.
New Contexts—Reaching Users
Beyond Their Desks
Mobile adds an entirely new layer to digital in that it
very much affects the context of your interactions
with clients. Not only can it help you reach your
audiences during windows of time outside of the
standard workday, say during their commute, but its
condensed nature also provides an opportunity to
prioritize the content and messages you’re delivering.
This again adds relevancy, but it also demonstrates how
dedicated you are to being a true partner, one that
understands not only what your audiences want to
hear or learn, but also how they want to do so.
The possibilities are endless and exciting … but it’s
important to realize they may not all work for your
business, or for all audiences you’re trying to reach.
Having a plan in place for utilizing these tools and
channels in a smart way can help to add some clarity
to the booming, sometimes fuzzy, digital realm.
8
12. SECTION III
A Strategic Shift: How
The Relationship Cycle
Transforms Your Approach
To Digital
9
13. Here’s what you know so far:
• You are a relationship-based
business.
• Your firm’s success depends
heavily on its reputation,
expertise and ability to
provide an exceptional
client experience.
• When those positive
experiences make it out into
the market—and trust us,
they will—they have the
ability to influence the
purchasing decisions of
others within and outside of
your own network.
• The rapidly changing
technology landscape has
transformed the way these
networks work, how your
messages make it to clients
and how messages about you
make their way to prospects.
You also know that interactive
solutions provide you with a
unique toolset for amplifying
the experience you provide
as you move your clients
along the Relationship Cycle.
This admittedly can be a little
overwhelming. One of the major
challenges–and opportunities–
facing marketers today is how to
best create a brand experience
in this new reality, where clients
continuously interact with your
organization across multiple
digital and offline channels.
How do you ensure you’re
always taking advantage of
the right channels for the right
audiences and influencing
the right people to grow your
business? Well, for starters, you
need a strong digital strategy
in place—one that is built on a
foundation of understanding,
drives engagement that
positively influences all involved
and is constantly measured,
analyzed and improved.
SECTION HIGHLIGHTS
• Businesses need to
shift to a more cyclical
approach to digital
strategy that allows
for continual evaluation
and alignment.
• What are the
components of an
effective digital
strategy? We outline
them here for you.
• Making the shift to
a relationship-based
model for marketing,
business development
and digital strategy
is an evolutionary
process.
SECTION III
A Strategic Shift: How
The Relationship Cycle
Transforms Your Approach
To Digital
10
14. Many firms take a bimodal approach
to digital strategy. For example, they
often set out to build or redesign
a website. They go through the
planning phase, the build phase
and the launch phase. Then, the site
exists without further examination
for several years until the process of
re-launching starts all over again.
But with relationships, technologies,
goals and objectives changing,
often simultaneously, with time,
these firms are bound to get left
behind if they don’t shift to a more
cyclical approach to their digital
strategy. They need a process in
place for continual evaluation and
alignment.
Consider Amazon. The familiar
shopping site has gone without
a major release for years, if not
decades. Yet the site is constantly
evolving. The point is: a digital
platform should be enduring, but
it can’t sit by itself for three or four
years. It has to be used to support
goals, and adjusted in response to
the ways clients are interacting
with it.
So, before we can build the
platform, we have to understand the
business goals we hope to achieve
by building it. There are macro
goals—expanding geographically,
expanding into a new industry or
vertical or boosting the bottom line,
for instance. There are also micro
goals—targets for each geographic
area, each line of business, for each
professional in the organization,
even for each publication on a
website. In effect, we need to start
at the finish line, with the overall
goals that the firm needs its digital
platform to support and achieve.
Micro goals roll up to macro goals,
and as individual goals are attained
(or not attained), the strategy is
adjusted and new tactics follow.
Before you can develop a strategy and identify the right tools and tactics to
use, it’s important to again consider the dimension of time. We already know
that relationships evolve over time. If we look more closely, we can
see that our goals for particular relationships also evolve and change over
time. We need to plan our digital investment keeping this in mind as well.
The Importance Of
Starting At The Finish Line
SIDEBAR:
CREATING
SUCCESSFUL
PERSONAS—THREE
HELPFUL STEPS
What is the single most important
consideration before laying out how
you will start communicating and
connecting with your audiences?
Well … it’s your audiences. In order to unlock
the true power of digital, you must have a
complete grasp on how to leverage interactive
solutions in different ways for different users.
