Kevin Hillstrom: MineThatData

Exploring How Customers Interact With Advertising, Products, Brands, and Channels, using Multichannel Forensics.

June 03, 2007

Ten Ways We Ruined Multichannel Marketing

Multichannel Marketing used to be called "Direct Marketing". Those were heady times. Now, we've ruined our once-promising method of selling to consumers and businesses. Let's look at ten ways we ruined what we now call "Multichannel Marketing".

Number 10 = E-Mail And RSS: There was an inflection point in the late 1990s, when e-mail could have been saved, and one in 2004 where RSS could have been saved. We stood by and watched. What would have been nice is the creation of a marketable, non-geeky, non-technical solution that the customer could have pulled into her inbox. Obviously, that solution is RSS. But who trusts a three-letter acronym that has no meaning to anybody? Allegedly, we're brilliant marketers. But we couldn't market a technology that allows the customer to pull whatever she wants into a secure, trusted inbox folder, without interference from twenty-four spam-based messages. E-mail and RSS could have replaced direct mail as the best way to drive volume, had they been managed differently. We're told that E-mail has the best ROI, yet since the advent of the tool, our businesses are not one bit more profitable. We failed.

Number 9 = Short Term Focus: Ignore the pointless arguments about whether lifetime value should sit at the "C-Level" table. Once you've sat at the "C-Level" table, you'll find it isn't very glamorous. We do almost everything to drive business today. We gear most of our marketing measurement around how an e-mail campaign did at driving click-thru rates over a twelve hour period of time, or how a search term drove conversion during a session. Our management teams are given incentives to increase sales and profit today --- incentives that far exceed their actual contributions.

Number 8 = Integration: We were told that we had to align marketing and merchandising across channels, because the customer demanded it. Did your customer demand it, or did you read this in a $279 research report? If the latter is true, who benefits, the customer, or the one producing the $279 research report? We made huge mistakes aligning our marketing and merchandising. First, in order to align these areas, we realized we didn't have the systems infrastructure to align areas properly. Second, putting the systems infrastructure in place to meet this vision requires money --- so instead of investing in the customer, we invest in a systems infrastructure, benefiting vendors. Third, to align marketing, we made compromises that homogenize marketing, lowering response within any one channel.

Number 7 = Shipping: We butchered shipping and handling. We charged our customers $16.95 for a service that they can employ UPS to do for $10.95. Customers aren't dumb, they know they are being gouged. Worse, we offered customers free shipping, charging them nothing for a service they can employ UPS to do for $10.95. We trained the customer that charges for shipping are evil. We trained the customer to expect to receive merchandise for free, though it may be unprofitable at the scale of business we manage. Why didn't we train the customer to expect to receive merchandise for $5, or $7? Why didn't we build an equitable partnership with our customers?

Number 6 = Career Development: Who is training tomorrow's multichannel leaders? By default, our merchandisers are taking control of the future of multichannel marketing. Merchandisers have to sell products across all channels. They learned how to do this without having the systems infrastructure to be effective. While everybody else defended their own turf, becoming experts at managing a niche, merchants became the rulers of the roost. It will be a decade before anybody else has the multichannel knowledge and experience to rival our merchandising co-workers. Why can't I buy a $279 research report on how to manage career development in a multichannel marketing environment?

Number 5 = Channel Dominance: If you worked for a company that has a catalog channel, an online channel, and a retail channel, you know what I am talking about. Dell is about to learn all about channel dominance. Dell will learn that customers who are given a choice between buying something online or in a retail setting will inevitably migrate to the retail setting. Over time, this mitigates all of the advantages of the direct-to-consumer channel. The dominant channel, and the sales rhythm of the dominant channel, require the other channels to "support" it. Anytime one channel "supports" another, it becomes compromised. Why do you think Macy's, Neiman Marcus and Nordstrom are in an arms race to build-out their online infrastructure? Each business wants to use the online channel to "support" their store channel. Anytime the online/catalog channel "supports" stores, sales in the "support" channel suffer, degrading the potential of multichannel marketing. Eventually, the catalog becomes a "brand advertising" tool. Eventually, the online channel becomes a "dictionary" or "encyclopedia" used by the customer to purchase store product. Eventually, "direct marketing" as an art/craft is compromised, unrecognizable.

