CEO of Team SI, Tim Whitley, leads a discussion with Andrew Levenson (Director of Growth) and Lannie Byrd (COO and Tradigital™ Marketing Expert) to talk about marketing trends and forecasting trends in the coming year of 2022. There’s a lot of discussion surrounding the coming year due to the fact that there have been so many changes, such as the cookieless world, audience types (where first party has started taking over), the COVID effect, et cetera. Here are a few of their thoughts and marketing predictions.
Live Shopping
Live shopping is a trend that, for the past year, has really taken off in the US. Live shopping takes a model that’s been around for a long time, like QVC and shopping through a television, and ties it in with e-commerce. So, users on social media platforms can watch a video where products are displayed and promoted throughout. Then they can actually purchase them right away.
A lot of times, it has some sort of engagement aspect. So, if you’re watching a video, someone can talk about the features and the benefits of the product, and then you can comment or engage with the video, or you can purchase it. Even TikTok has shoppable videos now, where you can purchase it from within the video that you’re watching. So it’s really about making that process as smooth and as seamless as possible, while not making them leave that video or go to another platform.
And, with this, comes an opportunity for a bricks and clicks version of live shopping and personalization. For example, Amazon’s version of live shopping stops in browser, but with Walmart, they could actually put products in front of customers that they could then go pick up that day, taking them from the browser/app into the store. Even better, an outlet mall could have a list of live shopping events that could be at the mall. The customer could be on the phone live shopping, and seeing different products and specials in the mall that day. Bricks and clicks would take the e-commerce side and combine it with actually being there and getting the specials from live shopping. There are a lot of opportunities to merge the two, in-person and e-commerce, through live shopping.
The lines between marketing and operations, or sales, are being blurred because consumers want convenience. So, when they see the product, they want to be able to purchase it, and they want to be able to purchase it where they are. Consumers are wanting a convenient purchasing process, and wanting marketers and companies to meet them where they’re at in terms of “I want to purchase now, I want to purchase here. I don’t want to go into a store.” It blends the marketing, and the sales, and the operations. You have to have the capabilities and the infrastructure set up to be able to offer those kinds of features and functionality that consumers are wanting.
First, Second, and Third Party Audiences
The concept of audiences – who we target – touches every campaign and every type of work we do: from developing personas to where we spend our media budget. We begin cultivating our audience through first-party data. We utilize our clients’ data warehouses to understand which audiences make the best purchases and which we should target. This makes up our primary audience.
Yet, we also have secondary audiences. These tend to be broader target categories. How do we develop messages around those audiences to target them? What kind of media channels do we use? Where are we placing the ads? What kind of data are we using? New methodologies that navigate the cookieless world are coming out to target these unique audiences. The elimination of third-party cookies has generated new ways to identify and target those audiences.
We saw a decline in audiences generated by third-party data in 2020 and 2021. The available third-party data assets globally went from about 560,000 to 62,000. This is a big jump. Third party audiences have been streamlined. They aren’t as specific and granular, but are more generalized.