Intent marketing

Intent marketing is about marketing a product or a service based on consumers' intent to adopt, purchase or consume that particular service which may have been either explicitly or implicitly conveyed by the subscriber.

Marketing to consumer's intent is expected to produce better ROI because of the absence of need to create awareness about a product or service in the consumer's mind before promoting it. Consumer's intent for consuming a product or service may either be predicted based on behavioral data or captured explicitly when the subscriber tries to purchase a product and the transaction has been aborted for some reason.[1]

Intent Data Sources

Most marketers are familiar with Search Marketing (both Search engine marketing and search engine optimization) as an intent data source, but there are other important sources, including:[2]

  • site data
  • off-site web activity
  • point-of-sale, CRM
  • social data
  • content consumption data.

In essence, intent data is the digital footprints left behind when a user uses a particular keyword on a search engine, visits a website, downloads a whitepaper, engages with your website, interacts on social platforms and so on. Each of these interactions gives us an individual's current and future intention, giving us a better picture of the individual as well as the account.

Individually these signals tell us a lot. When grouped together and in order, linked to individual people, we can uncover new ways to engage with those people while extrapolating engagement patterns to better interact with similar audiences.

Telecom operator’s scenario

In pre-paid majority telecom markets, mobile subscribers try to purchase or subscribe to various services using their mobile handsets as the medium and use their prepaid balance to pay for it. In some cases, the transaction initiated by the mobile subscriber to purchase or subscribe for a service may fail because of absence of enough prepaid balance required for it. In such cases, mobile operators may capture the failed transaction due to lack of prepaid balance (or any other reason) as subscriber's intent to purchase a product or subscribe for a service and market it when the subscriber has enough pre-paid balance. In this case, the mobile telecom subscriber's intent is taken explicitly from the failed transactions and used to market the product or service when the timing is right.

gollark: It's logically impossible for me to not have a phone, so I would simply retrieve my spare phone.
gollark: Imagine orienting objects.
gollark: You can't talk to anyone who's died to tyrannical dictators. Technically.
gollark: A generally intelligent AI:- could make itself more intelligent much more easily than a human- will probably have a very different set of capabilities to humans even if they "average out" to "equal intelligence" and thus might be really dangerous depending on what they are- is unlikely to share much of our human value system unless explicitly built that way
gollark: That's possibly reasonable but problematic to do.

See also

References

  1. "Are operators addressing subscriber's intent? Asks Flytxt's VP". telecomtiger.com. Retrieved 2014-03-15.
  2. "Intent-driven marketing: how hard is it really? - AdNews". www.adnews.com.au. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
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