Thursday, July 21, 2011

Measurement Tip #3

To determine marketing success, you should identify and report these exhibit metrics: 1) who visited, 2) why they came, 3) what they learned and 4) what your visitors plan to do as a result of their visit.

Although many think of an exhibition as a place to put a number of products and services on display to a large number of people, the real value comes from making contact with individuals who are qualified to do business with your company. These people may be prospects, customers, suppliers or other participants in the profit equation of your business. Therefore, in order to identify and justify the value of an event marketing activity, it is essential to know and report who visited your venue and what outcomes are expected as a result of their experience. Marketing exists to create sales opportunities and to increase the probability of sale. In order to create sales opportunities, your program must target specific individuals and persuade them to act in a manner that benefits your company.

To understand the effectiveness of your marketing program it is important to know why participants came to visit and what they learned during their stay. This informs you regarding the effectiveness of your targeting and attraction campaigns and identifies the elements of the event experience that were most successful and likely to influence a visitor’s decision to act on your behalf.

The answers to the four questions listed above can be determined in a variety of ways. A common practice is to conduct live, post-visit intercept surveys. They help you understand how well you connected with your target audience. Intercept surveys provide accurate demographic profiling of visitors to your exhibit or event. This includes targeting criteria such as industry affiliation, company type, company size, individual responsibility, job title, buying readiness, and purchase intent. Post-visit intercept surveys also identify what the participants learned (if anything) and most importantly what they intend to do as a result of their visit. This data can even provide a forecast of expected sales driven from the participant’s view.

More sophisticated measures are possible using post-event survey techniques that pull from the entire event audience which includes those who visited your exhibit or event as a subset. You can identify changes in purchase intent, brand preference, brand fit and Net Promoter* scores for example. These metrics help you understand a lot more about the effectiveness of your marketing activity in creating positive change in perceptions among your target markets that result in an increased probability of sale.

Another method is to utilize technologies such as localized scanning techniques that provide real-time visitor identification and tracking of their movement. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) for example, can provide real-time activity reports on session attendance, time on the show floor, and in-booth activity by product interest and for post-event analysis.

Understanding what your visitors plan to do as a result of their visit is one of the most crucial elements. A qualified lead should be committed to take a pre-determined action that sales has defined as a step in the company’s sales cycle. A tight definition of a qualified lead will provide a strong metric regarding generation of sales opportunity.

There are many metrics that are important to exhibit and event managers. As far as ROI is concerned, determining who came, the persuasiveness of their experience and their intent to act provide the clearest measures of effectiveness.

*Net Promoter Score is a registered trademark of Satmetrix Systems, Inc., Bain & Company, and Fred Reichheld

Friday, July 15, 2011

Assessing and Managing The Agency Relationship Between A Supplier and Client

I am frequently asked by exhibit and event companies how they can strengthen and retain their customer relationships and reduce turnover. Even though agency relationship evaluation is not yet common in the events industry, measuring the effectiveness and strength of this relationship can lead to better results, lower costs and long term, mutually beneficial partnerships.

The relationship between a client and their event marketing agency has a lot to do with the level of results obtained as well as the ease, effectiveness and cost of obtaining them. Thus, evaluating agency relationships is common practice in the advertising and PR worlds. Applying a similar methodology to event marketing agencies provides a good basis for evaluation of the working relationship.

There are two types of variables that serve as agency evaluation metrics:

1. Performance Variables

These variables include such considerations as overall effectiveness, production, financial management, creative, etc. The client is asked to evaluate their agency on those aspects of support using a suggested rating scale. The client is also asked to provide an explanation of each variable as the basis for discussion and improvement.

2. Values Variables

Common values are essential to a good relationship. Value variables include elements such as the agency’s discipline (how strong are they in meeting deadlines, being present at meetings, etc.) and their resourcefulness (do they think strategically for example?). Another example might be shared responsibility. The client is also asked to rate the value variables on a similar scale and provide an explanation of each variable as the basis for discussion and improvement.

