Jakarta, Indonesia – Jenius, a digital bank by Bank BTPN, has tapped Perx Technologies to transform traditional banking experiences that are purely driven by needs and wants to a fun and game-like experience.
Through the partnership, by introducing the concepts of gamification and instant gratification into every day personal banking experiences the Perx Loyalty Engagement Platform and Jenius aim to transform and uplift the quintessential thought relationship a consumer has with his or her lifestyle banking needs.
At the core of this partnership lies the goal to drive maximum customer lifetime value through a dynamic and rewarding loyalty program, mobile customer journeys studded with instant gratification and gamification allowing the bank to nudge and influence positive customer behaviour.
Moreover, with a diverse array of rewarding experiences, gamified savings milestones and a personalised loyalty program that keeps rewarding customers for their every action, Jenius aims at driving positive behavioural hacks into the community such as building a nest egg or better managing impulsive spending habits with full transparency.
Lastly, moving away from existing as ‘just another digital bank’ and transforming into a financial solution for the digital-savvy audience, Jenius aims to engage its customers beyond their regular banking needs by becoming an enabler to the lifestyle choices its customers make daily.
Febri Rusli, digital banking product and innovation head at Bank BTPN, said, “As a digital native bank, the app experience is paramount to Jenius’ success. By collaborating with Perx, we are able to leverage innovative technology to provide a fun, personalised, and rewarding experience across all customer touchpoints throughout their entire customer journey. This is essential to create retention, engagement, and customer-first service experience – which is ultimately what sets us apart from others in the industry.”
Meanwhile, Anna Gong, founder and CEO at Perx Technologies, commented, “In the experience economy, digitally savvy consumers expect personalized and meaningful interactions that keep them excited enough to return. We are delighted to deliver these ‘Aha moments’ in every customer journey a Jenius customer will experience going forward. We are thrilled to partner with Bank BTPN to create and deliver an engaging customer experience for everyone served by Jenius in Indonesia.”
Lastly, Jovin Shen, global sales director at Perx Technologies, stated, “Jenius is embarking on one of the most exciting customer experience transformation projects I have seen and delighted that Jenius chose to partner with Perx.”
London, United Kingdom – Global information services company Experian has announced that is acquiring a strategic stake with global customer engagement and commerce media company Reward. As part of the investment, Kashif Aslam, currently the head of corporate development at Experian, will join the Reward board of directors with immediate effect.
The investment cements an existing commercial partnership between Reward and Experian. This further collaboration will focus on leveraging Experian’s rich data and audience activation capabilities to fuel Reward’s offerings across banks and retail, expanding reach to create a more rewarding experience for consumers.
Moreover, the partnership focuses on pioneering new ways to enhance Reward’s customer engagement programmes. Aligning unique strengths across both entities, the pair will look to scale solutions across international markets, fusing technology and data analytics to provide improved services and more personalised reward offerings, based on a better understanding of consumers’ needs and preferences.
Looking ahead, both Experian and Reward express immense enthusiasm about the transformative potential this partnership promises to make on a global scale.
Jamie Samaha, CEO at Reward, said, “Experian’s investment in Reward is a powerful endorsement of our vision and international growth strategy. With a goal to give back $2 billion to customers by 2025, we are excited to leverage Experian’s global footprint and capabilities to enhance our service offering to our bank and retail partners.”
Meanwhile, Colin Grieves, managing director at Experian Marketing Services, commented, “Our investment in and partnership with Reward is an exciting step forward for our business. Reward’s principal belief that everyday spending should be rewarded is entirely aligned with our mission to help consumers improve their financial well-being. We look forward to developing our joint capabilities to help Reward service its banking and retail communities both in the UK and internationally. There is a great deal we can and will do together.”
Singapore – Global marketing and communications group Stagwell and global advertising technology company Nexxen has announced that they are teaming up to to offer an immersive suite of data solutions and integrated applications within the Stagwell Marketing Cloud, through which advertisers can gain a deeper understanding of consumers to enhance engagement and drive results.
