Posts Tagged ‘DHI’

Kroger Shows Loyalty to Customers (from #DHI09)

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Kroger mymagazine

One of most exciting things about the DHI Non-conference last week here in Cincinnati was a session by The Kroger Company, one of our clients at Bridge Worldwide. Through its various banner stores, Kroger is a major player in the retail food business, capturing 10 cents of every dollar spent on food in the United States. The company is not secretive, but it doesn’t go around regularly beating its chest about how it is winning in a very competitive market. In a session titled “Innovation and How to Meet New Expectations for Media Delivery,” RW (Kirk) Douthit and Angie Rose from Kroger shared several nuggets about how they are working to evolve to digital marketing by putting their customers in the center.

The main focus of the discussion revolved around Kroger’s work with its database marketing partner, dunnhumby, to provide personalized messages and offers to its loyalty cardholders. The company has the second-largest database in the U.S., after the Census Bureau. Kirk kicked off the discussion by reframing how Kroger thinks about the loyalty program:

“It’s not about customers’ loyalty to us; it’s about Kroger’s loyalty to its customers.”

This message permeated everything in the company’s session. Kirk and Angie spoke about the company’s use of quarterly coupon magazines (such as the one pictured above) that are personalized for its top shoppers based on their purchase habits. This helps the company drive sales of new products and larger baskets sizes from the 20% of customers who drive up to 60% of total sales.

The Kroger team spoke about how it is gradually embracing digital tools where it makes sense for its customers. They admitted that progress is slower than some customers want, but that it takes time to get things right. And while some shoppers are ready for innovations such as mobile coupons and online circulars, the company still has to provide mailed offers for the many who are not living in the digital future yet.

One of the really interesting digital services that Kroger is planning to release soon is the chance to pull up your Kroger shopping history. It’s a way of giving people a digital receipt and something unheard of in the industry to date. This could help people, say, track their spending on pharmaceuticals over the course of the year so that they can be properly charged back against flexible healthcare spending accounts. It’s a great example of how customers can see additional benefit from using their Kroger loyalty cards.

Finally, I also appreciated the Kroger team’s willingness to share how the decline of traditional media is happening faster than digital is ramping up. For example, a staple marketing tool for decades has been the daily newspaper. When sales needed a boost, Kroger has frequently used newspaper ads to drive traffic to stores on specials. But the decline of newspaper subscriptions is seriously weakening the impact of these ads, and there is no digital solution with the same scale impact. It’s another example Bob Garfield’s The Chaos Scenario come to life.

The entire audience really enjoyed Kirk and Angie’s open and honest communication about the opportunities and challenges in digital marketing. By better understanding their world, those of us who serve them can do much more to help Kroger crack the code.

Cincinnati #DHI09 Non-conference Presentation

Monday, September 28th, 2009
View more presentations from Bob Gilbreath.

On Thursday and Friday last week my hometown of Cincinnati hosted its second annual Digital Hub Initiative Non-conference. I was able to deliver a keynote speech Friday, following in the footsteps of A-list speakers such as John Battelle, Peter Kim, Brad Berens, Allan Adamson, Pete Blackshaw, and Winston Binch. I was very proud to see our event attract a large, engaged crowd and I can’t wait to see how we take it to an even higher level next year.

Obviously I was speaking to share the concept of my new book, The Next Evolution of Marketing, and the topic of this blog, Marketing with Meaning. Every time I speak I like to try something new and personalize my presentation based on the specific audience at hand. For my speech on Friday I decided to come down hard on my fellow digital leaders for choosing to adapt to the existing, traditional, interruptive model of marketing, and I challenged the room to lead the move to meaningful marketing, which happens to provide a powerful path for digital to win.

I thought this built very well on earlier presentations in the day from Peter Kim and Brad Berens, who both showed how digital technology is a groundbreaking societal change. My link was to show that such a dramatic shift in society means that there must be a similar dramatic shift in marketing strategy. I also used my presentation to share how a simple model of focusing on business objectives and higher-level insights can lead to meaningful marketing ideas in no time. You can see my slides above.

Overall I think it went pretty well.  The Twitter feedback was strong and several people came up to me to praise it. Hopefully a couple hundred digital marketers take my challenge and go back to their offices Monday ready to lead!

What I really love about this conference is that it is a way for the digital leaders of Cincinnati to practice Marketing with Meaning. Led by Jack Streitmarter and a diverse group of volunteers, the Digital Hub Initiative is about attracting, developing, and retaining digital talent in the Cincinnati area by investing in great events such as this. I was proud to see many groups come together and pool their efforts around this effort, including local chapters of the AdClub and American Marketing Association, big companies such as P&G and Kroger, and diverse digital services companies such as Nielsen and Empower.

Thanks again to the DHI leaders volunteers for inviting me to speak, and to all of the volunteers who pulled off a great show.