The Importance of Customer Service in Today’s World

Reading Luis Santos’s blog post I’m Best Friends With My Brand…Are You? relating to how brands need to be personal and more “human” reminded me of the importance of building strong customer relationships. He touched on the fact that being more personal is one of the few ways a brand can distinguish itself from the competition and be successful is today’s highly saturated markets. His thoughts and ideas precisely captured what most consumers are really looking for from the brands they purchase goods and services from.

This led me to think about how customer service is continuing to become a more and more integral aspect for the majority of businesses. In most markets, there is little differentiation amongst the actual products or services provided, and therefore companies need to look for other ways to make themselves stand out. Customer service can be a valuable tool to do this. In order to provide this, brands need to be geared towards the long run and have the ability to build a strong reputation over time. They also need to constantly communicate with their customers and react to their changing wants and needs. This involves having in place a strong customer feedback system, and employing intelligent and helpful staff in order to personally assist customers with questions or problems they may have. Brands that are able to stand out in these areas will gain an significant advantage over their competition and if they can maintain a high level of customer service, will continue to succeed well into the future.

Promoting Super Bowl Ads

Reading fellow classmate Zane King’s blog on “Marketing at the 2014 Super Bowl”(https://blogs.ubc.ca/zaneking1/2012/01/16/hello-world/) made me think a little deeper about the complex marketing involved with and around the Super Bowl. Zane discussed the massive amount of marketing that occurs during the Super Bowl and how important it is for companies to take advantage of the opportunity to attract potentially millions of new customers.  This made me realize that not only are companies advertising their particular product or service at the Super Bowl, but they are also promoting these very ads well in advance of the actual event. Essentially, this means that there is marketing towards marketing occurring during and around the Super Bowl.

Rapid increases in the usage of social media have made the initial marketing of advertisements more important than ever. Companies are now given the opportunity to build hype about their commercials by posting teaser videos on youtube, leaking hints and clues on twitter, or creating event pages on facebook. By promoting their actual commercials, companies can gain an early advantage over their competitors by getting inside the minds of consumers before everyone else does. The timing of these early promotions is crucial to their success – too early and they are forgotten by the time the Super Bowl actually occurs, but too late and they have already fallen behind in the race to market themselves.

As the Super Bowl’s come along year after year, it is becoming more and more challenging for companies to come up with unique and effective commercials to air during the event. By taking advantage of the ever-changing social media trends, companies can stretch their marketing campaigns out for much more than just one day. This will be the new source of competitive advantage surrounding the famous marketing event that is the Super Bowl.

Kia 2012 Super Bowl Ad Teaser

Heinz’s Crazy Coloured Ketchup

Aside

In 2000, Heinz came up with the ‘brilliant’ idea of changing the colour of their ketchup from the traditional red to a variety of different colours including green, purple, and blue. As Sandie Glass writes in her blog, What Were They Thinking? The Day Ketchup Crossed The Line From Perfect To Purple, Heinz erred in not targeting the proper audience – parents, as well as failing to find an efficient method to produce the products in a timely fashion. Although these reasons all had some effect on the success of crazy coloured ketchup, I believe that the main reason why Heinz failed with this is because the idea itself is simply not a good one. Ketchup is something that every person in the world associates with red, and this fundamental feature of it cannot be changed. The idea of putting any other coloured ketchup on my food just doesn’t seem right. The same goes for any other common food item that has been around for a long time. Mustard is yellow, relish is green, carrots are orange, and blueberries are blue. Changing any of these colours ruins the reputation that product has developed over the years. Innovative ideas and product improvements should be encouraged by all companies, but fundamental changes to the core values of products should not. Heinz should never have bothered with the idea of changing the colour of their most well-known product.

Link:http://www.fastcompany.com/1779591/what-were-they-thinking-the-day-ketchup-crossed-the-line-from-fun-food-to-play-food

 

 

Commercial Overplay: Cheetah Power Surge

Recently, I remember every single commercial break during Canucks games featuring the same Cheetah Power Surge advertisement over and over again. I didn’t mind seeing it the first few times, but it quickly became extremely annoying and eventually forced me to change the channel during every break in order to avoid it. This kind of commercial overplay has become extremely common in virtually all televised sports games and other events. The exact same commercials are thrown at you repeatedly in an attempt to force their messages into your mind. Personally, I can’t stand watching the same ads all the time, and I believe that this almost always negatively effects the company advertised. It would make much more sense for these companies to either create a larger variety of commercials to rotate that would keep the viewer more engaged, or to simply purchase less air time.