Marketing automation continues to grow. From the early days of simply creating automated email replies, there are now whole enterprise suites of software designed to lower the cost and increase the efficiency of the overall marketing cycle. But are there limits to the amount of work that can be outsourced to an algorithm? Are we at the end of the beginning of the marketing automation journey? Or is “peak automation” just around the corner?
I’ve just sent an email to Jeff, the sales director at Acme Widgets Inc. I know with Jeff that it is extremely important to state my purpose clearly in the first sentence and that I shouldn’t send him lots of extra information like links and attachments. And when I call Jeff on the phone, I know I should stay focused on one point and get right to the bottom line and not ask lots of questions.
You might imagine that I’ve known Jeff for some time in order to have such a clear and specific view on how I should interact and communicate with him.
But here’s the thing. I’ve never met Jeff. And I’ve been able to write my email to him purely based on what I could find out on the public Internet. The same goes for my telephone style. Not only that, my research took approximately 2 seconds.
This is all thanks to a new tool called Crystal Knows. Dubbed as the “the biggest improvement to email since spellcheck”, Crystal Knows claims to create unique personality profiles “for every person with an online presence, preparing you to speak or write in someone else’s natural communication style.”
By simply searching for the person you want to get in touch with, the tool provides a detailed report on the personality of your target contact. You can then use this information to tailor your email or phone call to them.
But how accurate is it? The tool itself provides its own confidence level.
Above 80pc and it is extremely confident that it is providing you with an accurate assessment of the person concerned. Some early users have expressed skepticism (like Lucy Kellaway at the FT), but many others report back that the results aren’t bad at all.
But What Does This Have To Do With Consumer Marketing?
Imagine I could combine Crystal Knows with my CRM and marketing automation systems? It presumably wouldn’t be too much of a stretch to automate not only when and how I contact my prospects and customers but also personalise the content and special offers to them based upon this kind of insight? Crystal Knows already provides an API so you can see that this is already an area where the technology is heading.
The role of automation continues to advance in other areas as well. Companies like Narrative Science and Automated Insights are removing the need for human beings to analyze and write reports or, in the latter case, write news stories.
Narrative Science, for example, provides a free service for Google Analytics users called Quill Engage. (There is a similar free service for Twitter too). By allowing access to your Google Analytics account, the tool will analyze your website data and automatically write a natural language report based on the information provided. Every week, you receive a detailed analysis that is hard to detect as being generated by a computer program rather than a human being.
Automated Insights is already being used by major news outlets such as the Associated Press to write press articles algorithmically. The company claims to have automatically created 1 billion stories in the last 12 months and is capable of creating 2,000 stories per second.
Last week, the technology was pitted against an experienced journalist to see who could write up a news story faster. The Automated Insights “robot reporter” won the speed trial easily – 2 minutes versus over 7 minutes.
But what of the quality of the content? At the moment, the public vote appears to still favor the human being. But is it only a matter of time before we find it tough to distinguish between content created by a human being and content generated by some lines of software code?
The New York Times has already helpfully provided an online quiz to see just how far you can tell the difference. You may be surprised or appalled by the results.
The Limits Of Automation
But surely there are limits to the use of automation, particularly in the realm of consumer marketing? Technology is clearly being used to reduce the cost of previously expensive, inefficient, and ineffective marketing techniques.
Gini Dietrich argued recently in her blog post Why PR Can’t Be Automated that here was an example of a discipline that would remain immune to the tide of algorithms threatening to overwhelm the marketing profession. It is a familiar position.
Things like relationships can’t be automated. Therefore there will always be a need in marketing for highly paid professionals who can provide this level of valuable human insight and interaction.
However, just because you don’t believe something shouldn’t be automated, it won’t stop people from trying. The inexorable pressure on driving down costs will inevitably lead to people attempting to replace expensive human beings with cheaper technology.
And it isn’t just marketing being impacted by the relentless rise of automation. As Harvard academic Justin Reich, an expert on the impact of technology, commented: “Robots and AI will increasingly replace routine kinds of work – even the complex routines performed by artisans, factory workers, lawyers and accountants.”
He could easily have added marketing professionals. Even digital marketing professionals. Although the prospects look good at the moment, it would be risky to assume that one’s current area of digital marketing expertise will remain immune forever to the forces of automation.
Conclusion
Consumer marketing presumably will continue to benefit from technology and automation for some time. But where can and should we draw the line? Or is the ultimate end game to allow the machines to get on with it and remove the need for messy, illogical, inefficient and downright contrary human beings altogether?
Where do you think this will all end?