Friday, October 1, 2010

P-Comm - Participatory Commerce and the next wave of Social Marketing

Its been called Crowdsourcing, Social Merchandising, Social commerce, and a host of other names. My favorite name for it is Participatory Commerce (P-Comm), which I'd love to take credit for (I will take credit for the shortened version - P-Comm), but Mark Pincus (founder of Tribe Networks and Zynga, which counts Mafia Wars, Cafe World and Farmville among its addictive online games) coined the phrase in October of 2005. Essentially, it means that the classic one way model of the marketer developing his/her product or service in a lab or back room, and then using mass marketing with a lowest common denominator messaging strategy to sell it to consumers is quickly disappearing in several categories.

In the era of social networking, everyone is not only a critic, but can also become part of the product and marketing process. Some of the key aspects of Twitter reflect P-Comm, as their users created or defined many of the key elements of the service (including the name Tweets, #tags, and retweeting). The founders stepped back and let the users decide how their service should evolve, and then fostered initiatives that seemed to gain traction. Data indicates that ratings and reviews improves conversion rates on E-Commerce sites, as 70% of online consumers indicated they trusted opinions posted by other visitors (Nielsen Global Online Consumer Survey, 7/09). Blogs attract over 80 Million unique visitors, and mommy bloggers have become a key marketing partner for advertisers looking to reach mothers (At 1800flowers.com, we worked with Mommy bloggers to launch our Spot a Mom campaign last year, with strong results). Youtube has enabled anyone with a digital camera (or digital phone) to create their own mini-movies, and the world is a better place now that everyone can share the antics of their adorable pets. Last, but certainly not least, Facebook has reconnected millions of former roommates, boyfriends, girlfriends, and stalkers while providing a steady stream of what is going on in their lives.

P-Comm will take social networking and E-Commerce to the next level. How about asking your customers to create a new product or service for your company? Or asking them what offer they'd find compelling? Maybe they could develop your logo as part of a contest? We've already seen user generated commercials which advertisers have aired on the Superbowl, so why not outsource your advertising to your most loyal customers? The opportunities to have your customers create products, services, offers, and messages that are relevant to them turns one way marketing around and creates ownership. And if customers feel part of the process of creating and marketing your product or service, they'll be more loyal and more likely to provide the most effective marketing ever created - positive word of mouth.

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