Patricia takes a fresh look at new approaches to influencing consumer purchasing decisions, and points towards the changing landscape social media is confronted with on a daily basis. To succeed you must adapt, and above all else balance the brand messaging in a media with consistent manner. Today the consumer needs clear, precise, consistent messaging that has a positive influence on the consumer. The consumer must build, and have confidence in your brand. To achieve that you must always align your core brand values and communicate them everywhere the consumer touches or is influenced by your brand. To do so will have a positive influence on consumer purchasing decisions related to your goods, products and services. Check it out.
5 Ways You Can Influence Consumer Purchasing Decisions: New Research
Are you wondering whether social media has any real impact on consumer purchasing decisions? Do you sometimes question the potential of social media marketing? Most businesses and organizations dive into social media hoping to increase brand awareness and acquire more customers. Many are disappointed when it doesn’t pan out. In this article I’ll share five ways you can adjust your social media tactics to improve your brand’s influence on consumer purchasing decisions.
#1: Change Social Conversations
A recent Gallup poll published in the State of the American Consumer report indicates that despite the tremendous number of Americans using social media platforms, only 5% say those platforms have a great deal of influence on their purchasing decisions. Worse still, 62% say social media has no influence at all! What’s the problem? Businesses think they can use social media to influence or change the way consumers think. The toughest lesson for businesses is learning to use social media channels the way consumers want to use them, not the way the business wants to use them.
Consumers use social media to make conversation and connections. Time and again, research has shown that consumers use social media primarily to connect with family and friends, follow trends and find product reviews or information. They also comment on what’s hot or new and write reviews about products. Since the 2008 recession, consumers have become more skeptical of businesses and more cautious with their own spending. Hence, it’s highly unlikely that businesses influence consumers’ purchasing behavior simply by talking about themselves and their products on Facebook.
The only way to motivate your social media audience and convert them into customers is to change the conversation and engage fully with your existing audience—you have to inspire them to advocate on your behalf. If social media users perceive your messages and intentions as sincere, they will engage with you. But if they suspect you’re trying to market to them, they will hide your content or permanently block you from their feeds. The bottom line is that social media isn’t primarily about driving sales or influencing consumers’ purchasing decisions. If that’s what you bought into, you’re going to be disappointed. Social media marketing is about making emotional connections throughpositive customer experiences, exceptional service and engaging conversations.
#2: Appeal to Millennials
The Gallup poll I mentioned in the previous section shows that Millennials in particular—a key social media audience—aren’t easily influenced by social media. Only 7% say social has a great deal of influence on purchasing decisions, while 48% say it has no influence at all.
To influence Millennials via social media, companies have to understand how that demographic consumes information, and then identify how to deliver a marketing message that appeals to them. Millennials are hyper-connected and consume content on multiple platforms and devices. While they’re enthusiastic about honest, authentic marketing, they want to be in charge of the conversations. They’re uninterested in the opinions of those outside their social group, but super-interested in what their friends think. Based on the Razorfish Liminal report, you can win over Millennials by creating mobile-friendly content that fits their needs and preferences—don’t waste their time with generic messages. If you’re not sure what they’re looking for, ask them. You can build trust with Millennials by showing there’s no clash between policy and practice. For example, if your company’s Twitter bio says you follow back everyone who follows you, be sure to do exactly that. If something goes wrong with your product or service, apologize publicly on social networks (particularly YouTube).
#3: Engage Customers Offline and Online
Social media doesn’t function in a vacuum. If you want to influence consumers, you must engage with them both online and offline. Gallup polls consistently find that customer engagement depends largely on how well an organization aligns all of its touch points.
For example, in the USA, Dr. Pepper encourages customers to create their own t-shirts as a way to join in the fun of their promotional campaigns. They’re turning customers into brand advocates through online offerings that translate offline.
While it’s easier for some industries to leverage both offline and online customer engagement, the key is to understand your brand’s emotional connection with consumers and act upon it. If you don’t know what the emotional connection is, the best thing to do is ask your audience.
#4: Start Authentic Facebook Conversations
Social media is highly personal for consumers—they want to interact with other people, not with brands. Consumers are more likely to respond to companies that are personable and genuine. Here’s an example of how ADT uses their Facebook page to talk with consumers notat them:
Notice how this post focuses on an issue that is highly personal, and literally close to home for American homeowners. Instead of pushing their product, ADT offers helpful information. The lesson for businesses (especially larger corporate brands) is to back off from hard-sell techniques and focus on open dialogue with consumers.
#5: Be Available at All Times
Because social media is 24/7, consumers have come to expect immediate responses from brands—even nights and weekends! Research shows that 42% of consumers who complain on social media expect a response within 60 minutes. Further, 57% expect the same response time at night and on weekends—even if it’s not during normal business hours. Is your brand equipped to handle those expectations?
You can scale your customer service with social media. For example, while one customer service agent is talking to a customer on the phone, another agent canrespond to several inquiries via social media. Another option is to launch an online community to enable customers to help each other. Within that community, you’ll likely find some members who are more engaged and helpful than others—they consistently go the extra mile to help other customers solve their problems. Create an advocacy program to reward (and retain) those people. Help customers help themselves by offering how-to articles on your blog or website. Make the information easy to find with links on your social profiles and other marketing materials. If customers can solve a problem themselves, it reduces the need to pick up the phone or tweet a reply. Finally, you’re probably monitoring social mentions already. Continue to do that—customers are a key source of information when your product isn’t working. Listen for negative feedback and reply accordingly. Over to You If you’ve been using social media marketing for even a short period of time, you’ve likely realized that consumers are good at tuning out brand-related content on Facebook and Twitter. You know that social media by itself could never motivate a fan or follower to recommend your brand to others, let alone purchase your products. But that doesn’t mean you can’t change the conversation. Concentrate on what social media audiences want instead of what you want. You’ll likely find more success by catering to customers’ expectations and habits. What do you think? Have you used any of these tactics to influence consumers through social media? What was your experience? Please share in the comment box below.
Patricia Redsicker writes research reviews for Social Media Examiner. She is the Social Media Manager at US Pharmacopeia, a public standards setting organization.
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