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Building brands: How can I help you?
Molly Aaker
Admap
Shortlisted, The Admap Prize, June 2014
2.
Building brands: How can I help you?
Molly Aaker
Freelance
Approximately two to three times a week, I purchase my morning coffee at a charming French café that's slightly out of the way
on my morning commute. I allow myself this small luxury, despite owning all the necessary requirements for home-brewing.
The moment I step into this café, I am magically transported from the realities of fast-paced New York City to every American's
romantic notion of Paris. Furthering this illusion, I am surrounded by elegant French expats energetically catching up after
dropping their children off at the Lycée Francais, ordering their cafés and croissants. As I approach the register, the refined
Scottish barista, Andrew, greets me with a familiar hello and how are you, already knowing my usual order. I am not just a
customer, but am the mayor (according to FourSquare). And this café is not just a caffeine and gluten–dispensing
establishment, but a well-curated experience. Every employee, cake, cup and decoration has been specifically chosen to
appeal to a particular customer. Impeccable service and friendly employees engage customers, while goodies like imported
French treats delight them. It's no surprise that I am not their only loyal customer.
Frank Rose points out in The Art of Immersion that "[The Internet] is the first medium that can act like all media—it can be text,
or audio, or video, or all of the above. It is nonlinear … inherently participatory … constantly encouraging you to comment, to
contribute, to join in. And it is immersive." (1) The Internet is not just immersive, but mimics real life, in-person experiences. It
can replace the music we hear as we walk into an establishment; the patterns, textures and colors specifically chosen to tell a
story about that store; the stories and information the sales clerk tells us about their products. It can even substitute how
employees interact with customers with a virtual "How can I help you?" through Twitter. As brands show up in our social
network feeds, the line between "Would I like to buy this product?" and "Do I want to have a relationship with this brand?" has
blurred.
As marketers, we are tasked with understanding how our brands should behave in the digital age—with wondering how to
unlock the magic formula, the right amount of customer data with the appropriate social channels and mobile apps. But what if
there is no magic formula? What if succeeding in the digital age means, regardless of the customer or location requires a
different attitude from brands, genuinely caring about their customers to create a unique, branded experience. Digital
technology enables brands to infuse genuine human touch in all communication points - a two-way conversation and
personalization that mirrors the types of in-person interactions that have dominated seller/customer relationships throughout
history.
"May I help you" begins with actually being there. An establishment carefully picks their location to cater to a specific
clientele—to fill an unmet need. Although businesses are developed with the intent of making a profit, successful brands are
Title: Building brands: How can I help you?
Author(s): Molly Aaker
Source: Admap
Issue: Shortlisted, The Admap Prize, June 2014
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3. also closely tied with the intent of helping people – either through their location or actual products. For my favorite café, the
owners may have been compelled by the intention of giving French expats a place to connect. For Warby Parker, their
purpose may have revolved around giving customers affordable glasses, shipped online. But most importantly, both
establishments carefully picked their location based on their customer's needs, whether it's choosing a particular neighborhood
to deciding on an online distribution platform. Brands who genuinely care about their customers' needs and behaviors have an
obligation to continually track where their customer may want to purchase products in the future and to serve those unmet
needs.
Tesco famously catered to the buying needs of their customers when they created a "virtual store" in a Korean subway,
allowing busy customers to conveniently scan products using smartphone-enabled QR codes. Kate Spade did something
similar, creating a 24-hour virtual store in front of a few New York City empty storefronts, allowing customers to purchase
products via the window screen and have it delivered within an hour. While the focus of these examples are often on the
technology used, at the heart of these executions was a recognition by brands that they could use technology to better serve
their customers' needs.
A brand that genuinely cares about their customer delivers what they say they will deliver, and understands exactly what their
customer values and needs. At a basic level, a person entering a coffee shop might value impeccable customer service and
delicious pastries, but nowadays, a caffeine junkie might also seek reliable Wi-Fi. My favorite coffee shop offers free Wi-Fi, a
service that has delighted Starbucks' customers for years. By anticipating and catering to customers' needs, brands are
building their reputation one customer at a time. In the digital age, reputation is critical – the shareable nature of social can
cause one bad Yelp review to go viral. A quick Google search can make it easy to tell which companies genuinely care about
their customers and which companies one suspects are only focused on short term gain. In fact, the only types of companies
that have survived despite bad reputations are those that customers have had no choice in supporting—from cable to health
insurance. But even those are seeing a decline in sales as alternatives become available. Even brands that compete on price,
most famously Amazon, work to ensure quality customer service and products, showing they care about their customers'
needs.
