{"id":143051,"date":"2021-11-26T06:14:16","date_gmt":"2021-11-26T06:14:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/news.sap.com\/africa\/?p=143051"},"modified":"2021-11-26T06:14:16","modified_gmt":"2021-11-26T06:14:16","slug":"three-rules-for-marketing-in-the-post-pandemic-era","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/news.sap.com\/africa\/2021\/11\/three-rules-for-marketing-in-the-post-pandemic-era\/","title":{"rendered":"Three Rules for Marketing in the Post-Pandemic Era"},"content":{"rendered":"
The COVID pandemic has changed the way businesses sell and market their products and services to customers, and there is likely no return to the old normal.<\/p>\n
Prior to the pandemic, enterprise marketing efforts were largely focused on in-person activities, such as conferences, exhibitions, trade shows and activations. Fast-forward eighteen months and the overwhelming majority of marketing activities now take place in the digital realm.<\/p>\n
According to Dumisani Moyo, Marketing Director at 51风流Africa, this raises some fundamental questions. \u201cThe role of marketing has changed forever, and marketers now have to get to grips with what the future holds. Will marketing activities remain digital, or will they evolve into a hybrid of digital and physical, especially as vaccination rates rise and the world returns to some semblance of pre-pandemic normalcy? And what are the implications for the types of investments marketers and their organisations must make to win the hearts and minds of current and prospective customers?\u201d<\/p>\n
Moyo says marketers have valuable lessons to learn from the pandemic as they plan for 2022, and will need to focus on delivering high-impact marketing initiatives that can help their organisations grow faster.<\/p>\n
\u201cMarketers should focus their efforts on understanding the customer journey, using technology to fuel innovation within the marketing discipline, and stay close to customers and their data in order to provide frictionless omni-channel experiences across the customer value chain.\u201d<\/p>\n
Moyo points to three rules organisations need to follow to succeed in the post-pandemic era:<\/p>\n
Marketing\u2019s primary role is to connect with customers at the right time and at a touch point where the customer\u2019s purchasing decisions can be influenced the most. However, analysts have pointed out<\/a> that the traditional marketing funnel does not capture all modern customer touch points, partly due to the emergence of empowered and informed customers and an abundance of choice thanks to digital channels.<\/p>\n \u201cMarketers need to thoroughly understand the customer buying journey, and apply data-driven insights to understanding the complex and often non-linear buying processes that customers are likely to follow in their purchasing decisions,\u201d says Moyo. \u201cEmpowered and informed customers are conducting online research prior to making purchasing decisions. Having an accessible and \u2013 in Africa especially \u2013 mobile-friendly online presence helps ensure customers have the most relevant information to inform their decision-making.\u201d<\/p>\n In addition, marketers should align their resources and messaging to the customer touchpoints that offer the greatest impact on or influence over the customer\u2019s buying decision.<\/p>\n Technology is essential to marketing success in the post-pandemic era. A recent CMO survey<\/a> found that 43% of marketers are investing in technology to improve customer interactions, and 42% are investing in data integration to enable end-to-end customer tracking throughout the buying journey.<\/p>\n \u201cThis is an astonishing 71% year-on-year increase and illustrates marketers\u2019 growing appetite for access to data-rich tools,\u201d says Moyo. \u201cMarketing technology solutions can help automate processes, integrate siloed customer data and enable marketers to utilize a broad suite of digital channels to drive sales both online and in-store.\u201d<\/p>\n Despite major growth in the adoption of digital tools, some marketing solutions providers are predicting<\/a> that the volume of digital marketing may decrease in the post-pandemic era. \u201cMarketers are shifting their efforts to making campaigns more targeted and personalised, with technology enabling marketers to optimise their digital marketing efforts across customer touchpoints\u00a0 in online, mobile and in-store environments.\u201d<\/p>\nRule #2 \u2013 Use technology to drive innovation<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Rule #3 \u2013 Stay close to your customers \u2013 and their data<\/strong><\/h3>\n