Jonathan Becher, CMO of international software provider SAP, recently revealed seven key takeaways for brands that want to create powerful connections with their consumers. Here’s a recap of his insights from C2 Montréal.
1. People Are Looking to Connect
We all want to connect. It’s a desire innate in all of us, and really connecting with others has a positive affect on the brain. Studies show how we are “hard-wired” to seek out social connections. Making such connections is highly rewarded by our brains: endorphins are released, oxytocin levels increase, stress levels go down, and our mood lifts.
2. There’s a Difference Between the Quantity and Quality of Connections
Not every connection is powerful. A shared level of empathy and mutual emotion is needed. In a social business context, brands must reach out and show they care about their consumers. And it isn’t the case that we can’t create meaningful connections remotely, or over long distances. Letter writing is a bit of a lost art, but for centuries it’s been a powerful enabler of human connections. It can be slow, but there’s an art to writing a good letter in order for meaning not to be lost even if it arrives a month later.
3. Marketing is Both an Art and Science
This has been an oft-debated topic, especially with the growing influence of data science on marketing. The buzz-phrase being thrown around is that “Mad Men are becoming Math Men.” Ultimately there are two elements essential to marketing:
- Tapping into the human psyche. This is the very heart of marketing. Understanding an unmet need amongst a small group, and designing a product or service to fulfill that need.
- Establishing a preference for a particular product for a specific number of people. Building equity and loyalty for a brand.
4. Social is an Enabler, Not a Goal in Itself
Every department is supported by social media. Whether it’s sales, development, support, or marketing, social can help achieve those goals.
5. Build a Network and Put It to Work
You can use the power of connections to build your own network. The SAP community network numbers 2 million members making tens of millions of connections. It’s been a great forum for ideas. SAP recently launched Ideaplace, which is designed to crowdsource SAP technology, bringing attention to features that are being talked about directly from the crowd. You can go one step further and start outsourcing the development too, giving away the intellectual property to third parties so they can kick off development and improve the variety of the ecosystem.
6. Integrate Analytics With Accessible Media to Tap Into People’s Emotions
Analytics can tell you what your audience is interested in. That’s incredibly powerful for engagement, as it gives you a route through to people’s passions and emotions. For example, nothing stirs up people’s emotions like sports. SAP worked on nba.com/stats and provided an integrated analytics suite, with video highlights, where users could build custom statistics about the NBA. Reaching out and engaging people in what they are passionate about can make even the most boring company more interesting.
7. Connections Are the Ultimate Form of Human Communication
For businesses today, it’s about going back to the heart of marketing. Really understanding what your consumers need, and what will make their lives easier, and then communicating that with them in a way that is as powerful and relevant as possible. If you can do that, you’ve made a quality connection. You can watch Becher’s excellent presentation below: