another. In fact, they trust their network of friends and family more than they trust corporations and brands.
In short, they are highly connected.
Breaking the Myths of Connectivity
Connectivity is arguably the most important game changer in the history of marketing. Granted, it can no longer be considered a new buzzword, but it has been changing many facets of marketing and is not showing signs of slowing down.
Connectivity has made us question many mainstream theories and major assumptions that we have learned about customer, product, and brand management. Connectivity significantly reduces the costs of interaction among companies, employees,
channel partners, customers, and other relevant parties. This in turn lowers the barriers to entering new markets,
enables concurrent product development, and shortens the time frame for brand building.
There have been various cases of how connectivity quickly disrupted long- established industries with seemingly high entry barriers. Amazon has disrupted the brick-and-mortar bookstores and later the publishing industry.
Likewise, Netflix has disturbed the brick-and-mortar video rental stores and,
along with the likes of Hulu, has shaken
up the satellite and cable TVservices. In a similar fashion, Spotify and Apple Music have changed the way music distribution works.
Connectivity also changes the way we see the competition and customers.
Today, collaboration with the competitors and co-creation with customers are central. Competition is no longer a zero-sum game. Customers are no longer the passive receivers of a company's segmentation, targeting, and positioning moves. Connectivity accelerates market dynamics to the point where it is virtually impossible for a company to stand alone and rely on internal resources to win. A company must face the reality that to win it must collaborate with external parties and even involve customer participation.
The success of Procter and Gamble's (P&G's) Connect + Develop program exemplifies this. Instead of protecting the brand equity of Febreze as its own competitive advantage, P&G licenses the trademark for new categories.
Partner companies such as Kaz and Bissell launched Honeywell scented fans and odor-removing vacuum bag filters that carry the Febreze brand.
Despite the obvious influence, connectivity
is often underrated as a mere application of technology that marketers need to deal with. Seeing connectivity from a technological viewpoint alone would often be misleading. In the context of strategy, many marketers view connectivity simply as an enabling platform and infrastructure that support the overall direction. A bigger-picture view of connectivity allows marketers to avoid this trap. While it is true that connectivity has been driven by technology—
namely “screen technology and the internet”—its importance is far more strategic.
A survey by Google reveals that 90 percent of our interactions with media are now facilitated by screens: smartphone, tablet, laptop, and television screens.
Screens are becoming so important in our lives that we spend more than four hours of our leisure time daily to use multiple screens sequentially and simultaneously. And behind these screen-based interactions, the internet has been the backbone. Global internet traffic has grown by a factor of 30 from
2000 to 2014, connecting four out of ten people in the world. According to a
Cisco forecast, we will see another ten-fold jump
of global internet traffic by2019, powered by more than 11 billion connected mobile devices.
With such a massive reach, connectivity transforms the way customers behave. When shopping in-store, most customers would search for price comparison and product reviews. Google research shows that eight out of ten smartphone users in the United States do mobile research in-store. Even when watching television advertising, more than half of the TV audience in
Indonesia conducts mobile search. This is a trend affecting customers globally.
Derivative products of the internet also enable transparency. Social media such as Twitter and Instagram enable customers to show and share their customer experience, which further inspires other customers from the same or a lower class to emulate and pursue a similar experience. Communal rating sites such as TripAdvisor and Yelp empower customers to make informed choices based on the wisdom of the crowd.
Thus, to fully embrace connectivity we need to view it holistically. While
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