Consumer marketing orthodoxy over the last 30 years has preached the importance of targeting, loyalty, and customer retention. The teachings of Philip Kotler and his followers have been taken as gospel. But what if these theories turned out to be contradicted by empirical evidence? The work of Australian academic Byron Sharp may force a rethink of how FMCG brands go about delivering growth.
Anyone who has worked in marketing for 5 minutes will be familiar with the following:
- It costs five times less to keep a customer than it does to acquire a new one.
- Growth will come from gaining more loyal customers.
- Differentiation is the cornerstone of marketing strategy (differentiate or die).
These concepts feel like part of the furniture of the marketing world and to disagree with them would seem crazy.
But what if these apparent laws of marketing turned out to be nothing of the sort. What if they proved to be untested assumptions. What would happen if robust empirical data contradicted these hypotheses?
A Radically Different View Of Marketing
In 2010, Australian marketing academic Professor Byron Sharp, director at the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science at the University of South Australia, published a controversial book, “How Brands Grow (What Marketers Don’t Know)”.
The reason for the uproar was the subject matter – nothing short of a full frontal assault on all accepted consumer marketing wisdom (as well as the suggestion that virtually all marketing text books were wrong).
Take statement one above. The source of this claim can be traced back to 1990 when the Harvard Business Review published “Zero Defections: Quality Comes to Services”, authored by Frederick F. Reichheld and W. Earl Sasser Jr. According to this piece, the doctrine of zero defect manufacturing was transforming the world of making things, and these academics argued that the philosophy of zero defection marketing would transform the world of selling things.
Their powerful claim was that companies could boost profits by almost 100 percent by retaining just 5 percent more of their customers.
However, Sharp takes a different view to this often unchallenged preference for retention at the expense of acquisition.
He points out that Reichheld and Sasser’s apparently modest 5 percent drop in defection is actually a drop of five percentage points – from 10 percent to 5 percent, which is a 50 percent decrease, or a halving of customer defection. Not quite as easy as first thought.
But perhaps there is some empirical data to back up Reichheld and Sasser’s claim? Nope. Turns out it was just a thought experiment. It also turns out that this reduction in customer defection is assumed to be achieved at zero cost.
In the real world, how many companies get anywhere close to reducing customer defections by 50 percent for no cost? Exactly, hardly any.
Differentiation: Not What Its Cut Out To Be
But what about differentiation? Surely it can’t be argued that this is largely irrelevant?
Sharp begins with an amusing dig at marketing textbooks that are all generally titled things like “Marketing Management” or “Marketing Principles”. Not much differentiation there then.
He then looks at a key question of consumer marketing – do buyers need to perceive a meaningful difference to regularly buy a brand (i.e., show preference or loyalty)?
The answer, based on the evidence, is a resounding no.
Sharp examines data across a variety of markets, everything from soft drinks to personal computers. The conclusion: although differentiation exists, it is weak and far less important than we’ve assumed. Brands within a category do not vary markedly in their degree of differentiation, perceived or otherwise.
What About Targeting?
Surely mass marketing is a thing of the past? Apparently not, according to Sharp.
From Kotler onwards, there has been a tacit agreement with marketers that brands identify specific market segments and develop product and marketing mixes tailored to each.
Based on Sharp’s analysis, this is a red herring. Just because you can name a segment doesn’t mean it exists in the real world.
In virtually every consumer category you can think of, buyers are similar. Therefore, brands need to target the whole market rather than just ever-smaller micro segments.
Also, the idea that 80 percent of sales come from the top 20 percent of customers turns out to be false as well. The ratio is much closer to 60/20.
In other words, nearly half your sales come from people who are anything but regulars. Given that 100 percent brand loyalty is a myth, growth needs to come from targeting the customers of other brands.
Acquisition, not retention, should be the key priority of the consumer marketer. And that puts an emphasis on targeting the whole market rather than segments.
Essentially, Sharp encourages a return to mass marketing (albeit of a more sophisticated variety).
Sharp continues by laying into price promotion and loyalty programs, as well as the current vogue for inspiring “passion” in consumers towards a brand (Kevin Roberts Lovemarks concept comes in a for particular pummeling).
In the end, consumers are seen not as rational, involved and deeply committed buyers, but uncaring cognitive misers who rely upon a number of heuristics to reduce the effort in making a buying decision to a minimum.
What This All Means For Consumer Marketers?
What are the ramifications for consumer digital marketing?
On the one hand, it seems to place a huge priority on gaining as much distinctive visibility as possible – in which case, this seems to suggest a bias towards advertising in all its forms including paid social promotion.
On the other hand, does the general lack of interest on the part of consumers toward relationships with brands suggest that much of the work around building conversations, engagement and passion is largely misguided?
Conclusion
Sharp lays out a pretty powerful case, backed up by in some cases decades of empirical data. It all suggests that much of the accepted wisdom of modern day marketing is sitting on pretty shaky ground.
However, in spite of the apparent inescapability of his findings, the marketing world seems to have largely ignored his insight. Perhaps because it tells a story that people don’t want to hear. Nevertheless, it seems foolish to ignore his work completely.
If nothing else, consumer marketeers would do well to always assess whether they are putting too much emphasis on customer loyalty and retention if indeed consumers are the kind of disloyal, brand passionless, cognitive misers that Sharp portrays them as. What do you think?