Wednesday, 30 November 2016

The 3-Step Marketing for Holidays 2016

The 3-Step Marketing for Holidays 2016


Our lifestyles are getting increasingly mobile. Whether its checking emails or surfing for information or keeping in touch with friends on social media, or shopping, mobile has become the preferred device.

As shoppers get hooked to their devices, retailers have a newfangled territory to tread on. The domain has changed but rules remain the same.

Visual Merchandising

In mobile shopping parlance, it would actually be audio-visual merchandising. Videos are a great way to attract customers and one of the best forms of customer engagement.
Here’s how retailers can execute videos:

  • Gift buying guides
  • Life hacks
  • “How to” videos
  • Witty or humorous advertisements

Upload these videos on You Tube, your website and social media of course. The more domains you upload it on, the more exposure your campaign gets.

Linking back

Once these videos get customer attention, it’s time to bring them back to our products. It is highly recommended that you have a clutter-free home page and the navigation is simple and fuss-free. Your catalog pages should display a range of products in a neat arrangement and the customer should be able to buy the desired product in just 4-5 taps. You would have to create broader categories and provide relevant filter options.

Selling

When users have finally selected their products, a smooth checkout experience would be the key to finally making the sale. The checkout should be simple and ideally done in 3-4 taps. Demanding for a lot of information, asking users to sign up first, making the payment process lengthy, these are some of the pitfalls that make customers abandon their carts at checkout. Fast and hassle free checkout are one of the most important factors of online sales or mobile sales.

Once you’ve followed these steps and made a sale, you need to ensure there is hassle free delivery. And if all goes well, you’ve earned yourself a loyal customer. 

Friday, 11 November 2016

Social Media Marketing for Beginners

Social Media Marketing for Beginners


Social media is not just another medium for friends to hangout. Social media has become a powerful platform that allows customers to interact with brands, share their experiences with the whole world and recommend or reject brands. Social media is where opinions matter, and can make or destroy a brand. As a business, big or small, you cannot overlook social media. There are millions of people using social media, and if you do not engage your customers, your competitor will.
Here are some tips to help you get started on your social media marketing journey.

  • Have a plan

  • Like any strategic business function, social media marketing needs a plan too. Randomly creating Facebook, Twitter and other social media accounts and posting content arbitrarily would not yield desired results. On the contrary, your users may be put off if your content is not engaging or inconsistent.

    • Chalk out social media sites and where you need your brand’s presence. You can choose to be present in all the places but then it would mean tailoring content for each platform specifically.
    • Outline the following for each of the platforms you wish to be present on:
      • Target group (their persona, age group, likes etc.)
      • SMM objective (what do you want from your Social Media Marketing initiative; sales, customer engagement, customer loyalty etc.?)
      • What would the content be like? (Informative blogpost, deals and discount links, product catalog, infographic, video, podcast or something else?)
      • Postings schedule (like a planned calendar, new postings at planned intervals, special postings on Holidays and special days etc.)


  • A picture is worth a thousand words (and a thousand likes too!)

  • Whatever you content type be, try and make visually appealing. Users on the internet are impatient. You need to focus on getting immediate attention which is more likely possible with an attractive pic than a long text post.

  • Mine Social Media groups to get more followers/friends

  • Social media groups such as Twitter groups, Facebook groups etc. bring together people sharing a common interest or a common platform of sorts. You need to check out the groups that fit in your customers’ profile and lure them to be your brand’s fans.

  • Bring in content variety

  • Do not stick to a single media type. Include different content formats such blog posts, pictures, quotes, infographics, videos etc. 
  • Acknowledge every customer

  • Make it a point to reply to every comment, feedback or criticism your customers put up on the Internet for you. This is where brands can actually be personalities bringing in the human touch.



You may also like to read http://www.xymob.com/blog-detail.html?postid=8951800940485695210.

Thursday, 3 November 2016

How Small Businesses Can Make the Most of

This Holiday Season


No business, irrespective of the scale of business, can afford to ignore a mobile marketing strategy for the upcoming Holiday season. While big players who have dedicated teams working on these plans would have their strategy and POA in place, small businesses often get caught in everyday functioning of the business. So if you have missed out on a strategic plan for the Holiday season, here’s a quick list of things you can start implementing immediately to make the most of the upcoming shopping season.

  • Is your website mobile compatible? If not, get the transition done on an urgent basis. You will need a mobile-friendly website to be visible to the mobile users.

