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The benefits of customer retention and cross-sell/upsell are well-documented. For instance, common principles like the 80/20 rule and how much cheaper it is to retain, rather than gain a customer are quoted often. So, instead of trying to convince you of customer marketing’s benefits, this post will offer a blueprint for success: Get ready for a look behind the yellow and teal curtain of Shift Paradigm as we outline the framework we use to assess, optimize and implement the customer marketing objectives of our clients.
A marketing framework, sometimes called a marketing framework strategy, is the visual representation of your business’s marketing flow. It includes details of execution and strategies to deliver content to your audience.
Marketing is a complex discipline filled dependencies, most of which are known by marketers. However, what we tend to find in client engagements is one of two things have happened which keep marketing’s outcomes from achieving business objectives:
Our Growth Paradigm Framework resolves both scenarios. Let’s take a look:
Often, when future customers approach us, the problem they’ve identified is something at the top of the staircase — the programs. We challenge our clients to start at the foundation, at the bottom of the staircase — and begin by focusing on their strategy. Read on as we walk through this process for customer marketing.
The savviest CMOs we consult are well aware that their marketing strategies must stem from — and support — the overarching corporate strategy of the company in order to drive growth. Curious how to do this? We wrote about it here. Ask yourself the following questions to get started:
How you answer these questions (and if you can answer them) will inform how much of your strategic efforts (and budget) should be directed toward customer marketing, if any.
Keep in mind that not all organizations’ customer marketing needs are alike. A single-product SaaS company will have very different needs in this area than a SaaS platform brand.. The single-product SaaS company will likely require some light customer marketing, but new customer acquisition will surely reign supreme. Alternatively, the SaaS platform company might spend as much as half of its efforts and budget on customer marketing, because much of its growth strategy hinges on developing existing customer relationships.
Once you confirm customer marketing fits into your larger organizational strategy, it’s time to dig into your actual customer marketing framework. Our frameworks all have the same five components: Strategy, Planning, Process, Development and Execution.
Customer Marketing Blueprint
The strategy phase is the first and most critical component of the customer marketing framework. It includes:
Keep in mind that how you’ve segmented your customers, and the corresponding personas, will be used to rank and prioritize where you spend your effort, depending on where you have low penetration and where you have high potential within accounts.
TIP: Ensure your personas are built off of hard-and-fast data points, not just generic concepts. Eventually, the strategic elements of customer marketing must be operationalized and you’ll need personas with enough meat on the bones to make that happen. For more on this, check out our article, “How to Create Buyer Personas You Can Actually Use.”
Have you determined concrete goals and metrics for your strategy? Again using a SaaS company as an example, onboarding and enablement would be the focuses.. Objectives would center on getting more people into the platform and making them comfortable with it, and KPIs would concentrate on user engagement. A different company in a different industry might shape its objectives around engaging buyers, and then demonstrating further use cases of other service offerings, and establish different KPIs to measure success.
The customer marketing plan is an area where we see a lot of marketing teams struggle, and it deserves a deep dive. By creating a solid framework which marketing can be guided by, content can be pipelined to the audience consistently. But first let’s outline the basics:
Much like the planning stage, the customer marketing process is an area where many organizations start to falter. And without a process to get them across the finish line, the best laid plans are useless. Consider::
It’s been a long road to get to this point:the internal development of all the things you planned to do. This isn’t customer-facing yet, but we are so close! It’s finally time to craft your:
This is where the rubber meets the road. All the strategy, all the planning, all the building, it all comes down to execution now. And so, with these pieces firmly in place, it’s time to hit the very literal button on the execution. If your sales team needs to change the way they talk, they start now. If the marketing team needs to put out a newsletter, it deploys now. This last step is one of action!
We just covered a lot of ground. Take a moment to let it all sink in, and then think about which areas are self-explanatory to you and which ones aren’t. Are there pieces of the customer marketing framework you’re struggling with? Where could you use some help?
When all is said and done, your success with customer marketing depends on fleshing out each of these areas of uncertainty. But we want to leave you with a few more tips we’ve learned through the years:
Finally, don’t forget to pay special attention to the following concepts when laying the groundwork for this whole process:
There’s a lot of variability when it comes to customer marketing, including your industry, products/services, growth strategy and more. But hopefully this customer marketing framework helps you understand the best way to approach it, and how to map your efforts to the desired outcomes. Any questions? We’d love to help.