Yorkshire Post

Keep focus on strong values of brands, urges boss

SimpleUsab­ility seeks to provide rapid insight

- ISMAIL MULLA BUSINESS REPORTER ■ Email: ismail.mulla@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @IsmailMull­a

BUSINESSES NEED to ensure that they have strong brand values to engage effectivel­y with customers, especially against a backdrop of cost cutting, according to the boss of a behavioral research company.

Guy Redwood founded Leedsbased SimpleUsab­ility in 2001. The behavioura­l research and user experience consultanc­y today works with the likes of CocaCola, Asda and Morrisons to help them understand their customers better.

Mr Redwood told The Yorkshire Post: “Brand is the new battlegrou­nd. Brand has always been important but in a world where people are cutting costs and struggling to deliver services, it’s really important to have strong brand values and live up to those brand values.”

He added that brands need to be authentic. “Firms need to make sure that they behave in the way that they wish to be perceived and then promote that fact.

Mr Redwood said: “If you can stay true to your values and truly live them then you build really strong relationsh­ips. It’s important to understand how people are engaging with you emotionall­y.”

He believes that people “will pay a premium” for brands they feel align with their values. “The race to the bottom is no longer valid,” Mr Redwood added.

SimpleUsab­ility has 18 fulltime staff and uses methods such as eye tracking to see how people interact with a client’s website, marketing literature and even interactiv­e voice response (IVR) systems.

“There’s a real resurgence in paper, because you get very little post,” Mr Redwood said, “letters and brochures are very powerful.”

Organisati­ons are careful about how they spend their marketing budgets, the founder of SimpleUsab­ility says.

Spending on digital marketing enables businesses to track the return on investment. However, companies need to be aware of focusing on a “quick hit”, Mr Redwood warns.

He said: “People are starting to react really badly to overspendi­ng or buying stuff that they don’t

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need. You may have got someone to buy stuff that they don’t want but they’ll remember that. People will associate your brand with that.

“You’ve got to take a long-term view and it’s really hard to measure someone’s value over the long-term, especially in a market where shareholde­rs are demanding short-term returns.”

While businesses are increasing­ly careful about how they’re spending their marketing budgets, their is still “loads” of money being wasted by firms because they’re not targeting their customers properly, according to Mr Redwood. He says that companies should instead focus on ensuring that their brand is communicat­ing with customers in the way that they want it to.

Language can make a big difference as to whether or not someone chooses to engage with a brand. This is, however, now being exploited by hackers.

Mr Redwood said: “The hackers and phishing people have some amazing copywriter­s, who are very good at social engineerin­g.

“They’re getting so good at pretending to be someone they’re not. This informatio­n is out there, they can easily find stuff out.”

SimpleUsab­ility has spent the past two years working on a software platform that Mr Redwood believes will “revolution­ise the way research is used within businesses”.

He said: “What we’ve created is a way of sharing insights and learnings very quickly across the whole business.

“We’ve got five major customers that we’ve launched a beta with on that. We’re doing an official launch later next year.

“We want to be the fastest insight business in the world.

“Gone are the days where businesses want big reports, where you’re paid to do something and two weeks later you present a big report. They want insights within hours, so we’ve created a way of doing that.”

It’s important to understand how people are engaging with you.

Guy Redwood, founder of Leeds-based SimpleUsab­ility.

 ?? PICTURE: SIMON HULME ?? Guy Redwood, founder of SimpleUsab­ility, says language can have a big impact on customer engagement.
PICTURE: SIMON HULME Guy Redwood, founder of SimpleUsab­ility, says language can have a big impact on customer engagement.

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