Not surprisingly, mobile
played an increasingly important role this holiday shopping season. According to
Deloitte's Annual Holiday Survey, 68 percent of smartphone users planned to use
their devices for holiday shopping, and these consumers would spend 27 percent
more on holiday gifts than non-smartphone owners.
During the holiday shopping
season in particular, consumers experience sensory overload with all of the
promotions and advertisements they come in contact with. On mobile, it is
critical that retailers hyper-target all messages based on real-time
situational factors and robust customer profiles and implement dynamic pricing
on an individual level.
If marketers push irrelevant
content, consumers will perceive it as an annoyance and intrusion that will
negatively influence not only their holiday shopping behavior, but also
behavior throughout the coming year. Retailers need to start analyzing all of
the behavioral (app and web), transactional and demographic data gathered this
holiday shopping season to start the creative targeting planning for the coming
holiday shopping season.
It no longer cuts it to
tailor messages only on past purchases or geolocation and demographic data. Advances
in predictive analytics, marketing automation and cross-channel profiling paved
the way for marketers to target their mobile audiences in much more
resourceful, highly personal and relevant ways. Here are eight ways retailers
should be segmenting their customers:
Shopping cart
abandoners: Predictive analytics can anticipate which customers are likely
to abandon their cart as well as which deal (e.g. "Free Shipping" or
"5% off") is more likely to inspire them to follow through on their
purchase.
The lone mall
wanderers: Leveraging location data and automation tools, a retailer can
target shoppers who are in a mall but have yet to walk through its doors with a
push alert featuring a personalized offer to entice them in.
Eleventh-hour
shoppers: Marketers need to start engaging with habitual procrastinators
early on, recommending items and highlighting sales for gifts. Pushing a
message when the individual comes in close proximity of a store, with a
tailored deal, will help retailers close on the last-minute purchases.
Holiday
hostesses: Leveraging big data, retailers can predict who likely plays
host during the holidays and send information on home decorating items, hosting
tips and festive recipes to drive engagement and loyalty.
Social butterflies: By
accounting for social influence, retailers can court customers with a large
Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest or Instagram footprint with special offers and
deals. Those posts could then be seen by thousands of other people.
Early-bird
buyers: Which customers err on the side of early? Retailers should start
targeting holiday campaigns to this cohort when other customers might balk at
the timing. Some people don't mind holiday gift ideas in September, while
others would cringe at the thought of it.
Deal fishers: Retailers
are always competing to provide the best deal, especially around the holidays.
Retailers need to segment their deal-hungry audience based on which offers
motivate them the most to make a purchase. While some people will get excited
about free shipping on orders over $100, others only care about discounts on
home goods.
Thrifty brand
loyalists: Some people want a certain brand, but wait for the price to
fall and then purchase a vast quantity. Most commonly, this segment emerges on
the day after Christmas and the following weeks. Retailers need to implement
dynamic pricing on an individual level, providing these thrifty brand loyalists
with deep discounts that will pay off in the total purchase bill.
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