Categories: Display

Brands & Telcos Must Partner to Deliver Omni-Channel Experience; SMEs Struggling with Digital

ExchangeWire Research’s weekly roundup brings you up-to-date research findings from around the world, with additional insight provided by Rebecca Muir, head of research and analysis, ExchangeWire. In this week’s edition: Brands and telcos must partner to deliver omni-channel experience; SMEs struggling with digital; and Influencer spend on the up.

Brands & telcos must partner to deliver omni-channel experience

Brands and communications service providers will need to become tightly coupled in order to truly fulfill their shared vision of delivering a more gratifying, valued, and relevant omni-channel experience for customers, finds a study by the CMO Council.

 

More than 80% of brand marketers surveyed say their brands are extremely, very, or increasingly reliant on global customer connectivity, secure digital communications, real-time customer interaction, and multi-channel content delivery.

Almost half (49%) of non-telco marketers see a potential leadership role for communications service providers to provide brands with an optimised framework for omni-channel engagement. Only 11% do not, and 40% are uncertain.

In contrast, 56% of telco industry marketers believe that non-telco companies are out-performing telco operators and communications service providers in delivering a true omni-channel experience. This compares to one quarter who do not.

Surprisingly, just 4% of subscriber-reliant telco companies believe they are giving their customers a consistent, personalised, and contextually relevant experience across all traditional and digital channels by leveraging persistence of information, respecting the privacy of customers, and aligning the business needs with IT. On the non-telco side, the picture is just as dismal. Just 1% of brand marketers say they have a complete omni-channel management model in place.

SMEs struggling with digital

Small business owners don’t seem to have a clue how to market their business in an increasingly digital marketplace, says a report by G2 Crowd.

Nearly a quarter of small businesses (24%) are still investing in either newspaper ads and/or billboards. Only 19% of respondents are spending money on Google AdWords. This figure declines as small businesses grow from 51-99 employees to 100-250 employees. Small businesses seem to be falling way behind as marketing becomes increasingly digital, which can be seen by the fact that on average:

- 15% use banner ads

- 11% use Google Dynamic Search Ads

- 9% have an advertising agency

Of the channels used, Facebook was named both the most successful, at 38% of respondents, and the least successful, at 29%. Since it was, by far, the most used channel, that isn’t really surprising. Despite this negative outlook, online and e-commerce is the largest channel used to grow and maintain business objectives (57%).

Influencer spend on the up

One-in-ten (9%) marketers will spend more than £100,000 on influencers in the next 12 months, according to research by Takumi.

The majority (39%), say they will spend up to £10,000, while a further fifth estimate their budget to be between £10,000 and £100,000. Only 4% say they plan to allocate nothing towards influencer campaigns.

One-in-four marketers (26%) now believe influencer marketing is a more effective way to target consumers than traditional advertising, such as display adverts on social media, while a further two-thirds (43%) agree that it is more effective, but only for millennial audiences.

The study also revealed that when selecting influencers, 56% of respondents deliberately choose accounts with fewer than 250,000 followers, while only a quarter select users above this quarter-of-a-million bracket. Almost two-thirds (61%) of respondents are confident that they can now measure engagement and ROI of influencer campaigns accurately.

Hugh Williams

Hugh Williams joined ExchangeWire in July 2016 as senior data analyst. He works on the ExchangeWire Research product, which was launched in 2014. Hugh helps oversee all research projects, from survey design to data analysis, and is the author of ExchangeWire’s Now & Next feature. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in History and Business from the University of Newcastle.

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