CRM and social media have been, for a while, antagonist topics for marketers and digital specialists. Traditionally, the value of a customer is defined by financial segmentation. You purchase X USD/RMB a year, you are a VIP customer. You don't, you are a regular customer.
This mantra more or less worked for decades, until the digital and mobile revolution illustrated by WeChat in China (or Kakao, Line, WhatsApp elsewhere) changed the game and the way consumers interact with one another. Closed messaging-app platforms have surpassed public social-media platforms (Weibo, Renren, Facebook, Twitter), forcing companies to adapt themselves to a new eco-system.
Having said that, users in China are what we call "early adopters". They test, digest and adopt any technological trends faster than anyone can imagine. Hence, they change their minds quickly. Brand loyalty suffers because this pool of 650 million internet users in China has different expectations when it comes to brand engagement.
They have ~500 contacts on their WeChat accounts each, interact daily with ~20 of them and follow ~10 brands or corporate accounts. They belong to between five and 10 groups where their contacts share similar interests or passions (sport, media, food, travel, fashion, etc). They barely open their professional mailboxes anymore as they are probably filled with advertising that is not relevant to their profiles. When they receive SMSes, 90 per cent of the time they are spam from random insurance or financial-services firms.
20 per cent of customers make 60 to 70 per cent of a brand's revenues. As online acquisition costs are rocketing, a CRM mindset is the right strategy to "fidelise" your existing customer base and increase repetitive purchase. When Facebook generates 85 per cent of its revenue from advertising, Tencent will make this same 85 per cent with added CRM services.
Once you have identified your best customers based on their daily activities (account clicks, content checked, number of chats) and campaign activities (to whom they share content, how many times), you will be able to map their social influence networks.
Here comes the question: how can i recruit more customers if I rely on my existing ones? The answer is simple. By turning these influencers into brand ambassadors.
2. Reward their social activities and turn them into brand ambassadors
Traditionally, CRM rewards only purchase amounts which is starting to be out-dated in a globalised world. We should reward passion for a brand. In other words, brands need to reward love before money.
In this second phase, social influence has to be screened and integrated within a real loyalty program or membership strategy. Especially in China, where consumers behave on the principle of "concentric circles". Managerial-level consumers goes out with managers, directors with directors. A customer who can afford a 5-star hotel suite or a brand new couture collection of clothes might have a significant part of his network who can do the same.
3. Targeted communication with a digital tech mindset
One of the key points of social CRM is to accept a reduced frequency of 'push messages'. No one likes to receive daily messages on their smartphones. To brands: you don't lose anything by communicating LESS with your customers. There is only 24 hours per day, and the key to get the most of messaging apps like WeChat is to use it as a tailored, direct communication channel to premium customers.
Based on their profiles (gender, location, subscription time, content checked), brands should send specific privileges and offers that are tailor made for them, such Shanghai store openings only to Shanghai-based customers.
Conclusion:
In China, the overall market is becoming more competitive and consumers more mature. Brands and agencies have to adapt their consumer engagement techniques and find the right "leash" to retain customer loyalty.
Alexis Bonhomme is the general manager of Curiosity China