The announcement comes as Nexxen launches the Nexxen Data Platform, building and expanding upon its proprietary data management platform. The platform provides an enriched ecosystem in which brands can securely and effectively input data of their choosing (first-party, contextual, second-party and more) to augment their audiences with Nexxen’s unique data assets and proprietary applications including contextual audience discovery tools.
Moreover, the availability of automatic content recognition (ACR) data through the platform enables advertisers to better understand viewability patterns and optimally allocate spend across linear and digital TV.
Various capabilities of the partnership are made possible through Nexxen’s proprietary unified identity graph. The solution, which will be broadly accessible through the Nexxen Data Platform, will combine and deduplicate multiple identifiers into a merged graph to enable increased scale, frequency capping and better targeting and attribution at the person and household level. The unified graph will also help advertisers address changes in privacy and identity, including cookie deprecation.
Mark Penn, chairman and CEO at Stagwell, said, “As Stagwell grows our assets and pipeline within the media ecosystem, this partnership with Nexxen is a win-win for clients. Clients of the Stagwell Marketing Cloud can leverage the Nexxen Data Platform, specifically Nexxen’s proprietary identity graph and Stagwell’s clean room capabilities, to effectively maximise their campaigns with unified and comprehensive views of valuable audiences across touchpoints and devices, in a privacy-compliant manner.”
Meanwhile, Ofer Druker, CEO at Nexxen, commented, “Emerging technology like the Nexxen Data Platform is enriching advertisers’ knowledge of consumers and improving engagement, enabling a shift from exclusively buying media to buying against audiences, and it is driving better results. Our important partnership with Stagwell brings advanced data solutions to top tier brands around the globe, and will grow in incremental layers of innovation and value as we put data at the core of Nexxen’s strategic roadmap.”
Mumbai, India – CleverTap, an all-in-one customer engagement and retention platform, has announced the launch of Clever.AI, its AI-powered customer engagement engine.
For CleverTap, it aims to provide brands with the next generation of AI capabilities required for building human-like knowledge of customers and efficiently delivering personalised experiences that resonate with them, hence enhancing customer lifetime value.
The three core AI pillars of predictive, generative, and prescriptive AI form the foundation of Clever.AI. ‘Clever.AI’ uses these pillars to transform the way brands communicate with their customers, making their interactions more informed and effective.
Talking about the launch, Anand Jain, co-founder and chief product officer, CleverTap, said, “We’re thrilled to unveil Clever.AI, a testament of our pursuit over the last several years in leading the way in adopting the latest tech to transform customer engagement. We will continue to innovate CleverTap’s All-in-One engagement platform with Clever.AI enhancing its precision in predictions, its ability to prescribe intelligent customer experiences strengthened by advanced product analytics and deeper persona profiling to ensure brands can build highly personalised experiences, and campaigns more effectively, ensuring every customer interaction is personalised and outcome-driven.”
Imagine a world where every customer interaction is not just a transaction, but a meaningful conversation. A world where businesses can anticipate customer needs, respond with precision, and engage at a personal level that transforms the customer experience.
The next 2024 revolution in customer engagement entails breakthrough features that redefine the standards of online customer interactions, and I will be listing two prominent ones in this article; ‘Automated Workflow Platform’ and ‘AI Response Feature’. These features are not only incremental improvements, they represent a sea change in how businesses of all sizes—from startups to corporations—can connect with their potential and existing customers on online platforms; WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook etc.
An Automated Workflow Platform is an automated powerhouse that streamlines customer conversations. The platform offers a visually user-friendly interface and intuitive approach to analyse, understand, and respond to customer queries in real time with pre-determined questions and answers. It delivers a personalised experience 24/7 without the need of constant supervision.
