Banks and the Hierarchical Social Web

March 16, 2010

Question: What’s the difference between the social web and, say, office politics?

Answer: There isn’t any.

I came across an interesting article on Jonathan Lehrer’s excellent blog, The Frontal Cortex.  In it, he expresses concern about how:

“Online social platforms both magnify our hierarchies (by measuring our friends, followers, links, etc.) and erase the ‘disproportions,’ so that we suddenly find ourselves in the same monkey cage with a far larger number of monkeys.”

It should come as no surprise that, as the social web matures, it becomes more and more like the offline world.

Everyone says that social media is about people.  Well, this is how people act.  They compete.  They keep score.  They defend what’s theirs.  We’re not going to lose these hard-wired behaviors just because the technology changes.  Or, for that matter, because the generation changes.

These behaviors have survived from prehistory into the present.  They will continue to be passed from generation to generation until some misguided future generation decides to genetically tweeze them out.  And that will mark the beginning of the end.

Occasionally, I come across a book or article claiming that these behaviors are outmoded and no longer useful—that they are unfit for the modern world.

I beg to differ.  These behaviors make us human.  They are the strategies our genes developed long, long ago to ensure our survival.  And they’ve worked.  They don’t feel comfortable now because they never did.

But, hey, the bonding behaviors that fueled the social web’s growth are also survival strategies.

So is the social web becoming more Darwinian?  Or more fully human?

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Community Banks, Credit Unions, and Arianna

January 22, 2010

One of the effects of social media has been the grassroots movement-on-steroids phenomenon.  For example, it’s been less than a month since the birth of Arianna Huffington’s Move Your Money initiative, and it’s already building big momentum.  Here are a few quotes from followers:

“I applaud the efforts of the people of this nation. This effort is a ‘human’ one…not a left, right, religious or non-religious. Real Change starts when the American people rise up and say…Enough is Enough. Move Your Money from these GREEDY banks Today!”

“I can’t remember the last time something has come along that truly and equally succeeds in motivating people to drop their red and blue team colors…in favor of pitchforks, torches and a hill.”

“I am so encouraged by this idea! I finally feel like we can do something that will impact our nation for good.”

“I very much appreciate this encouragement to say, “no!” to a wrong-headed worldview that bails out rich bankers and sends the bill to citizens. You can count on my money being moved to our local First Commercial Bank! Peace, and keep up the good work!”

“This is a fabulous idea, and the video is wonderfully compelling. I will share the link and move my money.”

Move your Money has given an angry America more than a voice.  It’s providing the public with a weapon that could do considerable damage.

This, of course, is not great news for the big banks, but I doubt they consider it a game-changer.  They are, after all, too big to fail.

For credit unions and community banks, however, it’s an unbelievable growth opportunity.

If ever there was a time to pull out all the stops, marketing-wise, this is it.

Jump into social media with both feet.  Take advantage of PR opportunities.  And, if you’ve got rates or some other advantage worth talking about, advertise.

As soul legend Howard Tate once implored:

“Get it while you can.”

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Banks: Do We Need a New AIDA?

January 21, 2010

If you’ve been in marketing for awhile, it’s a good bet you’re familiar with the hierarchy of effects.  Or maybe you know its upside-down cousin, the purchase funnel.

The hierarchy is typically represented by the acronym AIDA (Awareness, Interest, Desire, Action).  The AIDA model was meant to map the effects of traditional advertising.

In the era of social media, however, I think we need a new hierarchy.  I propose Attraction, Engagement, Experience, Diffusion.  Granted, the resulting acronym isn’t the hottest, but I think it better reflects the way social media works.

Attraction
This, of course, refers to pull (as opposed to push) marketing.  Instead of pushing messages out, be interesting or valuable enough to pull people toward you.

Engagement
This could refer to a range of engagements from reading a blog post to sampling to purchase and use.

Experience
Once the engagement has been initiated, the experience will decide if you go in the positive column, the negative column, or somewhere in between.

Diffusion
People with positive experiences will ideally spread the word, extending the reach of your attraction.

Technically, this isn’t a real hierarchy.  For one thing, there’s no drop-off between engagement and experience.  You can’t really have one without the other.

Maybe engagement and experience could be combined.  Or maybe it’s a cycle (or something else) instead of a hierarchy.

