Sept October Issue 2016 1 | Page 22

Big Social Mobile enterprises understand this and therefore have one first goal during every customer or consumer interaction: uniquely identifying who they are interacting with. This does not mean that solving a customer problem is not foremost in their mind, but rather that they position their ability to solve a customer problem, or to respond to a prospect’s inquiry, as most effective when they know who the customer is. The nuance is of primary important: great service companies actually tell consumers they can help them better if they know who they are—not just existing customers (who more readily self-identify) but every consumer. True, some consumers will not self-identify; they are smart enough to know the company will track and target them. But if you offer something of value, usually some type of content the consumer actually wants, they will. The concept is not challenging—simply ask the consumer who they are. But who is a consumer? Or more appropriately what is a consumer— truthfully a company doesn’t care who the consumer really is, what they want is a consumer that matches a specific profile. Someone’s name, for example, means very little. There is no one to one relationship between a name and a consumer. Only three data points are considered unique, and therefore acceptable as what I call bridging data: · Email addresses: social consumers have one personal email address that they use for all meaningful digital activities, such as when they make a purchase or register a product, and they will never give it up. They willingly attach their personal attributes—name, address, age, etc.—to this email address. Some people may use an additional email address when they are shopping or researching so as not to be identified, but good content, effective use of cookies, or an inevitable mistake is usually enough to ferret these out. 22 Strictly Marketing Magazine September/October 2016 · Phone numbers: perhaps even better than an email address is a consumer’s mobile phone number. Consumer’s rarely change them, and once identified it exposes the consumer to the massive amount of data collection that is possible via a smart device. While mobile phones can be shared within a household (causing data confusion) this is rare among social consumers—the main group targeted through the use of analytics. · Device IDs: every device has unique number, such as an UDID, that can be pulled from the device under certain circumstances. A common time is when they connect to Wi-Fi—perhaps why so many stores offer free Wi-Fi? This number rarely changes and can be used to associate the different devices a consumer uses to one specific consumer. It does require greater IT assistance (such as when setting up the Wi-Fi network, but for times when a consumer won’t self-identify, especially for devices that are not also phones, it is one of the few ways to sort through the consumerdevice relationship.