The Citizen (Gauteng)

Are you ready for hyper-relevance?

COMFORT ZONE: BRANDS CAN REGAIN HIGH GROUND BY EXPANDING MARKETING FRAMEWORKS

- Arthur Goldstuck

A new study by Accenture shows that, heading into the third decade of the 21st century, consumers want more from a brand than mere relevance.

Before Netflix, there was Blockbuste­r, the world’s best-known video store. Before YouTube, people looked for life hacks (then called life lessons) in Reader’s Digest. And before the digital camera became the most used feature on your smartphone, there was Kodak.

These are all organisati­ons that went into bankruptcy despite once owning their respective worlds. And we’re not even talking about the past few years, in which the frenzied pace of disruption has threatened thousands more businesses.

The bottom line is this: it doesn’t matter how big a company is today; if it doesn’t meet the needs of its customers, it may not exist a few years down the line. And those needs go beyond merely the features or direct benefits offered by a product.

A new study by Accenture shows that consumers want more than relevance.

“Nearly three-quarters of consumer switching is driven by a lack of relevance, putting R438 billion of potential annual revenue in jeopardy,” Accenture reports. “In the era of relevance, brands can regain the high ground by expanding their marketing frameworks and realigning their activities to a new set of principles – beyond their comfort zones.” At the launch of the study in Johannesbu­rg last week, Wayne Hill, head of Accenture Digital, summed up the meaning of hyper-relevance from his own encounters. “Nespresso knows who I am and it knows what I like. From an experience point of view, I walk into shop and I can smell the coffee. On the shelves, the merchandis­e looks like beauty products. When they package it, it’s like buying Louis Vuitton.

“Recently, I received a box from Nespresso that included a brand linked to my place of birth. That is hyper-relevance.”

Hull gave examples like Woolworths using algorithms to predict consumer consumptio­n, Discovery converting health insurance into wellness and healthcare, First National Bank creating a digital banking platform and Cape Town drone analytics start-up Aerobotics “hyper-personalis­ing crops”.

“Aerobotics don’t want to know what the crop is doing. They want to know what each stem is doing and from analysis of the stem, they can predict per stem what the product will look like.”

Not surprising­ly, new technology is at the heart of hyper-personalis­ation.

“New technology is not an IT activity,” said Hull. “It has to be embedded in the customer experience.”

Michael Jordaan, founder of the wireless Internet service pro---

Nearly three-quarters of consumer switching is driven by a lack of relevance.

vider Rain and Zero – the new bank due to be launched soon – spoke at the event about the lessons he had learned while CEO of FNB.

“One of our best ad campaigns was when I said we’ll give customers an iPad at a lower price than anyone else. We didn’t want to make money from it, we just wanted people to bank on it. We sold one every 30 seconds. That changed the electronic­s market.”

The Accenture study, titled Welcome to the Hyper-Relevance Era, emphasises the need for executives to develop a deeper understand­ing of what differenti­ates each era.

It divides the old and the new approach between the loyalty era and the relevance era.

Hull pointed out that the definition of hyper-relevance will evolve along with customer needs and habits. In the meantime, though, companies must strive to be meaningful, dynamic, dedicated, transparen­t, inspiratio­nal, standard-setting, omnipresen­t and accountabl­e .

“Of course, these are just some of the attributes that customers have come to expect,” he said.

“For establishe­d companies in SA, striving for hyper-relevance might seem an insurmount­able challenge, but now is the time for leaders to make the shift to the relevance era, to lay the groundwork for major changes.

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