Why You Should Collect Your Customers’ Digital Profiles

717
Filed under - Archived Content

OK, this post has an interesting origin. I was doing a webinar (Go Digital! Engagement Strategies for Contact Centres) with Emma Samuel (Global Corporate Marketing Director at NewVoiceMedia). Of course, I should have anticipated it, given the webinar title was ‘Go Digital!’ and we were spelling out the new doctrine of ‘real time’, ‘innovative’, ‘perpetual beta’ etc. What does she do? She only sneaks in another poll under my nose, right at the close.

“What would you like Martin to next write a blog on?”

The options that each grabbed a quarter of the online vote were:

“Steps Towards Understanding Your Customer Digital Profile” and “Checklist On Going Digital”.

So, having been mugged with some nifty online crowd sourcing, here is the post that was ordered online.

Why Digital Profiling?

The context for this idea is to do with the speed of change. Do you know how fast your customers are adopting new digital behaviour? If so, are your customer journeys calibrated to meet that expectation? This is the purpose of tracking their digital profile.

For instance, would a Saga digital profile (50+ age group) be different from a Blizzard profile (gamers)? Common sense says so, but I’ve been caught out on that before.

For instance, I recently got to know a great team from Screwfix through the P&Q Challenge they attended with me. I was put back in my box one session when I tried to second guess that their customers (professional tradesmen) had to be major mobile users when ordering from their contact centre. Stands to reason, I thought, being on the customer site, assessing the job, then making the call. But not a bit of it. In fact, I was completely wrong. Over 80% of calls originated from landlines.

So here is the question. Are people really going to use that new mobile app which the IT team is just dying to persuade you to sign off? Or will they come if you launch Chat? Is it Twitter and Facebook for social customer service? Or is it now WhatsApp and Yik Yak?

Digital profiling helps reduce guesswork and increases accurate insight.

The ABC of Digital Profiling

So how do you do it?

Some of it can be gleaned from existing research. The rest has to be primary research, which, by the way, should be considered an ongoing feedback loop until the digital wheel stops spinning and settles down. In other words, it needs to be understood as a commitment for the foreseeable future.

Let’s first tackle existing research. There is a ton of it: from government level, to research firms to individual brands using research to prove a market demand. It’s all useful if you remember the golden rule of customer insight. Use at least three sources before settling on any interpretation of what’s going on. It’s the same process your smartphone’s GPS uses as it locks onto more than one satellite so it can triangulate and figure out where you are.

This type of research is useful for developing foundation insights about customers. For instance, OFCOM, the UK regulator, has just published their annual review of our communication habits which, according to them, are increasingly digital. (Media Use and Attitudes 2015 report)

The headlines are impressive.

  • The proportion of adults using the internet has risen by half, from six in ten in 2005 to almost nine in ten today
  • People in the UK spent an average of 20 hours and 30 minutes online each week in 2014, over double the amount in 2005. The biggest increase occurred among 16–24-year-olds, which almost tripled
  • The amount of time people are online while ‘out and about’ has increased five-fold over the past ten years, from 30 minutes in 2005 to nearly two and a half hours in 2014
  • Over a quarter (27%) of internet users regularly watch TV or films online, compared to one in ten in 2007. This rises to 39% for 16–2- year-olds
  • Watching video clips online has almost doubled over the past eight years, from 21% to 39% of internet users
  • Regular instant messaging on a mobile phone has leapt from 29% of mobile phone users in 2013 to 42% in 2014, driven by services including WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and BBM
  • Nearly all mobile phone users are sending text messages (90% in 2014, compared to 70% in 2005). People are also increasingly using their mobile phone to email (52% regularly using their phone to email, compared to 5% in 2005) or make a phone call over the internet (VoIP) 43% in 2014, compared to 27% in 2013
  • The use of social media has tripled since 2007. Nearly three-quarters (72%) of internet users aged 16 and above say they have a social media profile, compared to 22% in 2007. 2014 saw a dramatic surge in older people using social media, with nearly half (49%) of 55–64-year-olds who go online having a social media profile, up from one-third (33%) in 2013
  • The majority of internet users (68%) are happy to provide personal information online in the belief they will benefit in some way. But more people say they would never provide their credit or debit card details (21% in 2014, compared to 13% in 2013) or their mobile number (26% in 2014, 17% in 2013)

Remember this isn’t a snapshot of an uber-cool demographic in Shoreditch, London. It’s mainstream UK. It reflects what we do in the suburbs and estates throughout the land. In other words, this is about the customers of many organisations.

Once you start to reflect on these changes in our national behaviour, they start to offer a wealth of clues. Such as to how to set up successful self-service or provide digital customer service.

So keep a look-out for this type of research. Personally, I tend to favour annual surveys. The kinks get ironed out after the first few attempts and they provide trend data. But one-offs often fill in important details so they can be very useful as well.

By the way, do pay some attention to the size and source of the sample. They will be different. Make sure you aren’t trying to force them into a single narrative. It’s our instinct to try and make sense of things but make-believe is not the objective here.

The other type of research is what you can learn directly from your own customers. Use the general themes which the published sources provide to build a set of questions that allow you to understand their digital behaviour. Some areas you might consider are:

How they consume news, e.g.

  • TV
  • Online news services
  • Social feeds

How they consume TV

  • Cable, satellite, internet
  • Traditional TV, laptop, smartphone

Preferences in their multi-device use

  • Online shopping via laptop/tablet/smartphone

The scope of their ‘on the move’ mobile behaviour

  • Information based, e.g. maps
  • Transaction based, e.g. e-commerce
  • Interaction based, e.g. social network updates

Significant online behaviours, e.g.

  • Mobile shopping
  • Mobile banking
  • Complaining via social channel

Channel preferences for key communication tasks, e.g.

  • Buying from us
  • Getting an update
  • Getting advice from us
  • Making a complaint

Expectations around autonomy and self-management

  • Access to real-time corporate data, e.g. stock availability at a particular store
  • Online access to personal information, e.g. purchasing history

I’m not suggesting you ask for all this. Nor that this is all you could ask for. It’s indicative and you can pick and choose from this list and add in your own ideas. The aim is that you can develop a profile that suggests how advanced they have become in adopting digital behaviour.

But once collected, how is the data used? Well, assuming you have been smart enough to request it in a digital form so that it’s available for immediate analysis and secondly that you asked some basic demographic questions to identify different customer types, you are now positioned to hunt for the big themes. Where are your customers on their personal digital journeys?

After gazing at the data and slicing it by age, gender or even CRM metadata to see what pops up, you might want to group your insights into various digital profiles from conservative adopters to progressive ones. This helps you understand the digital status of your overall customer base and what each of those segments is likely to expect from you.

Once all that is done, you can start to apply to your service strategy. How likely is mobile consumed self-service? What’s the most popular non-voice channel mix? Are there any significant generational preferences?

All this will help you develop service strategies that enjoy widespread adoption and help remove guesswork on what your digital strategy should look like.

Obviously, over time it will change. But you have already got that sorted because you are now committed to keep polling your customers at appropriate stages in their lifecycle with you – on-boarding, renewal, etc. and the insights stay fresh.

So, that’s what I mean by digital profiling.

PS Get in touch once you actually make this happen. I’ll give you a big shout-out as a digital pioneer!

Author: Guest Author

Published On: 29th May 2015 - Last modified: 5th Feb 2019
Read more about - Archived Content

Follow Us on LinkedIn