Doing so starts with identifying who your
different users are and what makes them tick.
Anticipating the needs and interests of
your partner is a key component of any
successful relationship; it’s no different in the
business world. Begin by mapping out the
demographics of your users, their professional
role and relationship to your organization.
Know their pain points – what challenges or
frustrations are you uniquely suited to help
them solve? Finally, work to discover the
details of their digital habits and practices.
Are they active on social media? If so, what
channels do they prefer? At what times of the
day are they most likely to engage with you?
What kind of devices do they typically use
to access the Internet? How long do they
spend online? How do they search for
information online? continued on pg. 12
SECTION III: A STRATEGIC SHIFT: HOW THE RELATIONSHIP CYCLE
TRANSFORMS YOUR APPROACH TO DIGITAL
11
15. A digital strategy typically includes, but is not limited to, the following efforts:
Having a thoughtful strategy allows
you to plan and control the overall
experience you are creating for
your audiences—from choosing the
right channel and delivering the
right content to building the right
technical platform and creating the
optimal brand experience.
Research and
Discovery:
Gain a mutual
understanding of an
organization, its markets
and how well current
efforts connect with
audiences. Identify
guiding principles and
goals. Gather quantitative
and qualitative data
on audience needs,
preferences and
information consumption
habits.
• Goals and hypotheses
• Interviews – internal
and external
• User survey
• Secondary research
• Competitive
benchmarking
Relationship
Design:
Define and prioritize
the firm’s most
important relationships.
Investigate and analyze
the expectations and
opportunities in those
relationships. Describe
how relationships
change and develop to
enable the organization’s
success.
• User persona portfolio
• User content strategy
• Social media strategy
Experience Design:
Design the firm’s online
brand experience.
Maintain focus on
audiences and how they
will interact with the firm.
Identify forward-leaning
technology and tools to
bring the vision to life.
• Experience scenarios
• Content ecosystem
map
• Technical architecture
• Digital brand
expression
• Metrics design
No two digital strategies are alike because each one relies on a solid
understanding of an individual firm’s unique goals, its clients’ objectives and
their information consumption habits. Think of it as a firm’s digital fingerprint.
SECTION III: A STRATEGIC SHIFT: HOW THE RELATIONSHIP CYCLE
TRANSFORMS YOUR APPROACH TO DIGITAL
What Does A
Comprehensive Digital
Strategy Look Like?
SIDEBAR (CONT.):
CREATING
SUCCESSFUL
PERSONAS—THREE
HELPFUL STEPS
Customizing your interactions with users can’t
be done if you don’t understand what kind of
information they’re looking for, where they go
to get it and how often they come back for
more. User personas can help you identify
important groups and patterns and serve as
the foundation of a proactive and successful
digital strategy.
WHEN EMBARKING ON THE PROCESS
OF CREATING PERSONAS, HERE ARE
THREE THINGS TO KEEP IN MIND:
1. Start with the big picture.
Begin by setting high-level goals for each
target audience. Goals may cut across several
audiences, or hone in on one particular area
of opportunity. This is also a good time to form
hypotheses to help guide user research, which
is the next step on the road to building a
successful persona.
2. Reflect key user insights.
Test your hypotheses regarding what users
are looking for with respect to digital
interactions. Conduct qualitative and
quantitative research to better understand
key insights and opportunities.
continued on pg. 13
12
16. 4
Founders Workbench is available at: www.foundersworkbench.com
These strategies and
plans should answer the
following questions:
• How do we want each of our personas
to interact with us online?
• How do we initiate that contact (or will
the user initiate contact)?
• What do we want the user to do after
they interact with us?
• What type of content is most valuable
to audiences? How does our content
help them as they make decisions?
• How can we use new technologies –
like data personalization, responsive
design, social integration and
marketing automation – to optimize
our content ecosystem and its
relevance to our personas?
• How can we best express our brand
in contexts like web, mobile, email and
social media?
• How can we measure our success and
make adjustments over time?
You must also keep in mind where your
users are on the Relationship Cycle,
what types of interactions you might be
able to engage in to help encourage
their movement along the Cycle and
how those experiences can help shape
the interactions you have with those
who have yet to enter the Cycle.
