Marketing to the Experience Generation
Mobile should be a key strategy for any brand hoping to reach the "Experience Generation" in India.
Mobile should be a key strategy for any brand hoping to reach the "Experience Generation" in India.
A lot of the rules that marketers have trusted for years are slowly changing as the “Experience Generation” redefines how and when marketing can succeed.
This Experience Generation is changing the consumer landscape in a number of ways:
The Experience Generation is already having an impact in India and, although the old forms of marketing and communication are still effective for now, the data is clearly showing that the quicker we address these new challenges, the better we will serve the wants and aspirations of a new generation ready to cut ties with tradition.
The Experience Generation is especially active in India, considering that more than 50 percent of Indian Internet users are mobile-only, compared to other developed countries, where mobile-only users only account for 20 percent to 25 percent of the population.
On-demand entertainment is driving a huge portion mobile activity, as superior video viewing now works across constrained and variable networks. Indian youth are watching trailers for Hollywood movies as well as TV shows and sports on their mobile devices.
Regular mobile viewing is changing the way the Experience Generation interacts with content. The content needs to be able to meet them where they are, as they aren’t going to be waiting at the same time, on the same day each week, to watch a favorite TV show.
Similarly, putting the same 30-second TV advertisement before an online video clip is considered intrusive and makes people tune out, making an immersive, contextual experience more desirable to younger viewers.
It’s notable that a recent Vuclip survey of 6,000 people in India shows that 74 percent of people answered that they currently watch their favorite videos, TV shows, and movies mostly on mobile, while only 11 percent said mostly on television.
Mobile video is moving from early adopters and going mainstream with the youth driving this trend.
Even sharing video clips is popular in India, with 65 percent of consumers sharing mobile videos, with Twitter being a key way to do this.
The Experience Generation likes to engage socially with content, getting links through social recommendations and then telling their friends about it, rather than being told what to watch.
And, despite cost and buffering concerns, 89 percent of respondents to a recent Vuclip survey said they would watch long-form movies on their mobile devices if they were made available.
Marketers need to meet the Experience Generation head on. Targeted television advertising may not reach them, so you have to diversify your marketing efforts.
Campaigns need to have individual appeal tailored specifically to seamlessly and contextually engage with the Experience Generation on their mobile device.
“One size fits all” doesn’t work anymore.
You also need to be sure to deliver an amazing experience from the start and that means finding the right environment in which to advertise. Elegant, immersive mobile experiences reflect directly onto your brand. Crashing apps with buffering video tells the customer how well your company understands the mobile audience.
You also have a change to focus your company in new ways, similar to Dove celebrating natural beauty, or Coca-Cola making an emotional case for the good moods its products convey. They are selling bigger ideas than soap and soda.
The Experience Generation rewards innovation, encourages engagement with companies when it is handled properly, and gives you a chance to put your brand directly at its fingertips. Not only that, but given how much sharing is happening on mobile, you have an opportunity here to create an army of loyal consumers who are passing along your message for you.
Whether they respond to your brand depends on how well you learn who they are and what experience speaks to them.
Image via Shutterstock.