  • Make sure your website has all important information easily available to the users such as contact numbers, store location, store timings etc.

  • Create different offers for every week till Christmas. Concentrate on Thanksgiving products and offers till November 3rd week. Later, shift focus to Christmas gifts. Tailor your offers around products mostly needed at that particular time and the urgency of need. For instance, in the Christmas week, you could look at same day delivery offers or instant exchange offers.

  • Get listed on mobile directories like Yelp, Nearby, Google+ Local etc. 

  •  Advertise on local-based apps like InstaTeam.

  • Create social media profile or if you have one already, heavily promote your offers there. Make sure you thank users for sharing your profile, reply to all comments and acknowledge all compliments. 

  • If you have the budget, engage an app marketing or online marketing company to help you out with optimizing your mobile marketing. 

You may also like to read http://www.xymob.com/blog-detail.html?postid=7239803028852645233.

Friday, 28 October 2016

From Personalization to Individualization

From Personalization to Individualization


There was a time marketers were really upbeat about personalization. Although, personalization is a very broad team and makes us believe in a whole gamut of wonderful things that marketers would be doing for their customers to make the experience up-close and personal, the intimacy in reality, is a hoax. Apart from a select few companies, marketers have been doing joke of a job when it comes to one-to-one marketing or personalization. The only personalization in a mass mailing list was the name, rest all being the same. Discounting and believing, that these marketers were willing but unable, one can consider that there wasn’t much customer information available also. Mostly customer information was based on mass surveys and generalized assumptions for a particular target group.
But things are different now. Now marketers can actually know their customers and know them beyond just their name. Customers are leaving data trails all over interaction points. There is enough data and there are apt tools to correlate that data. What companies need now is the strategy for data-driven marketing. Companies, keen on providing meaningful marketing experiences to their customers, need to define the following:

  • The process of gathering customer information from different customer touch-points and storing it in a central repository.

  • The tools that will help turn customer data and customer information into customer knowledge.

  • The strategy that will optimize this customer knowledge into a meaningful, truly engaging and enriching interaction. 

In the digital era, customer information is spread all across – in-store, online, app, customer helpline and every window that the company has. Thanks to mobile commerce, companies can also have access to detailed profiles of customers including information of their buying behavior, social group etc. Then there are technologies like geofencing that help companies understand the geography dynamics of the customer. Finding information is not a big deal, the real challenge is weaving a strategy around that information. The key to success in this hi-tech era will be adding human touch to this hi tech information and creating optimized interactions which are individualized and not just personalized.
You might also be interested in reading http://www.xymob.com/blog-detail.html?postid=4164849917444943696

Thursday, 13 October 2016

Don’t Give Up

Tips for increasing app retention


Mobile app is just the start of a relationship the fate of which will then be decided based on how interested and engaged the user is with the app. Creating and getting downloads is not the challenge, the real challenge is engaging and retaining users. According to a research by Silicon Valley analyst, Andrew Chen, 77 percent of users never use an app again 72 hours after installing it.

Here are a few tips to help you increase user engagement and retention.
  • User Profiling
  • As soon as the user downloads the app, right technology can help you create user profile and eventually build upon it. There are trends that suggest if the user is likely to the app for instance if the user has quit the on-boarding process or has not created a profile, or not uploaded profile picture, which means that if the user has not shown serious involvement from the beginning, chances are that the user will either uninstall or abandon the app. If these trends can be tracked in the very beginning, the user can be enticed into using the app which can improve chances of retention.

  • Up Close and Personal
  • For every interaction you have with the user, try and make it as personal as you can. Make personal references by including their name, location or maybe some usage history, but do not make it sound creepily intrusive. Work out an intelligent strategy that has a fine mix of personalization, timing and of course the message.

  • Gauge your market
  • One size does not fit all, definitely not on the Internet. There can be no winning formula or standard practices that will make different apps do well. In fact, apps designed in the same segment may also have to follow different marketing, promotion and interaction rules to suit their specific audience. For instance, Facebook and LinkedIn are both social media platforms, both may have same users but the placement and promotion of both the platforms is totally different. Similarly, Candy Crush may just be a candy game, supposedly good to keep kids happy for a while, but it has more adult user base than any other game in the segment. So the marketing strategy for each app has to be tailored to suit that particular audience.