If you’re looking to create dynamic and responsive workflows, most platforms offer custom conditions and branching, which allow you to set up workflows that respond only to certain scenarios:
Custom conditions: You can create workflows that adhere to different scenarios. For example, auto-responses will be sent when you receive messages containing specific keywords.
Branching: Branching allows you to create different paths within a workflow based on a criteria. This enables your desired actions to specified individuals or groups, such as assigning conversations to sales representatives based on inquiry type.
The power of automated workflows results in increased productivity in sales and consistent, efficient and optimised customer interactions, all while saving innumerable hours.
An AI Response Feature takes time- and cost-efficiency to the next level. With great feasibility, businesses can easily generate AI-powered responses in chats within a click. The features aims to solve the pain point of time and costs expended in training and assigning staff for personalised customer engagement, since this feature allows businesses to go beyond the usual responses to customer queries; it enriches each conversation with tailored content, product recommendations, and offers, driven by a deep understanding of customer preferences and past interactions. The tool’s superpower is in human-like digital communication in superhuman speed and efficiency, which has proven to foster loyalty and significantly boost sales conversion rates (by up to 80%).
For businesses that operate in the diverse and rapidly expanding Southeast Asian market, they are left to pivot in the complexity of engaging with a multicultural audience. An Automated Workflow Platform and AI Response Feature emerge as game-changing features that equip businesses to navigate language differences and unique cultural nuances with ease. The AI-powered platform ensures that no message goes unattended, enabling businesses to cultivate robust customer relationships and drive growth in this dynamic landscape.
This article is written by Henson Tsai, founder and CEO of SleekFlow
The retail landscape is dynamic. And trends tend to come and go based on evolving consumer behaviours, technological advancements and global economic shifts. But one trend, in particular, has quickly taken the retail world by storm, cementing its place as a lasting force – and that’s subscriptions.
The subscription economy grew by more than 300 per cent between 2012 and 2019. And it’s continuing its meteoric rise thanks in large part to Amazon Prime making subscriptions a part of everyday life for many Australians. In fact, according to Telsyte data, Amazon Prime had 4.5 million subscribers in Australia as of June 2023.
“This is a huge amount of people who are opting for additional convenience with a recurring order. And that convenience is key. It’s creating the sense of brand loyalty, giving subscription businesses a recurring touch point with a subscriber on a cadence versus relying on a one-off purchase,” saysCarl Nightingale, Head of Product for Chargebee Retention.
“That committed relationship creates a partnership and allows brands to be more personalised in how they engage subscribers, which leads to healthier unit economics overall.”
The Relationship Between Subscriptions and Loyalty
Many loyalty programs include a subscription element, and many subscription services incorporate conventional loyalty principles. Both of these approaches provide value to customers, whether members or subscribers, in return for something valuable to a brand or retailer. In the context of loyalty programs, the exchange is data which can be used to generate deep customer insights which enable better, customer-centric decision making across all areas of the business. For subscription programs, it’s the predictability that comes with recurring revenue. At a time when consumers are encountering higher prices and adjusting their spending patterns, this value exchange is becoming paramount.
Consumers want discounts and other benefits to reduce the overall cost of their purchases. At the same time, brands – especially, retailers – need strategies to retain and attract new customers, especially as inflation-driven brand switching runs rampant. The good news is that subscription and loyalty programs, as well as hybrid programs that combine elements of both, excel at boosting customer retention. They create dependable, ongoing and expanding revenue streams and significantly greater customer lifetime value when executed well.
Subscription and loyalty programs boost customer retention by:
Leveraging the psychology of affiliation and community
Offering tangible value and convenience to members and subscribers
Creating more opportunities and interaction points for customer engagement and marketing
Enabling more sophisticated personalisation and insights into customer behaviour
The Psychology of Subscriptions
Subscription programs create an emotional, exclusive draw for consumers to join loyalty programs. Combining the convenience and savings of subscriptions strengthens customer savings while helping customers feel valued. Loyalty programs will typically recognise a customer’s long-standing status as a member (e.g., member since 2010). They may even recognise certain milestones, creating an environment where customers feel appreciated — an essential factor in customer retention.
