Posts Tagged ‘upromise’

Meaningful Marketing Start-ups: SaveWave

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

It’s been a little more than two years since our launch of the Marketing with Meaning platform on this blog, and nearly a year since the publication of my book on the topic. One of the interesting things that has happened since I’ve been trying to drive this new paradigm of marketing is that I have come into contact with a wide range of individuals around the world who also believe in our cause. It’s a delight to log in to my email, Twitter, or blog accounts each day and find a random message of thanks from someone who has just discovered what we’re aiming to do.

As a spokesperson for this next evolution of marketing and a strategy leader at a digital agency, I also have a chance to connect with entrepreneurs who are building businesses based on the shift toward Marketing with Meaning. While there are some people trying to create businesses based on shoving interruptive ads in front of our faces, a handful of start-ups are working to build platforms for marketers to add value through their advertising. So in the next few weeks I plan to feature a few of these businesses here. Unless specifically called out, I have no financial ties to these companies; rather, I believe that their success will serve as a catalyst for the movement that we desperately want to see supplant the old approach–so I want to give them whatever helping hand I can. And in a few weeks I will even be able to share a meaningful marketing platform that we have been working on for more than a year here at Bridge Worldwide!

First Up: SaveWave

SaveWave is a rare example of a start-up that was spawned from a large company–that itself is part of a much larger organization.  The company was recently formed as an offshoot of Upromise, the multi-brand loyalty program that helps people save money for college. Upromise itself is a great meaningful marketing platform that I had a chance to work with when I worked in marketing at P&G.  It has helped people save billions and generates huge results for its brand partners (see my previous post here). Because of its success, Upromise, in turn, was purchased by Sallie Mae a few years ago. In June, some of the key founders of Upromise saw a huge opportunity to take a piece of Upromise’s success model and create something new.  Such “intrapreneurship” is praiseworthy on its own, because it can be so difficult to build something on top of your day job and get the parent company to embrace a concept that is outside its usual business model.

SaveWave was created to channel a very powerful tool: access to product-level purchase data at more than 27,000 retailers in the U.S. Getting access to this UPC and shopper card data and building the trust of retailers comes from years of work by Upromise. Now this access will allow SaveWave to help marketers create other offers and promotions that are based on understanding whether a specific transaction occurred.  This unlocks an incredible amount of potential for meaningful marketing. The first and most obvious use of this system is for mobile/digital couponing, which Upromise has actually been offering since 2008; but this also allows for much more, for example:

  • Brands can partner with retailers to make personalized offers to customers. Instead of one-size-fits-all coupons, you can test various alternatives and vary your offer according to customer type.
  • Marketers can go beyond just offering cents back, and instead could allow customers to earn other “rewards,” such as frequent-flier miles, iTunes songs, or Starbucks cards.  These latter alternatives can be much more meaningful in that they are “real” benefits that you can feel and spend, whereas $.50 savings on a $100 bill at the checkout lane is not registered as a real savings by shoppers. Meanwhile, marketers can purchase these kinds of rewards for less than the actual cost of redeeming a coupon.
  • SaveWave plans to “white label” its tool with one or more APIs. In other words, they want to provide the back-end engine that a thousand other big companies, entrepreneurs, and app-builders can use to create their own meaningful marketing tools.  We’re already assessing the tool for our clients and our own app ideas.

Nothing is easy in the start-up world, of course, even if you have competitive advantages such as SaveWave’s data access and a nice first round of venture capital funding. I think the company’s main challenge will lie in figuring out how to stand out among a very wide swath of competitors. Digital and mobile couponing is a no-brainer and will eventually happen; the result is that everybody is going after the prize.  I think the key to success will be to actually get relationships up and running quickly, using big deals to lead to drive positive momentum.

So if you’re on a big brand or working on a way to make digital coupons and rewards do more for your business or clients, check out SaveWave and contact my friend Brendaen Makechnie over there.  Tell him that Bob sent you.

