1. Building a digital strategyYoumna OvazzaMay 2011 Overviews and illustrations from the ebook
2. About This presentationis a condensed version of the ebook « Building a digital strategy »:itfeatures an overview of each article with the ebook illustrations. The detailed content of each article and the ebook are available for reading and free download in PDF format on Butter Cake’swebsite(www.butter-cake.com), underCreative Commons licensing. Thankyou for yourinterest and have a good reading! YoumnaOvazza yovazza@butter-cake.com May 2011
3. Ebook « Building a digital strategy » At a time when the economicpotential of the Internet isundeniable, can brands and companiescontinue to addressitonlyfrom an operational perspective or even continue surfing new trends opportunistically? How to build a digital strategythatis the truereflection of the brand strategyon the Internet, and allowsto optimizeefficiencyand performance?Adding up a sum of actions on the web and mobile does not makea digital strategy, nordoes the gathering of digital operationalexperts produce a strategic point of view. The lack of a comprehensivedigital architecture thataligns all web and mobile meanswith the brand strategyisoften the weaklink in the whole system.This book develops a global overview of the Internet, thatconnects all the variouschannelstogether and thenputstheminto perspective withthe othermedia and means of action. It thenproposes a pragmatic and stepby stepmethodology to developa digital strategyfrom the brand or business strategy.
4. About the author Youmna Ovazza is a communications specialist with an expertise in both strategic marketing and online communication, developed in more than 15 years of extensive professional experience in and for major corporate companies, medium and start-up businesses, in the FMCG, services and High-Tech/Telco industries. She created Butter Cake in february 2011. Butter Cake is an independent non-profit online publication, focused on business strategy, digital innovation, management and organisation themes. This ebook is Butter Cake’s first completed project. Youmna is Franco-Lebanese and a graduate of the ESSEC business school. Contact: yovazza@butter-cake.com @ButterCakeNews
6. Warning: Translation This book was originally published in French hence a few specific references to the French Internet market, which serve as an illustration but don’t impact the general demonstration and methodology developed here. Internet uses observed are those of mature markets similar to France, and may need some adjustment with regard to specific behaviours in emerging markets. - Translation by Stuart Mudie - (www.stuartmudie.com)
8. Overview Companies have a growing need to effectively coordinate their different activities on the web and on the mobile, yet they struggle to come up with a digital strategy. Confusion exists between digital expertise and strategic expertise. The development of a strategy first requires the creation of common points of reference for discussing the different actions: a coherent, global vision of the Internet would connect the various professions and stakeholders and would thus provide greater perspective across all channels.. > Full article on Butter Cake website
9. Adding up a sum of actions on the web and mobile does not make a digital strategy e-commerce BLOGS + + + Digital strategy # + + + ePUB forums @ www.butter-cake.com
10. Gathering a bunch of digital operational experts doesn’tproduce a strategic point of view Digital strategy # + + + + + Usability Mobile marketing Blogging Community management Emailing SEO www.butter-cake.com
11. I. How to have a global vision of the Internet?I.1. Internet is a SPACE made of places
12. Overview By considering the Internet as a virtual SPACE instead of a media or channel, the different places that make up the web, how they work and the way Internet users use them becomes clearer for companies and brands that have ventured into the web. The same geographical logic can be transposed to define the pillars of a digital strategy: places of presence, traffic, routes, places where audiences gather, accessibility… along with a sense of place and how to behave there. > Full article on Butter Cake website
13. Why do weneed a global vision of the Internet? www.butter-cake.com
14. The mobile is a bridge between the virtual online space and the physical offline space Internet = virtual online space The mobile as a BRIDGEbetween the twospaces Offline physicalspace www.butter-cake.com
15. Likeanyspace, the Internet is a collection of places (sites)joinedtogether by roads (links) www.butter-cake.com
17. I. How to have a global vision of the Internet?I.2. Internet users: uses & motivations
18. Overview Today, almosteveryoneis on the Internet. Writing down the many uses in a listthatgets longer eachyearis no longer of any use to brands looking to analyse the web. Instead, theyneed to step back and look at the main starting motivations of Internet users (searching for information, building relationships, consumption and production) to seewherethese cross over with the brand’s objectives and thusfind the right place for the Internet compared to other media and channels. The Internet isbasically a medium of utility, experience and relationships, far lessthanitis one of image and emotion. It is of far greaterbenefit for thosewhoparticipate in itregularlyinstead of focusing on occasional, tactical use. > Full article on Butter Cake website
20. Comparison of use cases for the main communications tools www.butter-cake.com Inspiration source : https://community.jivesoftware.com/message/435339
21. The four main motivations for using the Internet Blahblahblah www.butter-cake.com
22. I. How to have a global vision of the Internet?I.3. Internet users: browsing & criteria for selection
23. Overview The Internet is a virtualspace in whichwefindourwayaround in the sameway as we do in the real physicalspace: using points of reference and pathsthat come fromexperienceenabling us to build up a mental image of the space. Content is the tar of the web, the materialthatisused to builditsroads: a strategy of content and a strategy of means are closelylinked. Internet userscontinuallypassjudgement on the content theyfinduntiltheyreachtheir goal. Theircriteria are oftenbased on the quality of the source as much as on the quality of the content itself. > Full article on Butter Cake website