At its core, what a customer seeks in a product is unlikely to change with the introduction of new technology. Even purely
digital brands like Facebook have revolved first and foremost around needs of their users. Apple understood that buying
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4. expensive electronics requires extensive research and the assurance that the product will continue to work. Consequently they
have built their brand on excellent customer service that they have extended to online tools. With banks, people value security
and customer service. In person, that might mean money held in a secure vault and helpful, well-dressed clerks at bank
locations. In the digital space, that could translate to 24-7 online chat access, a user-focused mobile app and online,
informative content. Citi has a history of using technology to serve their customers' needs—first with the introduction of ATMs,
and most recently with a mobile app that allows customers to scan checks into their accounts. Nike sells the promise of fitness
whether through their athletic gear, mobile apps, FuelBand or even in-person athletic events.
Millennials, as a consumer group, are particularly important for brands to understand in the digital age, since they are the
demographic most likely to be heavy consumers of digital technology. In December 2013, The New York Times published an
opinion piece called Millennial Searchers, noting the ways in which Millennials seek meaning and purpose in their lives. For
them, it is no longer enough to purchase something that will give them a fleeting sense of happiness—they seek more
meaning in their purchases. Across categories, we see older brands tying themselves to a bigger purpose – showing they care
about bigger issues and using social to spread that purpose. From IBM's Smarter Planet to Dove's Real Beauty, each seeks to
convey that their products help fulfill a bigger mission. On the flipside, brands built within the digital age started with a genuine
purpose: TOMS's Buy A Pair, Give A Pair campaign was based on the premise of philanthropy, allowing the average person to
be a philanthropist. Warby Parker followed suit. For younger brands, especially those appealing to Millennials, what you do as
a company is more important than what you say because it helps establish you as being genuinely focused on customers.
Each brand helps customers fill an emotional need with their purchase.
It has never been more important to ensure that at the heart of your brand, you care about customers. Digital technology has
pulled away the curtain that marketing previously created around brands. Each communication and customer touch point
becomes an opportunity for everyone to see how a brand treats their customer. Brands like United (Breaks Guitars),
JPMorgan (Ask JP Morgan) and have learned that infusing a customer-focused culture is critical in maintaining the reputation
of the company. On the flip side, companies with excellent customer experiences, such as Apple, Virgin America or Zappos,
have grown in the digital age. In fact, their success is often attributed to a strong company culture. Employee and in-person
experiences have the potential to represent the brand, and interactions can easily go digital through an online review or public
Tweet.
Finally, a brand that truly cares will add that little bit of delight, fulfilling a human desire and want. It's asking how your day is in
a way that makes you feel special. Carefully wrapping your purchase. It's the décor that provides a mini escape to Paris. Or
the music that puts you in a better mood. It's an employee that goes above and beyond for their customer—remembers their
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5. order, ensures a particular product is in stock. Or the particularly knowledgeable store clerk, who, like a good friend, gives you
an honest opinion as to why you shouldn't buy something in their store.
For the online experience, decor can be translated into a well designed website that takes you to another place as you browse
during your lunch break. A busy shelf of curated objects can be turned into a Pinterest board meant as visual eye candy, as in
Anthroplogie's merchandising. It could be having a well-designed e-commerce site that allows customers to browse thoroughly
and uninterrupted before purchasing. It's the technology a company can harness to predict what a customer wants based on
their interactions. Or six-second how-to Vine videos bringing out fantasies of DIY home improvement. Brands can even create
physical spaces to cater to customers' desires. In December 2013, Samsung created a pop-up experience store in New York's
Soho. Customers were treated to free coffee, and the ultimate indulgence - cupcakes - while enjoying a space to relax during
the busy shopping season. In the digital age, what may once have been a local stunt can now be shared instantly and globally
through people's social feeds, allowing everyone to see how a brand caters to the hidden desires of their customers.
Two-way interactions can be built with a brand over time through social media—an exchange never achieved through
traditional advertising. A barista can facilitate conversations between like-minded customers, playing host or even
matchmaker. Social media communities can be built and nurtured by community managers with no direct intention to sell
products, only a direct intent to care about their customers' wants.
Traditional advertising plays a critical role in adding to people's desires and wants. Now that a Google search (ZMOT) has
taken over the role of conveying detailed product benefits and reviews, traditional advertising, more than ever, is a place to tell
a compelling story. Budweiser's "Puppy Love"—a heartwarming story of love between a dog and a horse—was voted one of
the most popular ads of the Super Bowl in 2014. As viewers, we may not exactly understand how the commercial fit into the
heart of the brand, but our hearts were filled with warmth as we viewed the commercial. Popular viral ads of 2013 were likely
to illuminate bigger issues that we are often too afraid to discuss on our own but want to (Dove's Real Beauty Sketches), act
as a purely distracting entertainment (Evian's Baby & Me), make us laugh (Kmart's "Ship My Pants) or make us cry out of joy
(GoPro's Fireman Saves Kitten). Ads that "go viral" are emotive, story-driven, funny and genuinely entertaining—all qualities
that compel us to share so that we can fulfill our desire to connect with others, using them as conversational fodder.
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