  • Check what went wrong
  • Although this is a classic, but works every time. Track your uninstalls. Analyze why users are uninstalling the app. There could be various reasons including poor onboarding, unappealing UX, complicated navigation, bugs, arid messaging or shoddy engagement strategy. If you are lucky, your users will leave a comment and let you know what’s wrong. But in most cases, users just leave. That is where technology and analysis will have to play an important role and help find out what’s wrong, so that it can be rectified whatever it is.


Need more insights into app retention and engagement? Read our blogs at www.xymob.com/blogs

Wednesday, 28 September 2016

Implementing Mobile Marketing

Implementing Mobile Marketing


Mobile marketing has arrived. Marketers across industries can give you facts, figures, statistics, research data and so much information to reiterate the fact that mobile marketing is perhaps the biggest business opportunity waiting to be tapped.

The question is not whether mobile marketing needs to be included in the marketing strategy or not. The fact that mobile marketing is not a mere subset or fraction of the marketing mix, but is, in-fact a part of the central strategy, has been well established. The question now is, how does a marketer, especially in the SME or entrepreneurial setup, implement mobile marketing so as to add value to the bottom-line?

Like any other strategy, before preparing the blue print on paper, a few basic questions/concerns will need to be addressed.

First and foremost, companies will have to understand and define the value preposition, how will this app benefit my customers? Does the app help solve a need, want or desire? Since app is the new fad, most retailers are getting their own apps. But is the app a fancy thing that will keep customers busy for a day or two or is it either helping the customers or easing off the chores? The value preposition for the customers has to be designed.

Once the value has been defined, the next step is think of practical and creative marketing methods to draw and engage customers. App and ads may be the most popular forms of mobile marketing, but there’s so much more. Other forms of mobile marketing that can work are:


And so much more. Marketers will need to research their customer base and understand what works for their set of customers. This might take some time, but marketers need to be thorough with their homework. They should know who their customers are, what is their social circle like, what motivates them in general and so on. And then, marketers will be able to figure out the kind of marketing mix perfect that will work.

In the next step, social media presence and digital video presence need to be essential. Apart from the fact that the customer base that has access to social and video networking and broadcasting platforms is huge, what also matters is that customers relate to brands that have social media and video sites. The connect on these platforms is definitely higher.
Brands also need to explore options of native advertising. Native adverting has better ROI than most forms of advertising.

Last but not the least, brands need to consolidate data from all customer touch points and create a central repository for all that information. There is technology available. But implementing that technology to help create a smart database system is the winning move.

Practical Mobile Marketing

Practical Mobile Marketing


Creating an App? Here are a few things that will help you make an app that actually engages users and doesn’t just sit in their phones never being used or worse, uninstalled.
If you already have an app, this article will help you get it right and become a total hit with the users.

  • Great On-Boarding Experience – On boarding is not just initiating your app, but also reiterates to the user why she should use the app. To get the onboarding right, the key is ‘keeping it simple’. Create neat graphics with very simple introduction to your app.  Show app value to the user here.
    • DONTS -
    • Very bright colors
    • Busy design
    • Big words, ornamental language


  • Permissions – With television, radio, even your laptop being bombarded with advertising and marketing noise, phones become one gadget that still leave some control with users. People do not want to be swamped with messages or notifications. So the right time to ask for permissions (especially for notifications) is after a great onboarding experience, show value to the user and then seek permission. For instance, a shopping app can say, “We bring you offers and discounts from across brands and stores. When we find a great offer do you wish to be updated?”, or maybe for a geofencing feature, the app can ask, “We’ll let you know about great deals in your vicinity based on your current location. Do you wish to be notified?” These are examples. There can be numerous innovative ways of seeking permissions from users. Get creative.


  • App Engagement – There can be various occasions to engage users. Well timed and meticulously personalized notifications with specific CTA can actually go beyond just engaging users, they can actually add to the bottom line.

    • In-app alerts –  Shopping app – Entice to get extra discounts or introduce a personalized discount offer (this can be based on purchase history) Gaming app – Asking users to purchase more lives, more power etc.
    • Push notifications –  Shopping app – Alerting discounts or fresh stock added Reminders for birthdays, events marked in the calendar or important occasions  Reminders for important information such as flight boarding date & time, hotel reservation dates, check-in and check-out times Order update, delivery date and time update Sorry, you’ve missed on some great deals – messages Breaking news – this should be relevant to the users’ preferences, digital footprint or data profiling.