Maybe someone else has a better idea.

Think of it as a thought starter.

Start thinking.

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Smart Marketing for Smart Banks

October 28, 2009

480569137_cce02eaddc

Yesterday, the Brand Strategy Insider posted a terrific article: Top 10 Integrated Marketing Trends for 2010.

A few choice quotes:

“The only way to do more with less is to align resources toward a single and powerful integrated marketing solution.”

Focused and integrated being the operative words.  Putting your faith in an individual channel—be it social media or print—is bound to result in losses of effectiveness and efficiency.

“No single channel has a lock on the ‘social’ nature of content.  Most any medium can serve as the originating medium in a journey that can take a great piece of content across channels, and into vast networks of hearts and minds.”

We sometimes forget that the basic unit of a social network is an individual.  The individual feeds the network and vice versa, but the point of origination is always the individual.

“At the end of the day, channels serve only as pipelines for content.  Without a good idea, content will simply evaporate.”

Like it or not, ideas drive content which, in turn, drives sharing.

And, by the way, whether it’s in a TV ad or a tweet, ideas come from individuals.  Collaboration is a great thing, but somebody has to strike the first spark.  Collaborators then pick it up and run with it, turning that spark into wildfire (well, not always wildfire).

Reality Check (Credit for this device goes to my friend, Jeff Pilcher, of The Financial Brand):  A recent study from the Center for Media Design found that live TV is still far and away the screen that all age groups (18-65+) view most on an average day.  All other screens—DVR, PC, mobile, console games, etc.—claim only a fractions of live TV’s reach and duration.

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Is Advertising really dead? Really? Part III

October 21, 2009

Warning: This post is long (and probably long-winded).  If you belong the statistical majority who don’t read on the web, here’s the conclusion—advertising is neither dead nor dying.  If you want to know why, read on.

In this—the final post of a series—I’m going to wrap things up.  Here’s the argument I’ve been attempting to refute:

  • Premise: Consumers don’t believe advertising anymore.
  • Inference: Consumers are in control now.
  • Conclusion: Advertising is dead.

So far, I’ve submitted that:

  • Belief is not a necessary condition for advertising effectiveness, and therefore the premise is irrelevant.
  • Consumers have always been able to vote with their feet. While they do have more voice today, and while they may feel empowered by this, they don’t have any more real control than they’ve always had.

Here are a few thought I’ve had since posting parts I and II:

Premise:

  • Consumers haven’t believed or trusted advertising for decades—a fact that hasn’t prevented it from working for decades.
  • Belief and trust are primarily evidence-based—if the sun has risen every day, you believe and trust that it will rise tomorrow—but decisions, as neuroscience has revealed, are primarily emotion-based.

Inference:

  • If consumers were in control, we’d see more evidence—better service, less overcharging, an increase in consumer-friendly policies, etc.
  • It’s not clear that most consumers want control (and the attendant responsibility), so even if they were given the way, would they have the will?

Before moving on to the conclusion, I want to consider some other common arguments for the advertising is dead theory.

  1. Consumer media habits have changed.
    Advertising has not changed.
    Advertising is dead.
  2. Businesses require accountability today.
    Advertising isn’t accountable.
    Advertising is dead.
  3. People hate advertising.
    People are tuning advertising out.
    Advertising is dead.

Advertising and Media Habits

Media habits are indeed changing, but advertising is changing, too.

In fact, from its inception, advertising has been in continuous evolution.

  • Over the years, it has adapted to radio, TV, cable, online, mobile, and thousands of so-called alternative media—gas station pumps, eggs, graffiti , t-shirts, stairways, interactive billboards, and the human body, to name a few.
  • It has taken on price/product, problem/solution, image, lifestyle, and behavior as messaging platforms.
  • Its focus has evolved through local, national, international, targeted, segmented, behavioral, and personal.

So media habits have changed.  They’ve changed before; they’ll change again.  As the Ad Contrarian so eloquently put it:

“Advertising doesn’t really care what media live and what media die. It will use what’s available.”

Related to changing media habits is the fracturing or splintering of media. With more choices available to consumers, no one medium gets the audience that TV, Newspapers, or Magazines once commanded.