Once the variables have been established, it is essential to implement the agency evaluation as part of the overall event marketing measurement program. Relationship measurement should be supplemental to measurement of accomplishments and results. If results are less than satisfactory, the immediate focus should be on identifying and correcting factors that will produce better results from the next event. Sometimes immediate performance issues degrade into ad-hoc evaluation of the relationship, neither solving the immediate problem nor objectively diagnosing the relationship issues. If relationship measurement is structured and scheduled as a regular activity, for example quarterly, this tendency is reduced.

On a more advanced level, evaluations are completed by the agency as well, providing analysis of both sides of the relationship. Relationship variables with the largest rating gaps reveal the likely causes behind problems or friction among the team members. Changes are made that alleviate problems and progress is tracked by reporting improvement from period to period.

Although agency evaluation may be new to our world, it should be given strong consideration as an aid to increased customer satisfaction, lower turnover and greater job satisfaction for everyone. We are working on bringing this capability to the events industry. Please comment and let us know your thoughts or suggest elements of performance and values that apply to event marketing agency relationships.

For more information or to discuss this concept as a means to improve your Event Marketing program, please contact us at +1 (770) 391-0015 or heatherdeloach@constellationcc.com.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Measurement Tip # 2

Gather and share information that will satisfy your internal customer - Sales.

(This is the second in a series of articles for the MC2 eConnections Newsletter)

The sales team is the internal customer of the marketing function. Marketing is employed to generate sales opportunities and to increase the probability of sales. These same objectives apply to a marketing event. So, what information can you supply that will be valuable for the sales team?

Beginning with the planning phase, define for the sales team who is “addressable” at the upcoming event. The correct strategy, messaging, products and content can be determined by knowing the target audience available at a marketing event. This information is valuable in choosing which products to feature and even which sales team members will participate. You might also identify who among your existing customers are likely to attend. This information is often available from the event organizer and from your own measurement records from the last event cycle.

Second, give the sales team a forecast of how many participants are expected at your booth or event along with their demographics. Suggest that the sales team use this information to determine which demonstrations and other experiences to include. Forecast the number of expected engagements and estimate the number of committed leads that should result. From there the sales team can help you estimate the “sales opportunity” value for the event.

You should not only give information to the sales team, but you should also seek it. Ask the sales team to define the steps that an interested, targeted visitor should be asked to take. This will become your definition of a qualified lead, i.e. someone who is committed to take those steps with your company.

Finally, report the actual attendance at your event in the same way you defined the forecast. Who visited? Define your visitors by the following:

• Industry
• Company type,
• Relationship to your company (such as customer, prospect, supplier, partner, etc.)
• Company size
• Titles
• Level of decision authority individual contact information

This information comes from your scans or leads documentation and may also be supplemented by an exit survey of visitors who have completed their experience.

Of course, the golden ticket for the sales team is complete documentation of well qualified leads. Work with sales to determine how much information is really required to support an effective follow-up. Requiring too much information will clog the process and dissuade prospects from participating in documenting the lead. Too little information makes it less likely that sales will want to follow-up.

You want to confirm the specifics of the follow-up step with the visitor before you pass this information on to sales. Clarify the following:

• “Who”- As in the visitors name and organization
-Remember to get accurate contact information

• “What”-As in the nature of the follow-up expected
• “When”- What is the mutually agreeable time frame for the follow-up

Your lead system should have a place for all of these data points. By keeping this data in a common database, you can analyze and report how well your events have provided the sales team with access to qualified targets over the year.

Your personal influence will increase considerably if you are seen as a manager who can deliver a well-targeted audience at your events. A good measurement program shows you how to improve upon your accomplishments in every category. I hope you tune in each month as we expand on the knowledge and skills to justify and improve your events and elevate your status in the organization.

Please contact me if you have questions or ideas you would like to share at edjones@constellationcc.com, or call 770-391-0015.

Ed