Quick service brands have a certain reputation. Some of it is bad – the least of which includes unhealthy meal options – while some of it is good. Think: Fast, cheap and easy. Some of those brands are working on the former; others have emerged as thought leaders when it comes to the mobile order component of the latter. While it’s too soon to say whether ordering pizza via emojis is the wave of the future, marketing experts agree it’s a step in the right direction for mobile commerce.
In a flurry of pizza emoji tweets last week, Domino’s announced its latest order innovation and became the latest brand to distill mobile orders to a single step.
To order pizza with an emoji, customers add their Twitter handles to their Domino’s Pizza Profiles and then order their so-called Easy Orders by tweeting the pizza emoji (or the hashtag #EasyOrder) to @Dominos. (Domino’s will then send the Easy Order via an automated direct message, which customers must confirm.)
A Domino’s rep notes the brand has millions of profiles set up in its online system and “the vast majority” have an established Easy Order.
The rep says the pizza emoji joins other ordering platforms, which include Samsung Smart TVs and Pebble and Android smartwatches, as well as the brand’s voice app, “Dom.”
“We’re paying attention to our customers and know they have all sorts of devices,” the rep writes in an email. “We want to be able to let them order from any of them.”
A Powerful Branding Tool
According to Kate Rush Sheehy, director of social media at R/GA, from a marketing standpoint alone, the pizza emoji is a smart step for Domino’s because the brand is “making a move to own one of only 722 emojis. That’s a powerful branding tool.”
But, Sheehy notes, it’s too early to tell whether this will translate to widespread consumer adoption/usage.
“We’ve seen things like Starbucks Tweet-a-Coffee come and go,” she said. “Where Twitter commerce has been really effective is around creating a movement when it comes to transaction-like tweet-to-donate [campaigns] for the Red Cross during natural disasters or individuals encouraging their networks to help them fund a Kickstarter. Those examples are around activating a base to support a cause, group or individual that the donator cares about.”
Further, Emily Grossman, mobile marketing specialist at Mobile Moxie, notes Domino’s is essentially extending an existing behavior.
“As mobile devices become a primary device for many consumers, we’ve seen a resistance to repeated typing-intensive activities like entering in credit card information – one-touch ordering has taken off because it allows consumers to set up a certain amount of credentials one time in advance and then use their mobile devices to execute those credentials,” Grossman said. “Things like ‘tweet to order’ or single-tap ordering are very much the culmination of a saved-credentials trend for which we’ve seen strong consumer demand for some time. Emojis take that one step further and help make the mobile interaction even quicker and easier.”
Further, Djamel Agaoua, CEO of MobPartner, notes Domino’s has found a way to conduct transactions outside of its app and mobile site and calls the move “very smart.”
“The fast food industry is all about speed and convenience — and so is your mobile device. The integration of the two is the perfect marriage,” Agaoua adds.
Single-Tap Orders
Single-step mobile orders aren’t entirely new.
Taco Bell debuted a feature called Rotate to Reorder when the brand launched its mobile app in October 2014. Per a brand rep, the app essentially saves a consumer’s last order, so he or she simply rotates the phone 90 degrees and the last order pops up on the screen at checkout.
In addition, Chipotle’s Apple Watch app boasts a Burrito Button that allows users to quickly place orders.
“Every new piece of technology should help consumers do things faster, better, simpler,”Sheehy said. “That’s what makes the Chipotle Apple Watch app so great – it’s a simpler version to help their customers re-order faster.”
Further, she notes that one-tap ordering is a “no-brainer” with the advent of Apple Watch and should “without a doubt be on every food service brand’s radar” even if consumers will still need their devices to set up accounts and to set preferences and favorites — just as Amazon 1‑Click requires a customer’s preferred address and credit card.
Grossman agrees it takes Amazon’s 1‑Click ordering to the next level.
“From a business perspective, single-tap ordering eliminates a ‘cart abandon’ phenomenon that occurs when consumers have to enter their payment or shipping details and are given the opportunity to reassess their purchase, and one-tap ordering usually increases conversion rates,” Grossman said.
And while it makes purchases appear more convenient because it eliminates re-entering credit card details and the like, it also “plays strongly into our ‘on-demand’ consumer culture by creating the illusion of faster processing and instant results.”
However, Lily Croll, senior social strategist at digital marketing agency Wire Stone, notes brands must overcome certain barriers surrounding consumer trust with stored payment information and accidental orders.
Versus Other Brands/Apps
Single-step mobile orders like the pizza emoji also allow Domino’s to distinguish itself within the quick service space.
For example, Burger King rolled out chicken fries emojis earlier this year, but customers can’t actually order chicken fries with chicken fries emojis.
Grossman, however, notes even if consumers could order with the chicken fries emoji, the chicken fries emoji are a part of a secondary keyboard that consumers would have to download, unlike the pizza emoji, which is already a default in most mobile keyboards.
“Adding more steps for the consumer to complete their transaction, slowing down the purchase process instead of speeding it up — it defeats the purpose,” Grossman said.
Per Croll, long-standing QSR leaders like Burger King and McDonald’s have struggled to maintain their competitive leads for many reasons and technology adoption is among them. (McDonald’s did not respond to a request for comment.)
“Starbucks, Taco Bell, Domino’s – these brands have seen gains in both sales and loyalty, which is likely due in part to their embracing new technologies that map to customers’ demands,” she said. “Comparing these brands’ ability to sell via emoji is putting the cart before the horse — some of these companies haven’t yet made the leap to mobile-friendly sites.”
However, Ben Reubenstein, CEO of Possible Mobile, said there are still plenty of opportunities for big QSR players.
“In fact, McDonald’s is experimenting with delivery-partnering with Postmates,” Reubenstein said. “This is a valid strategy as it allows them to measure demand and try something out without building all of the technical support needed with the partnership.”
However, it may ultimately turn out that apps like payment sharing service Venmo are the even bolder new frontier.
“I’d be far more interested in seeing a brand own an emoji for commerce on a platform like Venmo where the language of emojis is already tied to commerce,” Sheehy said.
Grossman agreed, noting Venmo is especially popular with millennials and gaining traction among other age groups.
“It essentially allows you to annotate small money transfers to friends, for things like splitting a cab or a meal, in a public/social setting,” Grossman said. “Consumers are already annotating their Venmo purchases with the pizza emoji. In fact, the pizza emoji is the most used emoji across the Venmo platform.”
What do you think pizza emojis say about the future of mobile commerce?