Advertising is changing in this regard, too. It’s become, more targeted, less wasteful, and better at integrating various media. Fracturing might be a network or newspaper killer, but it’s certainly not an advertising killer.

Advertising and Accountability

Are businesses really demanding advertising accountability?

I’ve been hearing this cry for more accountability since the commercializing of the web, yet less than 20% of marketers currently measure ROI with any consistently or strategic planning.

I’d say, for most marketers, accountability falls in the “someday” column.  According to McKinsey, most companies still base their advertising budgets on the previous year’s  budget.  This jibes with my own experience.  Every year, come September, marketing managers increase their spending so that their budgets won’t be cut the following year.  This was true 20 years ago and it’s true today.

Of course, every company should demand accountability—it’s important to be efficient as well as effective.  That’s just good budget stewardship.  Unfortunately, it’s not the reality.

The reality is that accountability does not equal—nor does it necessarily lead to—profitability, which is something shareholders demand.  I’ve been doing this for nearly 30 years, and I’ve never met a CEO who obsessed over advertising ROI (although very single one obsessed over perception).

When it comes to accountability, I’m afraid there’s a lot more heat than light out there.

But is advertising accountable?

Yes and no.

What’s the ROI on a CFO? A new corporate headquarters? A mission statement? Casual Fridays? Public relations? Diversity? Training?

All of these have can have a positive effect on a business, and you can often correlate them with a rise in productivity, revenue, or profit.  But can you calculate a precise ROI?

I submit that advertising is more accountable than any of these.

There’s a spectrum, of course. Direct mail is highly accountable. Ads including special phone numbers or URLs are accountable, too.  As are retail sale ads, coupon ads, and search advertising.

Good-will advertising, not so much.

Most criticism, however, is directed at what is known as awareness advertising.

First off, the term is a misnomer. Very little advertising is devoted to awareness only.  What critics actually rail about should be called something like meaning advertising.  Because that’s what it does—it puts meaning into the products and services being advertised.  Most people spend most of their money on meaning. It is with this meaning that they construct their identities. Like it or not, the things we buy tell us—and others—who we are. The difference between Nike and New Balance is meaning. The difference between Black & Decker and Craftsman is meaning.  Shopping carts in a checkout line are baskets loaded with meaning.

The reason you follow through on the recommendations of people you know is not that you trust them, but that you share meanings with them.

So what about the ROI of meaning, then?  Does it matter?  I don’t think it matters to Muhtar Kent.  He’s just glad Coke has meaning.  And he’ll do everything in his power to keep it, because that meaning is worth nearly $68 billion to Coca-Cola—two thirds of its market cap.  And that’s the accountability Mr. Kent cares most about.

Unlike advertising accountability, meaning generates profit.

So, while much of advertising is accountable in the traditional sense, current methods simply aren’t up to the task of measuring meaning.

On the other hand, using a marketing tactic because you can measure it is like looking for your lost keys where the best light is, regardless of where you lost them.

Advertising and Tuning Out

“People read what interests them. Sometimes it’s an ad.”
Howard Luck Gossage

This is, and always has been, the case.  Nobody likes advertising, except when they do.

Think small. Where’s the beef? Just do it. Got milk? Think different. Mikey likes it.

Most people really don’t hate advertising.  They hate advertising that insults their intelligence, screams at them, bores them, tells unfunny or offensive jokes, wastes their time, or intentionally misleads them.  In other words, they hate bad advertising.

Good advertising, on the other hand provides value.  It’s likable, memetic, and game-changing,  Check out the movie Art & Copy if you get a chance, for an insight into how good advertising works.

Unfortunately, the bad usually outweighs the good.  Which is why most people say they hate advertising (most people also bristle at the suggestion that advertising influences them, but that’s another story).

According to Forrester, however, consumer attitudes toward advertising are actually improving.  Still negative, mind you, but improving.

A few statistics:

99% – Households in the US that own at least one television set

66% – US homes have three or more TV sets.

