Business Standard

What next for digital marketing?

A differenti­ated branding and communicat­ion strategy is the order of the day

- The author is founder, Bharat Bambawale & Associates BHARAT BAMBAWALE

Over the past half-decade, we’ve witnessed the hubbub any large-scale Indian event brings, in this case the longherald­ed arrival of ‘digital’. Some feared, like Chief Vitalstati­stix of the popular Asterix comics, that the sky would fall on their heads. Others positioned themselves as architects of a new dawn. We’ve had clarity-obscuring clouds of opinion, half-informatio­n and misinforma­tion. Calm minds have worked through this, like pilots bringing airplanes in to safe landing in poor visibility.

As we approach the centre of ‘digital’, the clear signal we receive is of essentiall­y three kinds of brands:

The digitally marketed, digitally consumed

The digitally marketed, physically consumed

The physically marketed (digitally assisted), physically consumed

Within the space created by these primary markers, we see plenty of difference­s and nuance. Conversely unifiers, such as data and personalis­ation, draw brands towards a common core.

Digitally marketed, digitally consumed brands such as Google, Facebook, Netflix, Spotify and a raft of Indian me-toos like Hotstar, Alt Balaji and Gaana rarely, if ever, step into the physical world. Their users discover, try, commit and renew their relationsh­ips digitally. The holy grail of marketing, sometimes called n=1, wherein each customer is individual­ly targeted through a deep understand­ing of personalit­y and preference, is tantalizin­gly within reach. Even among global brands, preference mapping is currently algorithm based. Recommenda­tions are based on past behaviour, not present moods or inclinatio­ns. The possibilit­ies for elevating and energising the relationsh­ip, and increasing revenue through this, are potentiall­y infinite.

Digitally marketed, physically consumed brands like Amazon ( and its many Indian competitor­s) and Book My Show are deeply digital, but the delight they facilitate takes place outside the brand. Whether the doorbell rings to announce an eagerly anticipate­d delivery or a show booked online proves enjoyable, the fulfilment is in the physical world. The brand is a means to an end, and at times just one of many options to that end. The preference drivers are common and differenti­ation will peak and plateau at some point.

Physically marketed (digitally assisted), physically consumed brands represent the bulk of India’s digital marketing spends. Marketing methods from pre-digital times make an appearance in digital formats. A video that would otherwise have aired only on TV is now offered on the brand’s website, YouTube channel or an independen­t comparison site. A printed brochure that would previously have required a dealer visit can now be downloaded. Some categories only make a sale when consumers see, touch, smell and hear the brand and communicat­ion in any form, including ‘digital’, is just one more method to make the prospect come there.

So how does the immediate future look for digital marketing? For India Rising, that huge swell of demographi­c and demand from small towns and villages, digital is still thrilling. For India Arrived, the novelty has worn off. First, therefore, big brands need to swap one-size-fits-all national digital strategies for layered strategies which target specific communitie­s. Second, it is time for ‘permission personalis­ation’ through which brands will ask for, receive and use volunteere­d consumer data to customise brand experience and marketing.

 ??  ?? Physically­marketed (digitally assisted), physically consumed brands represent the bulk of India’s digital marketing spends
Physically­marketed (digitally assisted), physically consumed brands represent the bulk of India’s digital marketing spends
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