Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Tying Events to Business Improvement and ROI “Business Speak”

BY: Ed Jones Date: August 6, 2008

Today I read a great post by David Carter on ROI and social media. It provided a simple structure for linking marketing activity to business improvement. As you know, I am all about simple structures for things that are perceived to be difficult. I suggest you read it. The structure he presents is entirely consistent with what we teach about event ROI. I was encouraged to make the same case for events, so with appropriate acknowledgment to Mr. Carter, and borrowing from the structure and questions he presented, here is the event version for tying activity to ROI.

Identifying something to measure is perhaps the most difficult hurdle in event measurement. Once crossed you are well on your way to justifying an event expenditure. You may have 1,000 customers and prospects visit your exhibit or conference, but none of those visitors have an identifiable value until you can link them to an element in the simplified profit equation. Revenue – Expense = Profit.

To be successful you must think of event activities in terms of value to the company. Consider the simple relationships between typical event activities, business processes and the simplified profit equation:

• Seeing and documenting new prospects (sometimes referred to as developing leads) is really customer acquisition.
• Seeing existing customers and thanking them for the business, providing executive access and introducing them to preferential programs is really customer retention.
• Briefing customers at a conference on how to use, manage and troubleshoot a system or product is really customer support.
• Asking customers and prospects questions at an event is really product or market research.
• Spreading and reinforcing the brand and priority messages is really advertising.

So, tying event accomplishments to value might be more straightforward than previously thought. Ask the people who manage these functions within your company for the following values:

• What is the cost of acquiring a customer? How much are you willing to spend to get a customer?
• What is the annual value of a customer? Do you sell a one time service or product, or do you have a recurring stream of revenue?
• What does it cost to support the customer? For example, what is the average cost of a call to the support center?
• What do you spend on product or market research? Be sure to include focus groups, attitude and awareness, perception, brand research and testing?
• What is the cost of our advertising on a gross and targeted impression basis?

Most event interaction goals can be tied to the numbers above. Then you can speak about event accomplishments in business terms. Report accomplishments as either an influence on revenue or cost. Those are the two ingredients of profit.
As Mr. Carter points out, the difference between the cost to acquire a customer, and the average value of an existing customer is the value of retaining a customer. Customer retention should be a primary event marketing goal. Mention customer retention and you will get any executive's attention.

How many customers were briefed on a new product at your last show? What would be the cost to do that in the field? How many technical questions were fielded at your conference or at a show? How many calls to the call center were avoided? Those are direct influences on cost reduction/ expense avoidance, one of the four key values from event marketing. What was the impact on customer satisfaction and the associated impact on customer retention?

Linking event activity to these types of business accomplishments puts events in the context of business improvement.

Ed

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi Ed,

Thanks for sharing - this is brilliant in its simplicity.

Best,

Gary Nolan