Tag Archives: brand management

Transparency in Business: Why It’s Important

Transparency

Brand transparency is the key to success in the digital world. Being open in business has never been more important, whether it is content marketing, customer service, business model, or responding to a crisis. Transparency is a great way to gain customers’ trust, following, traffic, loyalty, sales by converting visitors into customers. 

In the digital age, customers and your competitors have tons information online available to them than ever before. Brands that follow the model of being transparency win. Companies slowly understand that customers want honesty which begins with knowing your customers or audience by building a community and by engaging in an ongoing dialogue. Customers research and look into different resources before making a purchase. What it means is that people look for the truth and the marketing jargon is becoming outdated.

Companies that take the leap absolutely see the rewards. For example, Moz, a company that sells inbound marketing and marketing analytics software subscriptions. Moz is one of the most recognized marketing technology company and the company is known to be very transparent and authentic. In 2012, Moz published their funding and results in full detail for everyone to see. 

Another example is Buffer, a social media management software company. Buffer published the salaries of every employee, including the CEO. This move was very bold and I am sure this move made some of their employees uncomfortable. The results of this transparency were quite amazing, the company was praised for its bravery and they were flooded with resumes and gained a tremendous traffic and engagement on their site. Besides displaying how much each employee is making, but also the formula for how they arrived at such a salary. For example, one blog post received more than 381 comments.

In 2008, Domino’s Pizza surveyed their customers and shared the results/news publicly, which included negative feedbacks. As a result, Domino’s Pizza used the negative feedback to ask their customers to help them fix the problems. By 2009, the company’s stock jumped from $7.73 to $105.11.

There are many other companies that could have changed the outcome of their crisis through being transparent. For example:

 Qantas – Twitter Nosedive

Microsoft (Xbox One) – Online Service   

Volkswagen- Emissions    

Transparency is becoming a cornerstone of brand communication and one of the most important factors in customer engagement. Brands can no longer afford not to align what a brand says and what a brand does. Consumers are becoming more interested in what a brand stand for and seek more information about the brand.

One particular example stands out, during Xbox One launch in the midst of the confusion and anger about their online subscription. One employee tweeted ‘’sorry I don’t get the drama around having an ‘always –on’ console.  That’s the world we live in. #dealwithit.’ This angered a lot of customers, and the employee was fired.

This shows that brands should dismantle silos, build a customer centric and transparent business model that must be followed by the entire organization, not by a single department.

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So, what do you think about transparency? Share your views.

Target Market Selection

Target marketing is a particular market segment at which a marketing campaign is focused. When selecting a target market it is important to make sure that it fits the company’s objectives, resources, and capabilities.

There are different aspects that should be considered when evaluating your market segment. For instance; risk level, competition in the segment, the growth rate of the segment, brand loyalty of existing customers in the segment, the size of the segment, sales potential, etc. There are other market research and analysis that should also be considered like test marketing, buyer intentions, and sales potential.

Different market segments for targeting:

  • Single-segment/concentrated- one market and not the entire market.
  • Selective specialization/differentiated strategy- a segment that is based on its range of products instead of one market.
  • Market specialization- specializes in serving one particular market segment with an array of different products.
  • Full market specialization- targets the entire market. This is a mass market strategy, different segments.

If a company develops a strong competitive advantage, it may find it profitable to pursue a larger segment. Although larger segments may have more competition and not necessarily profitable.  It’s important for the company to offer superior value to the targeted segment and also get a positive return on investment.