IOT in Digital Marketing
The boom
in IoT (Internet of Things) technology will soon allow us to analyze, predict,
and respond to consumer behavior in almost every market possible.
The
Internet of Things is the connection of everyday products like cars, alarm
clocks, and lights to computing devices via the internet. It allows them to
exchange data with each other, providing marketers with more contexts about
their customers' product usage. This enables marketers to deliver more relevant
messages and leads to greater customer engagement.
For
example, if you run out of milk or it spoils, a refrigerator connected to the
internet could recognize your need and display a message on its screen or your
phone about the best milk deals in town. You could even order a carton through
one of those devices if the refrigerator company partnered with a grocery
store.
Since IoT technology connects the internet with
objects that are ubiquitous in our daily lives, marketers in almost every
industry will be able to engage consumers throughout every phase of the
customer journey.
The term
“Big Data” is an understatement for the amount of data IoT devices will
produce. According to the Ericsson Mobility Report, IoT devices and sensors
will exceed mobile phones as the largest category of connected devices in 2019
and generate a staggering 400 zettabytes of data per year.
IoT's
surge will over joy marketers because they can leverage these massive data sets
to integrate consumer behavioral signals into their marketing stack. This will
allow them to capture interactions, conversion metrics, and consumer behavior
predictions and link them to purchase-intent data.
Access
to this data is exciting, but it could also lead to confusion. Marketers might
not know how to interpret this unprecedented influx of information. Changes to
the digital marketing landscape are clearly on the
horizon. So check out these six predictions of how IoT will influence digital
marketing's growth and evolution and how you can prepare for it.
1) New digital devices will
emerge.
Since
anything connected to the internet could be an avenue for consumer engagement,
marketers will move beyond today’s digital devices like laptops, mobile, and
tablets. For instance, we could use things like car and refrigerator monitors
as possible touch points. Amazon already leverages IoT with their Dash buttons,
allowing consumers to order a product with the push of a wifi-connected button.
IoT
devices generate unprecedented amounts of data, so every customer interaction
allows marketers to capture consumer intent, behavior, needs, and desires. This
makes it possible to serve contextually relevant marketing messages at the most
optimal place and time.
Understanding
a consumer’s behavior, purchase patterns, and location also provides a level of
attribution, analytics, and predictive capabilities that were previously
unavailable. Based on signals from IoT devices we'll be able to push timely
notifications to consumers when they need to purchase something rather than
waiting for them to show interest. These insights and the ability to accurately
attribute every interaction throughout the customer journey will be
groundbreaking.
3) Marketing technology platforms
will treat IoT data like their first born.
Marketing platforms and technologies will be able to
ingest and use IoT data similarly to how cookies and unique IDs (UIDs) are used
today. These platforms will also use IoT signals to further evolve our current
cross-device technologies.
Developing
platforms and technologies capable of ingesting, analyzing, and acting on these
vast data sets will be a very complex undertaking. But evolution in digital marketing AI and machine learning
applications will produce marketing technology platforms that can process,
interpret, and evaluate these data sets in near real-time. In other words,
expect many new entrants in the marketing technology space to tackle this
challenge.
4) The agency's role will evolve.
Along
with the traditional responsibilities of agencies, they will start playing an
increasingly technical, data-centric role as technology partners. Agencies will
help build their client's platforms, develop their internal systems, and manage
the implementation of tagging elements. The agency staff's skill set must adapt
to the evolution of their role, though. They'll need to develop an agile
approach to managing campaigns, marketing initiatives, pricing, and product development.
Keen understanding of the data packets IoT devices can produce will become
commonplace, as well as knowing what the actionable endpoints within a customer
journey are.
5)
Marketers will be able to deliver timely, personalized messages that align with
their customer's lifecycle stage
The
ability to deliver timely, personalized messages at the precise moment to the
optimal device will transform digital marketing. For example, using data
collected from a fitness wearable and proximity data collected from beacons,
digital marketers could deliver fitness product messaging or emails when the
user is near a relevant advertiser’s store, like a smoothie joint. The
possibilities for using a combination of these signals to provide highly
relevant messaging at the optimal moment are unlimited.
IoT
could also provide marketers with the information to improve customer
experience and determine when they should send acquisition or retention
marketing messages. One example is using offline purchases coupled with proximity
data from IoT devices in a brick and mortar store to target recent purchasers
with an upsell email or social campaigns asking for product feedback to send to
their peers.
6) There will be increased
scrutiny of privacy and security.
With
great data, comes great responsibility. We can expect more privacy and security
regulations and technologies focused on protecting both consumer and enterprise
data. Methods such as network segmentation, device-to-device authentication,
and bolstered encryption techniques will likely emerge to prevent IoT devices
from being compromised. The data created by the Internet of Things will unleash
considerable digital marketing potential. Predicting exactly
how these changes will play out is not exact, but the evolution is already
underway.
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