Close your eyes. Think of the last time you had to work on a cross-functional team to achieve some kind of common goal.
Okay now open them.
What did you picture? Was it something like this?
The most important steps in personalization are those initial ones to adequately plan, execute, and refine your strategy.
Close your eyes. Think of the last time you had to work on a cross-functional team to achieve some kind of common goal.
Okay now open them.
What did you picture? Was it something like this?
This is the cold reality for many cross-functional teams, especially those tasked with implementing a personalization strategy. Nobody knows who’s doing what, or when, or why, or... anything.
In a recent Optimizely study, 36% of executives noted that they’re being held back from implementing personalization due to disjointed workflows.
So, it doesn’t matter how many superheroes and webslingers you have on your team. Without a unified solution to bring everyone together, you’ll excel in nothing but finger-pointing and (if you’re lucky) brightly colored tights.
Here are some tips to get started with planning your personalization strategy.
36% of executives noted that they’re being held back from implementing personalization due to disjointed workflows.
Personalization is a marriage of art and science, and the scientific method starts with defining a problem (actually, it starts with observations, but let’s assume you’ve already observed customer behavior).
For the overwhelming majority of companies, that’s a large enough hurdle to hold them back from personalization. In fact the same study shows just 26% of marketing, ecommerce, and IT executives worldwide have a unified definition of personalization throughout their organization.
How your organization defines personalization will be heavily influenced by what your organization does and who you do it for. Some tips to help you define personalization would be:
(Don’t just say “we want them to make a purchase,” because duh).
Your definition of personalization and how to implement should depend on what you want your customers to do at various stages of the buying cycle.
Personalization for your organization might mean providing the most relevant content to your users in order to boost time on site. This is especially true for non-profits and NGOs.
But for ecommerce companies and retailers, personalization might me something completely different. They might want to deliver product recommendations and usher users towards a purchase as quickly as possible.
Personalization is a true team sport that requires effective coordination between many different departments. Without a centralized solution that allows for collaboration, visualization, ideation, and visibility, it’s basically just going to be one giant Spiderman meme after another.
Before you do anything, you’ll need to ensure you have a shared workspace that allows for cross-functional planning and collaboration.
By adopting a unified platform for the planning phase of personalization, you’ll be able to strategize, develop, and approve personalization campaigns from one single workspace.
Remember when we said you don’t need to begin with personalization planning? (It was only a minute or two ago).
Well, at some point, you’re going to need data if you want to really dig deep into providing the personalization experiences all customers expect.
In the aforementioned study, 44% of executives noted that complicated or fragmented data is a top challenge, while about the same amount noted that a lack of effective analytics holds them up. Typically, fragmented data is a result of:
One way to guarantee data won’t be an issue is with a powerful customer data platform (CDP).
Instead of tearing everything down and starting from scratch with your data that’s strewn about countless data warehouses and data clouds, leverage a CDP to keep track of constantly accumulating data. This is especially important for personalization, as you want to ensure you’re surfacing the right data at the right time to the right customers.
A robust CDP can help you get a complete view of your customers and create unlimited audience segments from your data. It acts as the command-and-control hub for your entire operation, streamlining analytics and helping you create campaign strategies to turn your anonymous shoppers into loyal customers.
An effective CDP will provide a holistic view of your customers while automatically creating audience segments. It will also streamline analytics to help you understand what’s slowing down your campaigns.
It seems like the more solutions we add to our tech stack, the less we’re able to get done.
It’s because solutions often aren’t built with the idea of integrating easily with other tools, they require routine maintenance, they break often, they weren’t a good fit to begin with, you’re locked into a 10,000-year contract, etc., etc., etc.
Without some technological wizardry, a bloated tech stack is going to slow everything down, which is a big reason why 40% of executives say they have difficulty scaling their program, while 39% noted that they’re struggling to implement personalization in real-time.
Similar to data collection, if you’re relying on a patchwork of disparate systems to execute scaling and implementation, chances are your personalization efforts are being throttled, and that negative experience is being passed onto the customer.
Building a solid framework early will establish the building blocks you’ll need to effectively scale your personalization efforts:
Personalization is a team sport that requires careful coordination and a unified vision. Before you even get to the phases where you’re trying to decide how to balance rule-based personalization with AI personalization, or you’re evaluating solutions based on flicker, you need to lay out your strategy and get your team in order. No solution (even one as powerful as Optimizely Personalization) will be able to overcome a lack of cohesion and vision.
If you’re just starting to invest in personalization, or you’re looking to revamp the entire process, it can seem pretty daunting at first. The most important steps are those initial ones you take to ensure you can adequately plan, execute, and refine your personalization strategy.