66% – US households that watch television during dinner

7 – Number hours the television is on per day in an average American  household

250 billion – Number of hours Americans watch television per year

72% – Adults who say that at least some of the ads they see on a typical day engage their attention

53% – Increase in those who say the commercials are the most important part of the Super Bowl (2005-2009)

50% – Internet users who report that TV captures their interest most effectively

51% – DVR users who say they always notice commercials while fast-forwarding

54% – DVR users who say they have rewound or paused television commercials to better understand the advertised product

I could go on and on.  Almost everyone uses statistics that support their claim, and ignore those that don’t.  Those who trumpet studies that “prove” DVR-enabled commercial skipping is approaching universality are no exception.

Try watching TV for an evening, poised to fast-forward through every single commercial break.  I’ve done it, and I didn’t find it liberating.  It was exhausting.

So…do people hate advertising?  Some of them, some of the time.  Are people tuning advertising out?  Some of them, some of the time.  None of this is new.  And, examined closely, none of it indicates of the death of advertising.

Summary

  • Belief is not a necessary condition for advertising effectiveness, so it doesn’t matter whether consumers believe advertising or not.
  • While consumers do have more voice today (and may feel empowered by this), they don’t have any more control than they’ve always had.
  • Media habits have changed, but it’s not the first time and it won’t be the last.
  • Advertising has changed as well.  In fact, it has been constantly evolving along with culture and technology, and it will continue to do so.
  • When it comes to businesses demanding accountability from advertising, there’s a lot more talk than action.
  • Much of advertising really is accountable in the traditional sense. The primary benefits of other advertising are intangible, but irreplaceable.
  • Some people hate advertising some of the time.  Some people tune out advertising some of the time. Same as it ever was.

Conclusion

Advertising is neither dead nor dying.  As long as there are products and services to sell, there will be advertising in one form or another.

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Banks: Google App Threatens Online Marketing Efforts

October 15, 2009

The boys in the lab have come up with a way for anyone to “easily contribute to any webpage and help others.”

Google sidewiki is a web plug-in that allows you to comment on any site or read comments posted by previous visitors.  Here’s how it works:

My take?

Consider your brand hijacked.  Whatever vestiges of control over your brand you may have had are now history.

Too dramatic?

Maybe, but I don’t think so.  If sidewiki catches on, it will be a game changer.  And, while other Google apps may have failed to gain traction, this one seems destined for success.  After all, it turns the entire web into a social medium.

It may also be the downfall of the internet.  When every statement on the web is directly attached to a counter statement, the web could devolve into pure noise—communication entropy.

But let’s say that doesn’t happen.  A more likely scenario is that brands will try to go with the flow, only to find out that they’re in a no-win situation.  So they will begin looking offline for ways to bolster their brands.

Another possibility is that sidewiki will break open a shining new age of brand/consumer collaboration.  Services and products will reach a state of continuously evolving perfection and hum along happily ever after.

I’ll believe that one when I see it. Meanwhile, I have to admit, this app is simply too cool for school.

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First Direct Bank Opens the Kimono

October 9, 2009

A post on Psst! caught my eye this morning.

First Direct has a brilliant new microsite.  With it, the bank is getting real-time outside-insight—both good and bad—and simultaneously sharing it with anyone who cares to look.  Here, from the post, is a description of how it works :

“The microsite gathers mentions of the First Direct brand from social media feeds, blogs and message boards, and displays them for all to see. Visitors can also post their comments directly on the site in the Talking Point area.”

This is an extremely clever piece of marketing.  By sharing the negative mentions along with the positive, the microsite builds credibility, making the positive comments that much more persuasive.

It’s also a first-rate example of social media marketing.  It not only makes the bank look honest, it makes the bank genuinely honest.

Most important, though, it gives the bank a level of customer insight that all the research in the world couldn’t give them.  Go to the microsite and check out the fluid, real-time dashboard:

Picture 2

It’s not just good-to-know information, it’s a flight correction device.

Kudos to First Direct for having the guts to do this.  It’s the best piece of bank marketing—maybe the best piece of marketing, period—I’ve seen in a long, long while.

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Imagining the Future of Retail Banking

October 6, 2009

predict_future_2009

Reading the various reports from Finovate 2009 got me wondering what all of these new developments portend for retail banking.