24. Threeways of findingyourway on the Internet- justlike in real life - B B B A A A C C C www.butter-cake.com Source: « Consumer web searchbehaviour: diagrammaticillustration of wayfinding on the web » by Chris Hodkinson, Geoffrey Kiel & Janet R. McColl-Kennedy, University of Queensland, 2000
25. Characteristics of a web search DEPTH of search = number of pages viewed / site Narrow, deepsearch > Typically, when a purchaseis close to being made: looking for specifickeywords, time spent on a limitednumber of sites in particular @ Broad, superficialsearch > Typically, in the early part of a purchase-relatedsearch: looking for a range of general information BREADTH of search = number of sites visited to rearch the final destination www.butter-cake.com Source: « Consumer web searchbehaviour: diagrammaticillustration of wayfinding on the web » by C. Hodkinson, G. Kiel & J. McColl-Kennedy, Univ. of Queensland
27. II. How to build a digital strategy?II.1. How to design a digital strategy
28. Overview A digital strategyis not just the sum total of all the actions yourcompany carries out on the Internet. It involvesnativelyintegrating the Internet prior to thinking about strategyeven on a company-widelevel, and identifying areas of presence and action withineachfunction/job alongsideother drivers and means. One way of approachingthisis to evaluate the potential impact of the Internet on the business model of the company and leadership methodsused by senior management, in order to define the right levels of goals, leadership and organisation relating to various cases. Onlythencanitbetranslatedinto action plans. > Full article on Butter Cake website
29. - Key quantitative Indicators for the brand or company: Brand awareness, Sales, Marketshare, Growth, New customers, Churn, Profit, Profitability, Staff turnover… - Key qualitative Indicators for the brand or company: Image & Reputation, Customer/partner/employee satisfaction, Referrals… www.butter-cake.com
30. Factorsinfluencingdecisionswhencreating a digital strategy Impact on business model €€€ Direct impact on business model > Decisiontaken by CEO Significant contribution to strategicfunctional areas > Decisiontakenat C-level Minor contribution to one or more functional areas > Decisiontakenat C-level or direct reports (Lead TBD) € How executivesfeel about new technologies X $ X € www.butter-cake.com Not a fan Focused on ROI Geek
31. II. How to build a digital strategy?II.2. How to turn a digital strategyinto an action plan
32. Overview Turning a digital strategyinto an action plan issomethingthatshouldbedone in phases to reflect the relative position of the Internet in the overallstrategy of means. Using a customerjourney and associatingdifferent brand goals to itis a way of organising all the content and actions and prioritisingthembeforegettinginto the detail of the digital action plan. Defining how to steer the projectwillthenbedoneretroactively. > Full article on Butter Cake website
33. Illustration of a genericcustomerjourneyand how it corresponds to brand objectives 33 www.butter-cake.com
34. Which type of content corresponds to which consumer needs?- Example for a typicalcustomerjourney - www.butter-cake.com
35. Creating a digital action planMapping content and actions by cross-referencing brand objectives and consumer objectives (Push & Pull) > Positioning and prioritisingavailable content > Identifyingmissing content: to generate or produce > Correspondencebetween actions to perform and functionalresponsibilities (communication, marketing, sales, after-sales, CRM…) www.butter-cake.com
36. II. How to build a digital strategy?II.3. How to manage and measure a digital action plan: what are the right performance indicators?
37. Overview The two main problemsrelating to the strategic management of digital actions are linked: an excess of available data and the difficulty of aggregatingthemwith actions carried out on other media. It is the startingviewpointthatdistorts the situation: if westartfocusing on operations and whatismeasurable, any additions or comparisonswillbeshortsighted and made at the wronglevel. Weneed to startfromstrategic objectives and criteria for success and failure to define the right indicators, and to avoidconfusingindicatorsrelating to goals withtacticalindicators. > Full article on Butter Cake website
41. II. How to build a digital strategy?II.4. How your digital communications canevolve and innovate
42. Overview Digital media isconstantlyevolving, and some trends are long-termwhileothers are more short-lived. Keeping up with the times whilemaking the right choice in terms of which trends to embrace for the brand and itscustomersis the communications balance thatneeds to besought. To be proactive in thissense, all brands need to continuallyintegrate monitoring and experimentation in theirannual plans. > Full article on Butter Cake website
43. New trends are a toolthatcan help balance the image of a brand with the counter-weightbeing the target profile Trends Target profile Brand image: REALITY as seen by consumers Brand image: GOAL desired by company
44. Someideas for organising a collaborative monitoring project Two-way One-way Degree of exchange and engagement over time Employees Partners Clients Continuouscollaboration Open innovation Monitoring Meetings Internalpresentations Meeting on specifictopics Cross-departmental teams Ideas box Collect feedback Studies and analysis Opinions and feedback Participative project Tests and requests for feedback Co-creation Ideas box www.butter-cake.com Stakeholders
46. Conclusion This book can help brands and companies structure their interrogations and approachwhatever issue they have withtheir digital strategy and withbothexternalpartners and internalstakeholderswithin the organisation. Some suggestions for use could include supporting actions such as: - Preparing annual marketing / communications plans - Preparing a response to a tender or a brand communications brief - Redesigning a web site and the associated communications strategy (SEO, content…) - Launching or evaluating an e-commerce activity, particularly from the consumer/client viewpoint - Analysing existing activities to optimise digital strategy - Integrating different actions (online and offline) based around the customer experience - Integrating the Internet in internal organisation and the role of different departments - Selecting suppliers and dividing up work between them - Developing or updating the brand or company strategy and evaluating the impact of the Internet - Building dashboards and scorecards, analysing the contribution of the Internet compared to other channels…