Marketers are elevating campaigns with customer-centric creative
By Ben Holding
Sponsored by Amazon Ads
Brands are always looking for their next big creative idea, the creative that will inspire customers, and potential ones, to choose their brand.
Often brand leaders rely on insight from past campaigns to plan for future ones. According to Heather Kehrberg, director of global creative success at Amazon Ads, “While past campaign insights are helpful and they should be considered, they can also be quite limiting for advertisers in terms of preventing them from trying something different that may reach a new set of customers.”
A more effective approach is to take a customer-centric view to develop campaign creative that resonates with the audience in the moment. Kehrberg explained the term and what it means to brands and customers: “A customer-centric approach to developing creative is one that goes beyond outcomes from past campaigns to also encompass scaled creative insights, specifically those related to particular creative elements. It then utilizes experimentation to determine what resonates and performs best.”
With this approach, marketers can understand how their audiences are likely to respond to different creative aspects before moving into asset production, allowing investments to be better informed and helping to make positive outcomes more likely.
Customer-centric creative is informed by insights and experimentation
The concept of customer-centric creative challenges marketers to seek more insights than just what’s gathered from analyzing past campaign performance.
A customer-centric approach brings a variety of audience insights into the process. “We need to understand everything from shopping behaviors, media consumption and trending topics, but we also need to go deeper and look at creative-specific insights,” explained Kehrberg. “These can help identify the best creative types to use for different goals, like awareness or purchase, and they inform decisions about creative elements like imagery, headlines and colors to use in order to really resonate with a specific audience.”
A solid place to start is always with a clear goal or KPI. That goal then informs which scaled insights and past campaign learnings are most relevant and enables marketers to hypothesize what kind of creative and creative elements will perform best toward the goal.
“Then you have to produce those creative versions based on your hypothesis and conduct creative experimentation,” said Kehrberg. “Once you see what’s working best, you can shift more of the campaign budget into those creative versions.”
A customer-centric approach drives outcomes
“There’s not only one type of creative that comes from this approach, which is the beauty of it,” said Kehrberg. “The creative should be very specific to your brand and to the objectives you’re hoping to achieve with your campaign. It shouldn’t be a one-size-fits-all, but more so tailored to the specific audiences that you’re hoping to reach.”
For example, using this approach, Kehrberg’s team at Amazon Ads worked with an Amazon seller in 2021 to run a consideration and conversion-driven campaign for artificial Christmas trees. With many other advertisers featuring similar products during the holiday season, this seller wanted to show customers how their product and brand were …read more
Source:: Digiday