April 9, 2006
This article appeared in the Retail Self-Service Executive Summary, Spring 2006.
Most consumers are unaware of the careful planning that goes into the design, packaging and marketing of the products and services they enjoy. Most of them don't know why they feel comfortable when they walk into a Starbucks; they just know that they do.
Janelle Barlow, Ph.D., says this non-tangible, hard-to-quantify relationship between consumers and the products and services they buy is at the core of a successful business.
"(A brand is) primarily an emotional process of engagement," she said in her keynote address at The Self-Service & Kiosk Show, Feb. 14, 2006. "Branding is about 95 percent emotional, and a large part of that 95 percent is at an unconscious level."
To make her point, she echoed a number of quotes from business leaders, including this provocative thought from Virgin's Richard Branson: "I'm convinced that it is feelings - and feelings alone - that account for the success of the Virgin brand."
That's a tough pill to swallow for those who would like to believe it is their product, or their hard work, that should get the credit for success.
Measuring customer service
Customer service and the (hopefully) resultant satisfaction are primary goals for any business. Typically, customer service is measured by a very basic barometer - good, bad or some combination of the two.
Barlow said that entire yardstick can be thrown out in favor of a more brand-centric one.
"All of us are involved with service in one way or another. Instead of good service or bad service, start asking whether your service is on-brand or off-brand."
She emphasized that satisfied customers are no longer enough, since companies have trained individuals to equate "satisfaction" with "average."
"We've taught customers to say they're satisfied when nothing happens," she said. "Satisfaction does not get loyalty today. We have taught people to say they're satisfied Â… it is hard to get low marks on customer service."
That lesson extends to self-service devices, where functionality is no longer enough. Kiosks must fit with the company's overall brand, make sense aesthetically and logistically, and provide an emotional experience to the user that goes far beyond any mere transaction.
"The functionality of your devices (is) pretty similar, right? So the question is, what's different? That's really your strength. Inside an industry, functionality is really not going to be that different."
Barlow said any self-service device must contain three branding power tools: likeability, reinforcement and consistency.
"I don't think kiosks can just be boxes of functionality. They have to be likable. You have to look at them and like them, or else people will walk away. Everything about them needs to reinforce the message. And they need to be consistent," she said.
"Think about your brand as a promise that you deliver consistently to a defined marketplace, and your self-service project as primarily an entry point to this promise."