Number 4 = Marketing's Digital Divide: What a waste. Catalogers honed their craft over more than a hundred years. Then online marketers invented a craft over a decade. Brands use both tools to grow sales. But the skillsets used in each craft are different, and we haven't cross-pollinated folks how to work with both crafts. Go to a NEMOA or Catalog conference, and you'll bask in the knowledge of a generation of catalog experts who are in their 40s, 50s and 60s. Go to any online-based conference out west, and you'll bask in the energy of a generation of online marketing experts who are in their 20s, 30s and 40s. Different channels, different tools, different generations, different mindsets, same objective. It could have been different, had the dot-com explosion of a decade ago not divided all of us so much.

Number 3 = Profit: The all-mighty quest to achieve 6.9% pre-tax profit instead of 6.2% pre-tax profit, to drive "shareholder value", causes us to make decisions that look good in the short-term. We send remails of catalogs, wrapping a new cover and back page around the same creative, hoping our customers won't notice. Private equity buys numerous companies, integrates backend and management operations to reduce expense, and then cross-pollinates the housefiles of each company to save on rental/exchange/co-op expenses (I lived through a version of this at Eddie Bauer). Circulation teams outsource the most vital part of their business, customer management, to a random statistician at a compiled list vendor. We ship merchandise overseas to be assembled, then ship it back here, all to lower cost of goods by a dollar a unit. Then we grumble when the worker in Indiana who used to have a job can no longer afford our product because her job was "outsourced" by our very-own company. We farm out call-center activities overseas.
How does the customer benefit from all of these activities, long-term?

Number 2 = Google: Multichannel Marketing is doomed to fail in a Google-dominated world. The very thing Google gives us as customers, the very thing we love (relevant choice), is what will destroy the businesses we manage. Today, we love it that Google drives 20% of our website traffic. Once online growth stops, and Google makes changes for no good reason that reduce our traffic from 20% to 14%, what is our recourse? That's the kind of change that gets an Executive fired. That's the kind of change that turns a 6.2% pre-tax profit business into a break-even pre-tax profit business. That's the kind of change that causes you to lay-off your online marketing analyst. That's the kind of power that Google holds over you --- you just don't see it today, because your online volume is growing year-over-year at acceptable rates.

Number 1 = The Punditocracy: There's a reason that some conferences lock vendors out of sessions. Everywhere you turn, some pundit is telling you what you must do to succeed, is telling you why you are a failure, or is beating the living daylights out of the failure of some "brand". All too often, what they tell you to do requires you to purchase their services. All too often, this strategy creates financial and emotional benefit for the punditocracy, not for your business, not for your customer. The punditocracy hijack relevant trends, turning them into "solutions" for perceived failures within you brand. If all of these "solutions" are so fantastic "in today's multichannel world", how come businesses aren't rolling in profit? The punditocracy pushes us toward their vision of the future, not toward a vision of what our customer wants from us. Our failure to shut out the punditocracy, our desire to trust organizations not truly doing things in our best interest, to trust somebody with a perceived "solution" over our own gut instinct, is causing us to lose control over our businesses, to lose control over the expense structure of our business, and to provide a homogenized "solution" to our customers. Worst of all, we did this to ourselves. We're ultimately responsible. If we don't buy into what the punditocracy tells us, they don't stay in business.

Ok, you're turn. In what other ways did we ruin multichannel marketing? Or, maybe you want to defend multichannel marketing --- go ahead, express your point of view.

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8 Comments:

At 8:31 AM , Anonymous Jason Cormier said...

Nice post Kevin. Numbers 10 and 2 are tied together now more than ever. When a company sends mass email to a list that includes several gmail accounts, and we see a spike in their search visiblity around search terms that were in that email... it tends to raise questions about how deep and wide Google's algorithm really runs.

RSS has become an increasingly important part of high search visibility in Google - yet, you are right. We must still spend extraordinary amounts of time marketing (and establishing trust) around that three letter acronym... one that makes people feel stupid because it's supposed to be "really simple."

Companies continue to live and die by Google, many of which are just waking up to this... and nothing is getting easier. I take that back: the online tools that help justify why and how to spend more money with Google have greatly improved.