Takeaways from the Upromise Partner Summit

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

This morning I gave a keynote speech at the 9th annual partner summit for Upromise in Boston. In case you haven’t heard of it by now, Upromise is a meaningful marketing platform that partners with brands to contribute a percentage of their sales to a college savings fund. I first came across Upromise back in 2001 when I worked on the Tide brand at Procter & Gamble and led a test of the service with a handful of other brands at the company. Nearly a decade later I was excited to see that Upromise is as strong as ever, and perfectly delivering on what I’ve been preaching in this blog and my book for two years this month. For this post I wanted to capture my catching up on some of the things that make Upromise a great partner for brands looking to connect with people in a meaningful way.

The Upromise Proposition

Overall, Upromise is a classic win-win-win and one of only a handful of businesses I consider “meaningful marketing platforms.” These platforms happen when you create a business that helps brands offer meaningful marketing to consumers, and you take a piece of revenue based on your ability to help both succeed. Probably the biggest meaningful marketing platform is Google, in which search advertising is clicked if it is helpful to consumers, and Google collects a fee from the advertiser based on whether the consumer chose to click on the ad.

Upromise similarly creates a win-win-win by enrolling a network of brands that will give a percentage of sales to a college savings plan. Consumers get anywhere from 1% to 5% back, businesses gladly hand over the fee to capture these sales, and Upromise collects a small percentage from the marketer based on each sale. To date, more than $44 billion has been spent through Upromise, resulting in more than $500 million in total earnings for consumers who are in the program. This success led Sallie Mae to acquire Upromise about two years ago.

In addition to the general plan, Upromise works hard to add features for both marketers and members. There is personalized offer platform, special promotions, and email, Facebook, and Twitter updates to help savers find out how to earn even more. And because Upromise has access to all of the data about purchase behavior, it offers an unprecedented ability to calculate ROI. No wonder its partners range from Exxon Mobil to McDonald’s to Bank of America.

Partner Example: Liberty Mutual

Liberty Mutual is one of a number of major financial services brands that are involved with Upromise. I have been a fan or Liberty Mutual for some time, and I wrote about their Responsibility Project both in this blog and in my book. In speaking with one of the brand’s representatives at this event, I learned that the Upromise partnership is a perfect fit with its brand purpose of encouraging responsibility.

Liberty Mutual has selected a smart path in embracing the idea of personal responsibility. First, the idea of “responsibility” differentiates the business in a crowded space and in a way that fits with what an insurance company is about (unlike sponsoring baseball games or showing a whale jumping in a commercial).

Second, people who are responsible tend to purchase more insurance AND they tend to be people who have fewer accidents. So by “owning” responsibility, Liberty Mutual increases its revenues and reduces its costs (i.e., paying out claims). Third, by embracing responsibility Liberty Mutual helps to build trust with its customers. After all, the responsibility goes both ways, and people need to trust that their insurance company will pay their claims if and when an accident happens.

The tie with Upromise makes a perfect fit with Liberty Mutual’s responsibility focus because the people who will take actions to save money years ahead of college are very likely to be more responsible than average. So Liberty Mutual further discovers and bonds with the high-revenue, high-profit customers that it desires. What I love is that this is a way of “targeting” people who have a desirable psychographic, and then delivering something that adds value to their lives.

Power of the Partner Summit

What I really love about the event that I attended is that it represents a way for Upromise to market itself in a meaningful way to its business customers. First, the company paid for me to attend in order to give these partners some added-value education about where the marketing world is going. Second, there was plenty of time for the partners to get together and trade tips and learnings amongst each other during meals, breaks, and at tonight’s Red Sox game. And there were additional speakers and breakout sessions in which companies such as Mastercard shared some keys to their success.

But the most original idea was a panel session in which actual Upromise users were flown in from around the country and put on the stage to share their likes and dislikes about the service. This “live focus group” offered some unscripted insights about what is working and what isn’t, but more importantly it reminded the partners of the real impact Upromise is making in terms of people’s purchase habits and success in saving for college. I have never seen a conference do something like this before, and I hope it is the beginning of a trend we see at other training events and corporate offsites.

So kudos to Upromise for continuing to build their customers’ businesses and give millions of parents a way to save for the biggest expense in their families’ futures.