Webeasts® is a
multi-channel digital marketing agency in New Delhi, NCR & on Cloud (Of-Course).
This is the second part of a 2-part post on digital marketing in the post COVID world.
Necessity has said to be the mother of invention. Some version of this statement has existed for centuries in cultures across the world. With the changes taking place due to COVID, its just the right time to see things from a brands’ perspective. Also how their digital marketing has to evolve to keep up to date with the times. It is safe to assume that changes will be needed in the marketing strategies too. This has influenced both by medical prudence and by economics.
Those brands and products that seek to serve people’s needs find themselves in a comparatively comfortable position right now. They can count on a relatively stable demand for their products. People need to buy flour, soap, and bleach. These brands can always count on this demand as it hasn’t changed much due to COVID. However, we understand this as a double-edged sword. While demand might not go down significantly, it will probably also not go up significantly. As a result, any brand that takes lead during this period will probably get a significant advantage. Why? Because people tend to continue engaging with the same brands.
Brands may seek to assess individual consumer demand online through ways like surveys to gauge the need. As mentioned already in the first part of this post, the idea for many could be to look to market periodic boxes, which seek to cover the aggregated demand for a variety of products in one go. The idea, after all, is to promote the ideas of convenience and safety to the end consumer and reduce overall trips to the market.
As regards, how this demand is serviced, brands can try different strategies like tying up with large existing online retailers, to using the existing supply chains with local Kirana stores being brought in as part of the process. Some could focus on this idea of supporting both local businesses as well as the end consumer; could this be a good angle to take on digital marketing? Only time will tell.
The challenge with many such brands in the marketplace of needs is that once things start getting home delivered, and the quality across brands is more or less consistent, it is hard to differentiate one brand from another. There is a chance here of not being able to break into any segment of the market that has already gone to a competitor. Along with the possible advantage of easier retention of customers for longer periods once acquired.
More and more brands will also have to compete on the price of course; economics will continue to remain at the core of consumer decisions, and of course, the end consumer may in many cases come out the other end of this pandemic with a reduced desire to spend more than is needed. It seems inevitable that brands will have to find ways to not just deliver but to try and absorb delivery costs within the overall selling price of these periodic deliveries.
To meet these needs and to share in the benefits of scaling, brands in different segments of the market may start marketing, selling and delivering together; for instance, food brands tying up with home supplies and FMCG brands, both of which together use a particular delivery brand/channel for logistics. Perhaps all of these will eventually have to move to a joint strategy of digital marketing to get end consumers; it is after all logically sound to expect customers to want to procure their necessities at the best possible price, with the fewest possible clicks. It is an interesting new playing field, with new rules, and there are both significant gains to be made, or losses to be suffered, depending on how these brands adapt to this change.
In sharp contrast to the brands seeking to address consumer needs, those marketing towards the desire and luxury end of the spectrum will have greater challenges facing them in convincing consumers to part with their cash in the post- COVID world.
A significant reason behind consumers buying such products is the desire to differentiate/distinguish themselves from others around them. however, in a world where people go out less frequently, will they still want to spend their money on such products? This is especially true for those that come out of this pandemic with a reduced ability to buy- they may choose to not spend on the latest phone, or that new dress in this market; they will in all likelihood be more skeptical of taking holidays. Office wear and ‘formal’ clothes may also see a drop in regular sales in a world where more and more people seek to work from home. In this market environment, these brands will have a harder time convincing people to spend money, especially the middle classes.
There are definitely changes needed due to COVID is in the way these products are marketed and sold online. There has been healthy price competition in the digital space for a while now in most of these product categories, and thus newer, more innovative marketing strategies might be needed to continue to have healthy sales.
We may see brands move towards fewer product line releases during a year, with significant promotion taking place on digital platforms before the release. This strategy is already used well in the technology sector, particularly with devices like personal computers and mobile phones. It is also safe to expect technology to find its way more and more into the marketing of products. Newer technologies like virtual reality and augmented reality can find a greater space in the marketing behind these products, similar to how some online retailers of spectacles are already using their digital spaces to try and show the consumer the product on their own face to gauge things like fit and look. Expect more such technology as brands’ core part of the digital marketing, with greater integration possibly with social media channels for real-time posting and to get comments and feedback from friends online.
The idea can be to help create a more real-world experience, without ever leaving the digital world. Those that make the customer feel at ease in this digital space, and successfully manage to convey that feeling through the myriad digital marketing channels at their disposal may find themselves at the forefront of how to market and sell in the changing marketplace today.
Out with the old, in with the new
Brands at the end of the day have a simple target, sell. In a world where consumer behavior can be altered in a significant manner, there is a necessity to make some significant changes in how to sell. Whether brands want or not, there’ll be a need to invent and evolve their strategies to successfully navigate the choppy waters that many of them are experiencing.
In addition to new marketing strategies, there may be new product categories needed, may be there is a need for not just more technology, But smarter utilization of technology geared towards a more seamless experience in the digital world. In any case, consumers will certainly continue to need a marketplace to serve their needs and desires.
Digital marketing in the post COVID world will be taking an exciting shape. we as an agency are eager to see how it unfoldes for all of us.