Social Media and the Customer Buying Cycle
DEFINITIONS
Social
Media: online interactive communities that feature user generated
content.
The Phases of the Customer
Buying Cycle:
- Awareness: customers/clients identify a need and begin the process of identifying products or services that meet that need
- Comparison- customers/clients evaluate how your product or
service meets this perceived need relative to the competition
- Selection: through a combination of analytical and emotional considerations, the customer/client makes a purchasing
decision
- Purchase: The customer/client purchases a good or service from
your business.
- Repurchase: Through emotional and logical consideration, the customer/client chooses to do business with you again.
Awareness: Whether we need a new computer,
or our car breaks down on the way to work, or we have a legal matter and need an
attorney, it is natural for us to communicate this need with friends, family
and colleagues. We put the word out and invite suggestions that help us decide
which products to consider and which ones to avoid. Social media broadens the network of people that
we invite into this conversation. If there isn’t already an expert in your
network of connections, a simple shout out will produce a lot of volunteered
information. People in social media
networks love to be helpful.
Comparison:
When a consumer narrows their choices down the
next natural step is to do a side by side comparison of features, benefits and
costs of prospective products or services.
Social media has a growing impact on this stage of the purchasing cycle
as there are conversations, blogs, and videos that extol the virtues of certain
products and excoriate others.
The influencers in these online conversations are likely to
be engaged in specialized social media activity around that interest. Make-up enthusiasts, for example, are
blogging, tweeting and sharing YouTube videos on Facebook or in forums such as http://www.makeupalley.com Meanwhile the cosmetic industry is also actively
engaged in these conversations feeding enthusiasts’ interests with engaging
content and shaping the conversation.
Selection: The selection process may be the most private
process in the buyers’ cycle. After going back and forth and talking it
through, it’s the moment of truth. It’s
time to make the choice and put your money on the line.
Purchase: You may have a friend or loved
one with you as you go to the cashier or click on the “purchase” button on the
e-commerce site but you are most likely NOT conversing with the twitter-verse
or live streaming your activity to an audience. All this changes as soon as the purchase is
made. After the purchase you call your
mother, you call your friends, you take a picture of your new purchase post it
on Facebook, and you tell your coworkers about the amazing deal you got.
Repurchase:
The importance of brand loyalty has
changed drastically as a result of social media. It used to be that if you liked a product or
service you would tell your friends and if you didn’t like it you would tell
EVERYBODY. Well the same is true now only the number of
people that a person doesn’t know in the social media world is literally
everyone.
When Netflix raised its rates
by 60% they received 4,100 damning comments on their company blog within
minutes of the announcement. The outrage
throughout the rest of the social media world resulted in a 60% decline in the
value of Netflix stock within 6 months. Ow!
Companies have to actively
cultivate brand loyalty and also be responsive to disgruntled consumers. They must be involved in the conversations
that are already taking place regarding their businesses.
The Buying Cycle has become a Buying Continuum: By bracketing the traditional buying cycle with these ongoing social media conversations the cycle has become a continuum. Business can be engaged in conversation with consumers or the people who influence their purchasing decisions (early adopters, taste makers, mavens) before a customer has even conceived of a need for a product or service.
The Buying Cycle has become a Buying Continuum: By bracketing the traditional buying cycle with these ongoing social media conversations the cycle has become a continuum. Business can be engaged in conversation with consumers or the people who influence their purchasing decisions (early adopters, taste makers, mavens) before a customer has even conceived of a need for a product or service.
Heather Gorringe, owner of Wiggly Wigglers in
rural Herefordshire, England puts it this way: “We sell products that people may not think they want…..It is
essential that we embrace new technology.
The reason for that is, if we didn’t do that we simply wouldn’t have any
customers. No one is going to wake up in
the morning and think, “Ahaaa, I really DO need to compost my kitchen waste
using worms.” We need to be able to
engage people and communicate with people on a nationwide basis and also on a
global basis.”
The
Promise of Social Media: Business is engaging and empowering influencers and is helping
to shape the conversation and win brand advocates. More importantly business has the ability to
LEARN valuable information about their own products and services that can give
them a competitive advantage in the traditional buying cycle. Empowered
consumers are in vibrant dialogues with business, the market, and each other. This represents the true promise of
e-commerce and social media and a revolution in how businesses market
themselves.
The author, Philip Stephano, is a social media marketing strategist in Bucks County, PA and founder of PrimalTweet. He is passionate about helping local and regional business around the country to use social media as an effective tool to find local prospects and customers. To learn more about Stephano go to http://about.me/philipstephano
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