An example of a great digital strategy
at play can be seen through Founders
Workbench.4
This digital experience
was created to meet the unique needs
of entrepreneurs, specifically those in
the early stages of founding a business
or launching a new innovation. Law
firm Goodwin Procter LLP, anticipating
the needs of this important group,
developed a digital presence rich
with valuable-content—from free legal
documents to capital calculators and
a dictionary to help translate the legal
jargon they’ll encounter as they start
their new business. Recognizing that its
audience is mobile and tech-savvy, the
site is fully responsive and offers a
variety of unique and useful web
apps. The firm amplifies the site with
a visible and strong social media
presence that provides pertinent news
updates as well as thoughtfully curated,
entrepreneur-specific content. Perhaps
most important, Goodwin Procter LLP is
constantly exploring ways to improve,
innovate and expand the Founders
Workbench digital footprint. It has
proved to be an essential and evolving
business tool for the firm.
We’ve defined our user personas and we’ve come to know their digital habits, pain
points and what makes them tick. But do we really know what they’ll do once we
set them free in the digital world? The answer is no; we can never know that with
absolute certainty. But, we can set ourselves up with proactive strategies and plans
for guiding the experience.
Putting It All Together:
A Digital Blueprint
SIDEBAR (CONT.):
CREATING
SUCCESSFUL
PERSONAS—THREE
HELPFUL STEPS
During the qualitative phase, focus on your
users’ interests, what information they look
for, where they find answers, where they find
value and how they learn to trust professional
information resources. It’s also a good idea to
talk with internal stakeholders to understand
their perceptions of user wants and needs.
Web-based quantitative surveys can help
gather more detailed information about digital
consumption patterns, online habits and
communication preferences. Here, you’re
looking for hard evidence that backs up your
hypotheses and directs you down the path to
developing effective tactics.
3. Know where they fall on the
Relationship Cycle.
You need to understand where each persona
is located today along the Relationship Cycle,
and how you can shape interactions that
encourage conversion and long-term
relationship development. To do that,
you’ll need to define important touch
points—content, functionality and
interactions—that are critical to balancing
goals, and understand where your current
touch points are succeeding or falling short.
SECTION III: A STRATEGIC SHIFT: HOW THE RELATIONSHIP CYCLE
TRANSFORMS YOUR APPROACH TO DIGITAL
13
17. 17
As we said at the beginning of this paper,
making the shift to a relationship-based model
for marketing, business development and digital
strategy is an evolutionary process. Evolution
is never finished, but continuously adapting,
perfecting and adjusting.
When we as relationship-based businesses build our strategies around the things that make us what
we are—expertise, insight, partnership, loyalty, advocacy—we end up with a platform that stands the
test of time, furthers our goals and moves our relationships forward. There always will be a new
technology, a new tactic, a new best practice. The right strategy is ready to incorporate all of the
above because it depends not on the latest and greatest bells and whistles, but on the principles of
exceeding our clients’ expectations and understanding their needs.
If you like what you’ve read here and are interested in working with
One North Interactive to build a digital relationship platform for your firm,
contact Dawn Michalak at dmichalak@onenorth.com or 312-873-6889.
John Simpson is Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer at One North and a 16-year veteran of helping professional
services and business-to-business marketers engage with their clients and grow their organizations through brand-based
digital marketing experiences. He is a frequent author and speaker as it relates to relationship development, digital
strategy and marketing innovation. John can be reached at jsimpson@onenorth.com.
Kalev Peekna is Managing Director, Chief Strategist at One North. He leads the development of new capabilities and
approaches that bring together Brand, Creative, Strategy, UX and Technology to create engaging digital experiences for
B2B and relationship-based businesses. A regular speaker, he presents on a wide range of topics within digital marketing
and design. Kalev can be reached at kpeekna@onenorth.com.
CONCLUSION
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18. 18
One North is a digital agency dedicated to
delivering compelling cross-platform customer
experiences. Everything we do, everything
we think and everything we create puts the
relationships you have with your clients first.
We’ve partnered with hundreds of organizations
to produce effective and elegant digital
experiences that intelligently connect business
strategy and marketing activities. From brand
planning, digital strategy and creative services, to
front and back-end development and technology
support, our teams work collaboratively to
deliver holistic digital solutions focused on
strengthening our clients’ most valuable asset:
their relationships.
To learn more, visit www.onenorth.com.
ABOUT ONE NORTH INTERACTIVE
15
19. ONENORTH.COM
If you like what you’ve read here and are interested in working with One North to build a digital
relationship platform for your firm, contact Dawn Michalak at dmichalak@onenorth.com.
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