Home Depot’s Social Media Store Associates

Great article in Ad Age about The Home Depot’s program to designate a group of store associates as a hybrid of in-store and social media customer service providers.

What’s intriguing to me about The Home Depot’s approach:

— They thought about simply adding people to their corporate communications staff but decided their social media store associates really needed ongoing exposure to products and “live” customers

— After some months of trying the program they’ve found that the social media store associates are doing a fantastic job of generating content—both adding their own and inspiring feedback and dialogue with customers

So, the learnings? 

— Hybrid works: combining offline and online is key

— Experience matters: maintaining ongoing visibility in and to the store adds to the value of the content

Posted By: lizbigham
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Brand marketers should act like retailers

I really, really love the fact that of the 5 tips offered by Beverly Stotz, VP-marketing at Illy Caffe North America, in her interview with Advertising Age on Monday, #1 is training partners to deliver a great experience to customers.

It’s so important that brands think like retailers—and place a priority on aligning that channel to deliver a great experience to end-user consumers.

So hats off to Illy’s Stotz for this reminder, and check out her interview — a great endorsement a marketing strategy that’s heavy on experience and engagement.

And here are all 5 of her tips:

1. Give partners the tools they need for success. Then trust them.

2. Actively engage consumers; give them a reason to choose you.

3. Become a part of your consumers’ ritual.

4. Continually refine your distribution strategy to maximize consumption occasions.

5. If you’re a high-end brand, give the general consumer a point of entry but stay true to your equity.

Posted By: lizbigham
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Great post over on Made By Many that points out how technology—no matter how impressive or whiz-bangy—isn’t worth a dime if it results in a frustrated, curse-laden customer experience.
The article’s title “designed by people who hate you” is a spot-on interpretation of the feeling you’re left with when dealing with a brand, company or product that consistently disappoints to the point where you feel the crappy experience you have is intentional. I would add to this list: the DMV, any tech support, automated phone menus for banks, flight check-ins, rental car check-ins, pull-up diapers, vending machines and Capri-Sun pouches. Anything you would add?
Posted By: leesawytock

Great post over on Made By Many that points out how technology—no matter how impressive or whiz-bangy—isn’t worth a dime if it results in a frustrated, curse-laden customer experience.

The article’s title “designed by people who hate you” is a spot-on interpretation of the feeling you’re left with when dealing with a brand, company or product that consistently disappoints to the point where you feel the crappy experience you have is intentional. I would add to this list: the DMV, any tech support, automated phone menus for banks, flight check-ins, rental car check-ins, pull-up diapers, vending machines and Capri-Sun pouches. Anything you would add?

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