Subscriptions represent enduring partnerships between customers and brands underpinned by a financial commitment. Though they require nurturing, this relationship is mutually beneficial, providing consumers consistency, reliability and convenience while businesses reduce their acquisition costs.
“The market has shifted in the last few years to no longer being about growth at all costs but about healthy, sustainable growth. And that has ushered in an overwhelming focus on subscriber retention, even more so than acquisition in the market,” Nightingale shares.
“We’re seeing companies prioritise efforts to engage and retain their existing subscribers above and beyond new growth and new acquisition. This isn’t surprising, given the fact that it can be up to five times more expensive to acquire a new customer than retain an existing customer.”
Subscriptions Create a Sense of Community
Subscriptions often employ triggers to prompt customers to use a product or service, generating habitual behaviour. In return for the continued benefit the customer receives from those products or services, such as the convenience of a home-delivered meal kit or access to a library of media content, the customer gives the brand a modest recurring fee and (usually) access to their behavioural and preference data. This exchange is one that consumers are increasingly eager to make.
Rather than discrete transactions, subscriptions feature recurring incremental payments, reliable and regular shipments of (or access to) products or services, and an ‘always on’ experience — often more affordable than making a series of one-time payments. Once a consumer becomes a subscriber, many typical barriers and friction points associated with purchasing are eliminated or mitigated.
Beyond the purely behavioural and transactional aspects of subscription psychology, subscriptions offer a sense of community. The continuous relationship between a brand and its subscribers creates a feeling of belonging to that brand and other subscribers. Brands can encourage this communal aspect through rewards programs, subscriber interactions, events and contests and other relevant content.
Many subscriptions also offer customers choice and customisability. Subscribers can pay for additional value by choosing an upgrade or a higher plan. This flexibility also helps develop customer loyalty – consumers see the opportunity to have different personalised subscriptions as meeting their needs rather than something sold to the masses.
Subscriptions Drive Customer Retention
The relationship between value and loyalty can go a long way toward boosting retention rates. But subscribers are inherently easier to retain than customers who require constant reacquisition efforts. The rationale for this is straightforward: a subscriber has to proactively cancel the subscription and until they take that step, the company has opportunities to prevent or dissuade cancellation.
How significant is the potential impact for retail brands to increase their retention rates through subscriptions? According to Bain & Company, a mere 5 per cent increase in customer retention rates can lead to as much as 25 per cent profit growth. A similar study by McKinsey found that subscription-based businesses grow at a rate five times faster than traditional businesses, on average, and also demonstrate higher profitability, with an average EBITDA margin of 25 per cent.
Subscriptions present a substantial opportunity that retailers can leverage. Businesses can track activity across various channels and tools through automated workflows to optimise retention rates. Customers who slow their activity are at a higher risk of churning than those who progressively increase their activity over time. By collecting, tracking and analysing customer data, companies can gain insights that inform the actions needed to retain more customers, including those identified as the most valuable to the brand.
Personalised Upselling, Cross-Selling and Marketing to Subscribers
Retention isn’t the only advantage that subscriptions and loyalty programs provide. They also provide companies with built-in marketing channels to engage and connect with customers. Consumers willingly share relevant personal information in exchange for the value they receive from their subscriptions and loyalty memberships. This kind of first-party data is becoming more critical with the sunsetting of third-party cookies.
“On the data front, with privacy regulations like GDPR and Australia’s Privacy Act, subscription models offer an opportunity to engage the customer in a voluntary exchange of data that can be leveraged for more personalisation, driving more results upstream. In a subscription model, brands can engage with their customer at different touch points. Then they can use all of those touch points to gather more personalised data,” says Nightingale.
“It’s much easier creating a highly personalised experience with a subscription model versus a non-subscription model that often relies on third-party cookies, which are being phased out entirely.”