A couple of future scenarios come to mind:

  • The Competition Scenario
    Currently, banks compete mostly on rates, offers, and intangibles. There just hasn’t been that much else to differentiate them. With the recent flurry of online and mobile applications, however, the next phase of competition could very well focus on products and features. Of course, this phase would necessarily be short-lived.  Not only are products easily replicated, people have a limited appetite for novelty.  Still, for the short term, product innovation could be the hot ticket.
  • The Mashup Scenario
    This is one I’ve talked about before. Consumers may opt for an a la carte approach to banking—a financial version of the daily me. In this scenario, the “bank” would be a mashup of online and mobile applications, reflecting the individual consumer’s needs and preferences. The consumer would select applications, a la carte, from a universe of brands. It’s unclear how traditional banks would fit into this scenario.  Possibilities could include application providers, aggregators, or links to the brick-and-mortar world.

Is it just me, or is there something about all this that feels like dotcom fever?  Mint’s recent sale to Quicken seems to have had an impact.

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On the Curve: Banks and Social Media

September 11, 2009

Re-shelving some books the other day, I came across two I hadn’t picked up in quite awhile.  One was Diffusion of Innovations by Everett Rogers, and the other was Crossing the Chasm by Geoffrey Moore.  Both are as relevant today as when they were written.

The Rogers book is about the rate at which new ideas and technologies spread.  It  introduces his famous adoption curve, which is based on the theory that some people are more open to adoption than others.  Therefore, trying to convince the masses to quickly adopt a new technology or idea is an exercise in frustration.

DiffusionOfInnovation

Moore’s book takes the Diffusion of Innovations a step further.  His thesis is that the adoption curve isn’t a smooth arc, but is punctuated by gaps or chasms, and that the means of success in one segment will not necessarily succeed in the following segment.

In other words, what got you here won’t get you there.

chasm_master

Locating Social Media

In plotting social media along the adoption curve, we first need to separate the cultural phenomenon from the marketing channel.

Let’s take the cultural phenomenon first.  According to Anderson Analytics, 36% of the U.S. population (110 million people) regularly uses social media, which puts adoption about half way up the Early Majority segment of the curve.

chasm_consumer

Now let’s look at the marketing channel, specifically as it relates to banks.  According to an ABA Banking Journal survey, about 16% of U.S. banks now use social media as a marketing channel, which puts bank adoption right on the cusp of the first chasm.

chasm_banks

While consumer adoption is relatively advanced, the majority of banks still need convincing.  And, considering the chasm, Early Majority banks are probably not going to jump at the same bait that hooked Innovators and Early Adopters.

Crossing the Chasm

Before Early Majority banks adopt social media, a number of issues need to be addressed.  These include:

  • Bank Culture
    Most banks are by nature pragmatic and conservative.  As well they should be.  Few would trust their money to a bank that didn’t exhibit these qualities.
  • Regulatory Concerns
    There are any number of rules, regulations, and laws (Regulation Z, Regulation DD, CAN-SPAM, etc.) that may apply to social media.  Compliance teams will justifiably tread with caution.
  • Low Perceived Value
    Whenever banks invest time, money, or other resources, they want to know that the investment will pay off, either in savings or in revenue.  Initiatives that don’t provide assurance of return get tabled.
  • Social Media Advocacy
    Unfortunately, the biggest impediment to adoption may be the very rhetoric that has sustained social media thus far.  Revolutionary talk isn’t going to work with Early Majority banks.  They want a business case, not a manifesto.

Before Early Majority banks adopt social media whole-heartedly, they will need to see these issues resolved to their satisfaction.  I should note that Innovator and Early Adopter banks have these issues as well, but they also have the means to overcome them or a higher appetite for risk.

With industry adoption at 16%, Early Majority banks still have a window of opportunity to gain competitive advantage through social media.  There’s just no telling when that window will close.

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Social Media ROI for Bank Marketers

September 2, 2009

A lot of good people have have tried to put together models for social media ROI.  None of them (to my knowledge) have succeeded in ringing the bell.

Until now, that is.

Olivier Blanchard has posted a slide presentation that’s right on the money.  And I do mean money.  He makes clear right away that ROI is about dollars—savings and revenue—not impressions, traffic, or engagements.  Then he explains, quite clearly, how to get there.

You can check out his slideshow and a video of his presentation at Social Media B2B.

By the way, if you’re not already following Olivier on the Brand Builder blog, you should be.  He’s a strong social media advocate and he’s got his feet on the ground—a winning combination.

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