Understanding Customer Intent
Everyone talks about the importance of understanding customer intent, but what does it mean? Is it predicting what product or category a customer will want to purchase next? How about identifying ahead of time when a customer is likely to become disengaged, or what their preferred channels of communication are? Is it sending a cart abandon message at the right time, or a reminder email for a commonly repurchased product?
If you happen to work in marketing, you’re probably in agreement that most of the examples above can indicate a customer’s intent to purchase. But do you also think about how understanding intent could include knowing when a customer might need someone from the care team to reach out and help them overcome a hurdle? Or what about reaching out directly to assist a customer in the final ordering steps for a big-ticket item?
As marketers, we can fall into the trap of trying to solve for only our own business objectives when putting together marketing programs. Through that lens, understanding customer intent means something to the effect of “what product should we put in front of a customer right now.” I would argue that a more humanistic approach to truly understanding where a customer is in their journey with your brand, should align with the following statement: truly understanding customer intent means going beyond marketing touchpoints to encompass the full customer experience.
Following the humanistic approach
Smart brands know that when they go beyond a transactional, purchase-driven program, and apply a humanistic approach to better understand customer intent, it leads to significantly higher engagement and repeat business in the form of greater customer loyalty.
For those of us in marketing, of course we still have a job to do, which is primarily to drive sales and conversions. But we don’t have to sacrifice one goal for the other. When it comes to intent driven marketing programs there are wonderfully effective strategies you can weave into your programs to leverage intent signals that will help you achieve your marketing objectives and better serve your customers at the same time.
Here are a few ways you can apply humanistic touchpoints in your marketing programs:
Beware of being too transactional
Customers get turned off by marketing efforts that come across as purely transactional. If you’re not offering something of value and it feels like you’re always asking your customers to make another purchase, they are eventually going to tune your messages out.
Here are a few things in particular to beware of:
Putting it into practice
The industry has evolved remarkably in the past 5 years. While basic retargeting was limited to big budget enterprise players in the past, today, companies of almost any size can put into place the key components of a sophisticated customer-intent driven program. There are two ingredients you’ll need: the right technology and a proper strategy that fits your organization and customers.
For technology, you’ll want a solution that can easily plug into your website to capture behavioral events, and you’ll also need a marketing automation platform to trigger event-driven marketing messages to your customers. Those are frequently separate products, though some solutions allow you to do both in one tool.
As far as strategy, start small and go after the wins that will lead to largest revenue and highest customer satisfaction wins. After establishing your base, you can start to build out your program with more sophisticated triggers that will add incremental lift to customer engagement and the bottom line.
We need to remember that the customer journey doesn’t start and end with a single purchase. Put the time and effort in to build a program that will message your customers appropriately, and with humanity, based on where they’re at in the customer journey, and you will be rewarded with their obsessive loyalty and repeat business.