Companies obtain valuable data from each customer transaction through subscriptions and loyalty programs. When able to execute marketing and promotions against these insights, retailers and direct-to-consumer brands can reap significant rewards. Transactional data provides valuable insights into customers’ purchase habits, including what they buy, how often they make purchases (monthly, weekly, etc.), and their preferred payment method.
This intelligence can inform how discounts and offers are customised to increase the likelihood of redemption, as opposed to generic promotions that are less targeted and offered to all customer segments. Once again, this comes back to CEO of Eagle Eye Tim Mason’s three golden rules of loyalty:
Treat others as they’d like to be treated: When you’re designing your program, don’t treat people as you’d love them to be, treat them how they like to be treated.
Reward the behaviour you seek: Become clear in understanding the behaviour that makes a real difference to your goals and incentivise customers accordingly.
Follow the DIAL approach for continuous improvement: When you have a loyalty program, you are privy to a significant amount of customer Data, which should be used to generate Insight. But the key is to then turn those Insights into Action – something that makes a difference and sparks customer Loyalty.
“Treat people like individual customers that are giving you this data willingly as part of their consumer habits. Then treat them to something relevant to them, which is going to get them to spend more time with you,” Al Henderson, Chief Sales Officer at Eagle Eye, says.
Grocery Retailers Well-Positioned
Grocery retailers are particularly well-positioned to gather data that reveals customer shopping habits and preferences. For example, if a grocer can infer that a customer is a pet owner based on past purchasing patterns, offering a discounted deal on pet food will create a more positive impression on that shopper – and increase the likelihood that the offer is redeemed – much more than a blanket discount on breakfast cereal or milk ever could.
Personalised offers can be distributed through many relevant touch points on special occasions like birthdays and subscription/loyalty membership anniversaries or seasonal promotions. These should be tailored to individual customer preferences and throughout a customer’s buying journey starting from the initial expression of interest through the purchase process and up to delivery or pickup.
Each of these touchpoints provides a brand or retailer with opportunities to gather more customer preference data. This, in turn, can be used to enhance and fine-tune personalised marketing strategies.
Al Henderson, shares, “Customers don’t identify with online and offline anymore. They’re just transacting with a brand. And, therefore, it’s important to bring the benefit of the subscription and the offers anywhere they might be – whether that’s in an app, in-store or online to get the uplift and maximise on the potential, removing friction from the journey.”
Subscription Success: The Role of Technology Partners
Brands often require technology partners to help them gather, manage and execute these engagement strategies, utilising the customer data available through their systems, such as point of sale, CRM and loyalty program databases. Eagle Eye, for example, enables companies to leverage this digital opportunity by providing real-time omnichannel customer connectivity, seamlessly integrating with all points of purchase and the retailer’sdata analytics capabilities.
Through this connection, Eagle Eye enables the implementation of all a retailer’s data-driven decisions to reach the end customer using a comprehensive digital marketing toolkit. This toolkit encompasses real-time digital loyalty programs, personalised promotions, subscription services, gifting and cashback initiatives, charitable donations, third-party partnerships, coalitions and more.
Many brands and retailers can face challenges with the technical and payment infrastructure required to accelerate the implementation of full-featured subscription programs. Partnering with platforms like Chargebee enables companies to rapidly launch and iterate subscription-based plans and products through freemium, trial and paid offerings. Helping companies provide tailor-made offers for long-time subscribers and those most likely to churn, Chargebee also mitigates cancellations.
Companies receive actionable insights and analytics on those customers who do churn to sharpen and refine future customer retention strategies. They also benefit from the automation of collections and revenue recovery. Together, these tools provide brands and retailers a powerful way to merge loyalty and subscription programs, ultimately reducing churn, upselling to existing customers and increasing customer lifetime value.
