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Acquiring
a customer is not the end of the marketing process?
Ganesh
Mandalam
Gulu
Mirchandani, managing director of Mirc Electronics,
spoke to Manoj Khatri about the changing competitive
and technological dynamics of the brown and white
goods industry, the forces that are likely to influence
the future of the industry and how Onida is gearing
up to meet the challenges.

CEO
of Xerago Consulting, Ganesh Mandalam, spoke to
Manoj Khatri about the modern techniques of understanding
consumer behaviour that are redefining customer
management across all segments and especially consumer
services.
What are the challenges
that a modern marketing manager faces? What has
given rise to these challenges?
Marketing has lost its edge. Around
the world, organisations are questioning the necessity
of having a marketing department. The marketing
manager today is hard-pressed to answer the hard-hitting
questions put to him by the CEO.
How many new customers
have you brought to the company?
How much business
value has your marketing efforts delivered?
How much of
the companys profits is purely the contribution
of marketing?
And so
on. Clearly, the traditional marketer has no available
data to be able to justify his role in the organisation.
Add to this the exponential increase in the difficulty
levels of marketing to todays highly informed
consumer. Seth Godin in his path-breaking book Permission
Marketing points out that the average urban consumer
faces a barrage of over a million advertising and
marketing communication messages in a day. The barrage
starts in the morning when you open your newspaper
while having your cup of tea. Then as you hit the
road to work, the entire urban landscape is one
large Andy Warholesque canvas of brand messages.
You settle down at your desk and boot your machine.
Before you can get to the business end of your mail,
theres the inevitable spam that you have to
wade through. Then those irritating phone calls
throughout the day promising you free credit cards
with a credit limit that makes you think you are
an Arab oil well owner. And as you retire to watch
some TV, the barrage continues.
As a marketer, if you wanted to reach out to yourself,
youd simply quit.
How important is the role
of customer in developing marketing strategies for
tomorrow? How has this changed over the past few
years?
No other function in a business organisation
works under as dynamic an environment as marketing.
And nothing can be more dynamic than changing consumer
profiles, attitudes and behaviour. Till five years
ago, one had to hunt for an LIC agent to pay ones
premium or buy a new policy. Today, one can get
do it on the Internet or at the nearest post office
or even better, one can simply leave a standing
instruction with ones bank. LIC has recognised
that the consumer of today has no time to go to
the vendor. The vendor has to come out of his ivory
tower to where the consumer is located. The reasons
could be any number - increased competition being
one major one. The point is that LIC cannot ignore
the changing consumer attitudes and behaviour. Another
development in the consumer space is the growing
diversity and individuality of each consumer. Take
the example of credit cards. While most banks have
a generic Gold and Silver card concept, even within
the Gold card segment, there are various customisations
- fee-waivers, free add-on cards, extra credit limits,
balance transfer facilities, embedded insurance,
etc. This makes credit card marketing extremely
complex as every consumer would have his or her
own requirements and each credit card account would
have to be structured accordingly. The same can
be applied to many other verticals like telecom,
insurance, retail, travel, healthcare, etc. With
the increasing service element in verticals like
automobiles, IT and even manufacturing, many other
traditional product verticals will soon face the
problem of individuality. The core of marketing
is identifying and understanding your customers.
And critical to this intelligence is the ability
to update the information in tune with the dynamism
of the market environment. Given the individuality
of each consumer, the task of gathering customer
data and analysing the same becomes even more difficult.
This knowledge remains a big handicap for marketers
in India resulting in subjective decision making
and higher hit and miss initiatives.
What is analytical marketing?
How is it
used to optimise marketing strategies?
Marketing
professionals, by nature, have to be innovative.
Over the years, many new innovations have been introduced.
When advertising became too expensive, Avon and
Amway introduced Multi-Level Marketing and have
become Fortune 500 companies. Multi-Level marketing
has been extended in the Internet age through variations
like viral marketing; member-get-member (MGM) programmes
and affiliate marketing. Direct marketing, PR, telemarketing,
web marketing and now SMS marketing have taken advantage
of new technology to serve the need of the harried
marketer. Most of the bigger advertising agencies
today have more business coming from non-traditional
advertising services than through mass media advertising.
Today, the new revolution hitting marketing is analytics.
The science of analytics has now entered the domain
of marketing to provide that critical insight required
by marketers to take better decisions. Using data
mining theories based on varied sciences like statistics,
artificial intelligence and psychology, analytic
tools like Affinium Model and SAS can mine through
terabytes of customer data and generate various
business intelligence reports - customer profitability,
cross sell propensity, attrition probabilities,
and customer life time value. Coupled with the use
of alternate channels (telephone, internet, email,
SMS, direct mail), Analytical Marketing creates
a platform for the marketer to precisely identify
his prospect, understand his behaviour and pitch
a product or service to customise his requirements,
thereby increasing success rates as well as optimising
marketing budgets. ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
generates over 30 per cent of their new customers
through analytical marketing. Across the world,
the average contribution of analytical marketing
is almost 50 per cent. The role of traditional mass
media advertising is restricted to creating and
maintaining brand awareness as well as working on
the more subjective elements of creating brand equity.
Analytical marketing provides marketers the critical
infrastructure that can result in significant return
on marketing investment and thus ensures the existence
of marketing.
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