 
At 1:59 PM , Blogger Kevin Hillstrom said...

Yup Jason, Really Simple Syndication, RSS. We can market this so much better than we do.

Thanks for offering your comments!

 
At 5:49 PM , Blogger malcolm said...

Much food for thought for me too Kevin.

The balance between a customer-focused marketing strategy, the need to predict consumer trends and develop products and a marketing strategy to drive customer demand is a difficult one.

The issues you raise in 3 would probably do for an entire blog, but the issues raised in 1 are worth exploring further.

Consumer patterns are terribly easy to predict after they have appeared, rather like economic trends, the real art (which is a fairly intuitive process) lies in selecting trends that can be commercialised and marketed to without significantly subtracting from that which makes the trend viable in the first place.

Popular and taste cultures are churned so quickly that there is little time to set up a product or trend specific marketing campaign to a new product. This is why the ‘off-the-shelf’ solutions are so prevalent. The skill is in selecting components and parts of these brand solutions without giving over our autonomy or product differentiation.

Or at least that’s the way I see it

 
At 6:15 PM , Blogger Kevin Hillstrom said...

Thanks for the good comments, Malcom!

 
At 12:16 AM , Blogger Eduard said...

It is a nice analysis. But what is the solution? What is your message?
That we shouldn't use more than one channel, because the other channels would become support channels?
Or is your point that all channels should be balanced? Or that each channel has different characteristics and should be managed differentely?
I agree that most multichannel operations are adding costs instead of profit and are frustrating the consumer. In my opinion we should use less channels. The number is defined by what we can manage. But I don't see the problem of one channel supporting the other. What is wrong with a retailer using the internet as a lead generator?

 
At 1:48 PM , Blogger Kevin Hillstrom said...

Hi Eduard --- the day after I wrote this, I added a "10 ways to save multichannel marketnig" post.

http://minethatdata.blogspot.com/2007/06/ten-ways-we-will-save-multichannel.html

I'm not talking about whether businesses should or should not use channels to benefit each other.

Ultimately, I'm talking about the ways that vendors, research analysts, pundits, CEOs and business leaders corrupted multichannel marketing.

Most of the things I outline had the potential to benefit customers. Instead, vendors, research analysts, pundits, CEOs and business leaders corrupted the things I talked about in an effort to benefit themselves.

If there were one thing I'd say to folks, it would be to focus solely on what is right for the customer --- go ahead and use the internet channel for retail lead generation --- but do it because it is right for your business, not because some pundit working for a vendor tells you to do so because s/he has software that enables online lead generation.

 
At 2:04 AM , Blogger Eduard de Wilde said...

I am very interested in this discussion (in relationship with your posting about the businessmodels), because it is the first time I've read someone questioning the need to go multichannel for the sake of multichannel. I approach multichannelfrom a marketing strategic/customer point of view, not based on data like you, although the outcome could be the same :-)
In my opinion, there are two basis business models: the direct model with all kind of variations, but where the catalogue/internet/call center are leading. Fysical outlet is only interesting as a 'proof of existance'.
The other one is the retail based multichannel. Catalogue/online is supporting the fysical outlets. Most of the time their original model was fysical retailing. For these business a real multichannel model is hardly possible. In my experience are the organisational issues the hardest, f.e. lead succession, monitoring, performance measurement and rewarding the right multichannel behaviour etc.
For the first type of businesses it is easier. It is easier for a catalogue company to add internet as a channel. They are used to measuring ROI, have systems that support direct sales, databased marketing etc.

It would be nice to make a matrix with the businessmodels and all the factors on which they differentiate

 
At 7:36 AM , Blogger Kevin Hillstrom said...

Eduard --- I think you accurately stated my objective when saying that I "question the need to go multichannel for the sake of being multichannel".

I am a strong proponent of doing what is best for each individual business --- not doing what is best for vendors and pundits. For those folks, what is frequently best is being "multichannel", because it requires a significant investment in systems, software, and marketing.

You become "multichannel" if it is what is best for your customer. For some folks, that simply may not be the case --- it may simply be best to capitalize on the channel that customers prefer, while complementing that primary channel with other activities that are beneficial to the customer. That doesn't mean you absolutely must have a catalog to be successful, or a fully functioning website, or blogs, etc.

 

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