CLV and Predictable Purchasing Patterns
The revenue impact of improved Customer Lifetime Value, or CLV, indicates the average revenue a company can generate from a customer over the entire lifetime of their account. In simpler terms, it’s the revenue a company will earn before the customer terminates the relationship. For example, if customers spend $100 on products or services every month for nine months, their CLV is $900. If they remain with the company for two years, their CLV increases to $2,400.
CLV is an important metric because it gives businesses a customer-centric viewpoint to inform crucial marketing and sales strategies, such as customer acquisition, retention, cross-selling, upselling and support. “CLV is not a new concept. But with the subscription business model, it becomes a very powerful concept to think about as it relates to maximising the unit economics for our business,” Nightingale points out.
A subscription program’s ability to provide businesses with a predictable revenue stream with ongoing growth potential makes the revenue model powerful. Unlike static revenue figures that remain constant monthly, subscription revenue compounds with each new subscriber. As long as businesses can acquire new subscribers at a pace that surpasses customer churn, revenue grows exponentially.
In practice, subscriptions increase CLV by fostering ongoing customer engagement and loyalty. They create a consistent revenue stream over an extended period, encouraging customers to make recurring purchases and develop a deeper connection with the brand. Additionally, the data collected from subscription customers can be used to personalise offers and improve the overall customer experience, further enhancing CLV.
Subscription-Fuelled Loyalty in Action
Woolworths demonstrates the power of subscriptions, even in a challenging economic environment. Everyday Extra, introduced by Woolworths Australia in 2022 as an extension of its Everyday Rewards loyalty program. For AU$7 per month or AU$70 per year, Everyday Extra members receive a bonus on points for both online and in-store spending, a 10 per cent discount on one online or in-store shopping trip per month at both the BIG W and Woolworths brands as well as exclusive subscriber-only offers and perks. By the first quarter of 2023, the program had enrolled over 250,000 active subscribers.
Subscriptions + Loyalty = Higher Retention and Engagement
In today’s uncertain economic landscape, companies need every advantage possible to attract, engage and retain customers. Subscription and loyalty programs offer a potent combination for retailers to achieve these critical objectives. Loyalty program members significantly outspend non-loyalty members by a wide margin, providing a source of long-term recurring revenue. Subscribers also tend to bring a substantially higher lifetime value to brands than sporadic customers, delivering stability and long-term potential for brands offering subscription programs.
However, the impact of these strategies goes beyond revenue. Subscriptions and loyalty programs create a strong bond between the customer and the brand, driven by affinity, convenience and value. They increase the number of touchpoints a customer has with a brand and yield valuable first-party data related to purchase history and preferences. In this way, these programs can supercharge personalisation and engagement strategies and make a retail brand more prominent in a consumer’s daily life.
These advantages are evident in retail and food service brands that have successfully harnessed subscription loyalty to boost in-store and digital revenues, increase frequency and create added value for their members. By partnering with technology companies like Eagle Eye and Chargebee, which specialise in the development and execution of loyalty and subscription strategies, many brands have experienced the revenue and growth results that hybrid subscription-loyalty initiatives can deliver.
Companies like Woolworths that have already embraced subscriptions and loyalty programs have the added advantage of attracting customers, building and refining loyalty strategies and strengthening and deepening customer relationships, reducing the likelihood of customer churn. As the subscription model continues to gain popularity, the true competitive edge will come from brands that efficiently and effectively execute it in partnership with specialised and experienced solutions providers who excel at optimising these programs.
This article is written by Jonathan Reeve, Vice President APAC, Eagle Eye
The insight is published as part of MARKETECH APAC’s thought leadership series under What’s NEXT 2023-2024. What’s NEXT 2023-2024 is a multi-platform industry initiative which features marketing and industry leaders in APAC sharing their marketing insights and predictions for the upcoming year.
Manila, Philippines – With the majority of today’s businesses embracing the use of AI, it is no surprise that AI has placed itself as something that will be staying and breaking through even further in the field of customer engagement. Furthermore, in an industry where the demand for AI is consistently escalating, leveraging it to enhance customer engagement is now seen as a vital requirement for businesses to prosper in the digital era.
To help marketers unlock the potential of AI in customer engagement at a time when it matters the most, MARKETECH APAC returned with an exclusive webinar last January 24 titled “What’s NEXT 2024: Customer Engagement in Asia”, which aimed to impart valuable insights to marketers on how to properly integrate AI with customer engagement.
Kicking things off, Ranya Arora, senior strategic business consultant at Braze, highlighted in her keynote presentation that this impact brought about by AI in marketing has led businesses and marketers to adapt alongside it, with the emergence of AI-dedicated marketing teams as well as the prevalence of AI-powered campaigns, all to ensure personalised and streamlined experiences that greatly reinforce customer satisfaction and loyalty.
According to Arora, the significant rate at which marketing has adopted and integrated with AI has now transformed it into something that it is synonymous with, with 76% of CMOs saying that generative AI will change the way that marketing operates.
For her, there are three key roles of AI in customer engagement that marketers should focus on; (1) drive more relevance by making experiences feel personal on every channel by tailoring content to each customer based on their preferences, attributes, and behaviours, (2) drive more effectiveness by automatically testing and optimising campaigns for their best-performing version, and (3) drive more efficiency to assist with routine tasks to allot more time towards formulating strategies and creative approaches.
Meanwhile, Jia Ling Lim, assistant head of marketing and partnerships at BeLive Technology; Rolly Pane, managing director for Indonesia at Clozette; Saniya Dhingra Agarwal, head of customer experience at foodpanda Singapore; and Chris Martin Alarcon, head of content and community management at Home Credit Philippines also provided their industry insights on the benefits that AI can bring to enhance customer engagement strategies in a panel discussion.
The marketing leaders, from different industries and countries, also provided advice on how AI can be leveraged for following customer behaviour and personalisation through data insights, how to overcome obstacles in the process of utilising AI for customer engagement, as well as its future potential.
To sum it all up, the insights imparted by the webinar served as a guide for marketers to properly settle and get into utilising AI tools more effectively to improve their customer engagement strategies, paving the way for businesses and brands to flourish with the assistance of AI.
The webinar, titled What’s NEXT 2024: Customer Engagement in Asia is made in partnership with customer engagement platform Braze. It garnered over 100 participants all across Asia from prominent brands such as 2GO, Bounty Fresh, Carousell, Johnson & Johnson, Mercedes Benz, and Shiseido, amongst many more.
If you missed going to the event, you may register HERE to obtain your on-demand access.
Singapore – Nestlé Professional has unveiled its latest initiative aimed at transforming the way it engages with food-service operators. The newly inaugurated Customer Engagement Centre (CEC) in Singapore is a testament to Nestlé’s commitment to the F&B and hospitality businesses, positioning itself as a comprehensive solutions provider.
The CEC stands out in bringing in-depth industry knowledge, expertise in food services and an extensive F&B and hospitality portfolio. Helmed by Nestlé Professional’s in-house chef and barista, and alongside association partners, they aim to address key industry challenges while serving the evolving needs of their clientele.
These challenges include a constant drive for sustainable practices, solutions for manpower challenges, and steps toward increased overall operational efficiencies delivered by innovative on-trend concepts.
Moreover, the opening of Nestlé Professional’s new CEC marks a significant shift from selling products to actively contributing to the growth and improvement of F&B and hospitality businesses in Singapore.
The new CEC is designed to resemble a café, where partners and affiliates can book an appointment for tastings and demonstrations to better understand the myriad of F&B offerings and solutions provided by Nestlé Professional. This includes product and machine demonstrations where product training, tailored applications, creative menu development, and recipe ideas are offered to meet unique business needs.
Paul Nagelkerken, country business manager at Nestlé Professional, said, “By creating a space that fosters collaboration and innovation, Nestlé Professional is poised to play a pivotal role in assisting the F&B industry in Singapore. This strategic initiative aligns with the company’s commitment to exceed the expectations of our customers, providing them with the concepts, tools and expertise needed to thrive in a dynamic and competitive market.”
Singapore – Singapore-based consumer engagement company Wootag has officially introduced ‘Intent’, its new behavioural AI platform which aims to influence consumer behaviour in the cookie-less era, redefining consumer engagement and providing marketers with a platform for precise personalization and targeted strategies.
Crafted with a user-centric approach, Intent promises improved consumer engagement by influencing consumer behaviour through its streamlined behavioural data streams-gathering platform.
Designed interactions prompt meaningful responses from the audience, allowing the platform to efficiently stream and build data models into a robust behavioural dataset enriched with unique identifiers, location, and many more parameters. This stream of behavioural data is seamlessly transmitted to the intent dashboard, enabling real-time analysis and continuous optimization.
Embracing a data-driven advertising (DAD) strategy, the platform empowers advertisers to create highly engaging content that resonates with their audience by leveraging advanced generative algorithms and combining creativity and precision to set a new standard for AI-driven engagement.
Furthermore, Intent takes centre stage by giving businesses an efficient means to navigate the evolving digital landscape with unprecedented efficiency, offering a transformative approach to audience engagement.
In a strategic collaboration, Wootag’s Intent platform partnered with L’Oreal Professional and Wavemaker on its Scalp Advance campaign in India, where L’Oreal Professional focused on personalised solutions for diverse scalp and hair concerns across India’s varied geographical and cultural landscape.
The campaign navigated through the complexities of consumer behaviours, employing strategic audience segmentation and ad sizing. Using the advanced generative algorithms of Intent, the campaign achieved success with a 3 times uplift in engagement, increased brand awareness, and a 76% surge in audience attention.
Singapore – 80% of APAC customers are likely to take their business elsewhere as a result of poor experiences, and 61% of consumers will not tolerate bad experiences and will walk away after just one or two bad encounters, according to the data cloud communications agency Vonage in their ‘Global Customer Engagement Report’ for 2024.
In connection to this, the report stated that APAC consumers claim that their poor experiences are mostly consisted of long wait times when speaking with an agent (63%), no way to speak to customer service via voice/phone (59%), lack of 24/7 support availability (48%) and lack of self-service support (46%).
These findings are especially important, given that the global data revealed that APAC consumers continue to prefer a range of channel options when communicating with businesses, with mobile phone calls (36%), messaging/non-SMS apps (31%) and phone calls via apps (29%) ranking high in preference. However, less than half (42%) indicated they are “very satisfied” when communicating with businesses.
As such, these findings underscore opportunities to leverage AI. With tools like AI-based virtual assistants, businesses are equipped to provide quick resolution, reduce frustrations and ultimately provide a more targeted and personalised experience for the user.
With AI, businesses can specifically address urgent customer inquiries, provide smarter self-service at scale, and deliver smart interactive voice responses and skills-based routing to connect customers with an agent best suited to handle their query, preventing and mitigating a bad customer experience.
Lastly, report findings demonstrate that consumers are embracing AI to make their experiences better. In fact, responses show a likelihood that chatbot and video chat usage will more than double within the next year, with 10% using chatbots today and 23% expected usage in the next six to 12 months. Additionally, 13% indicate they’re using video chat today, with 26% expected usage in the next six to 12 months.
Talking about the findings, Joy Corso, chief marketing officer at Vonage, said, “This data underscores that, to differentiate on customer engagement, businesses need an omnichannel communications strategy that allows customers to contact them seamlessly across their preferred channels.”
“Those that do will also benefit from the ability to leverage the powerful capabilities of AI across communication channels, such as voice, video, messaging, and chat, enabling them to augment live customer support. This goes a long way to ensuring personal and real-time customer engagement at every touchpoint,” she added.
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