Personalisation defined: What is Personalisation?
Find out what personalisation really means, and see examples of personalisation in action.
Find out what personalisation really means, and see examples of personalisation in action.
When a friend gives you a personalised gift for your birthday, a holiday, or a special occasion, it shows that they really know you and care about you. A more generic gift that doesn’t align with your interests may lead you to believe that your friend doesn’t know you as well as you’d hoped.
The same can be said for companies when it comes to personalised marketing. The term “personalisation” is used all the time in the world of marketing, but its true meaning can sometimes get lost.
Personalisation is defined as using data to target and retarget leads with a brand message that speaks directly to their specific interests, demographics, and buying behaviour.
In this article, we’ll look at what marketing personalisation really means and some examples of it in action.
What types of experiences can be tailored? Most of the channels where customer interactions happen can be personalised. Some of the main personalisation solutions include:
Marketing personalisation uses known information about a customer to create a tailored experience or interaction with a brand.
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What kind of information can be acted on to tailor experiences in those channels? It’s basically an unlimited list that contains any information a company can collect about its customers and prospects. Some of the most common include:
Remember, effective personalisation goes beyond simple name customisation. It’s about understanding user goals and helping them achieve those goals through tailored experiences.
There is a seemingly endless number of ways you could use this information to affect experiences in the channels mentioned.
For example, a B2B tech site that modifies its website homepage experience to speak differently to specific companies is using personalisation as part of its ABM strategy.
Experience: Tailor homepage hero image, copy and calls-to-action
Information used: Company name
A B2C shoe retailer that features nursing shoes on its homepage only to visitors that have shown an interest in nursing shoes is using personalisation.
Experience: Tailor homepage hero headline, image, and call-to-action
Information used: Past browsing history and time spent by category
This definition of personalisation may sound similar to another concept: customisation. But there is a clear difference. With personalisation, a company modifies an experience without any effort from the customer. Customisation, on the other hand, allows the customer to modify the experience themselves intentionally.
For example, when you adjust your Gmail settings to indicate the number of messages you want to see per page and add a signature, you are customising your email experience. But when Gmail displays advertisements based on your interests, it personalises your experience for you. In the first example, you’re intentionally changing the experience. In the second, you receive more relevant ads without taking any direct action yourself.
Let’s explore another example we’re all familiar with: online shopping. Many e-commerce sites allow you to filter the products shown on a page to help you more easily locate the ones that meet your specific criteria.
That’s customisation. You are intentionally customising the products you see on that page to help you find what you’re looking for more quickly.
But a site could deliver a similar result — helping you find the product that best meets your needs — without requiring you to take action yourself. Instead, the site could sort the products on the page and list those at the top that meet the preferences you’ve demonstrated by your behaviour. For example, if you regularly shop and purchase home decor in black and brushed nickel, it might display those items toward the top of the list. This way, you can find those products more quickly without needing to scroll through pages of irrelevant gold or white decor first.
In another example of customisation vs. personalisation, let’s consider email frequency. When you sign up to join a company’s email list (or when you attempt to unsubscribe), companies offer you the option to modify your preferences to dictate how often you’d like to receive emails (daily, weekly, etc.).
This is another example of customisation; you tell the company how often you’d like to hear from them.
But you could reach the same end result (more or fewer emails) with personalisation, too. In that case, the company would pay attention to how often you tend to engage with their email communications and adjust the frequency of email sends accordingly. Recipients who tend to open and interact with more emails will receive emails more frequently, while those who only interact occasionally will receive emails less frequently. That’s personalisation.
With both personalisation and customisation, the end result is a more relevant experience for the customer. The difference is whether the customer does the work or not.
There are many reasons why an organisation may choose to personalise. It can increase engagement, drive conversions, foster loyalty, and improve a number of other KPIs. But at the broadest level, personalisation is important because people have come to expect it in today's world.
For instance, many people use music streaming services like Spotify every day. Users have come to rely on the personalised playlists that Spotify curates for them based on carefully observing what they’ve listened to before.
The same can be said for watching TV shows and movies through Netflix. With all the content competing for viewers’ attention, platforms sift through it all to make recommendations for each subscriber, saving them time and improving their satisfaction with the services.
Even if you don’t use Spotify and Netflix regularly, you can probably still appreciate that personalisation is essential to a modern customer experience. Generic experiences fall flat compared to those.
The State of Marketing Report found that 64% of customers expect tailored engagement based on past interactions, but 52% say companies are generally impersonal. The report also found that 71% of customers expect companies to communicate with them in real-time. However, how companies balance personalisation with customer comfort levels will be integral to the solution roadmap.
And marketers have recognised that their customers demand personalisation. Data shows that most marketers believe personalisation helps advance customer relationships, while 92% believe their prospects or customers expect a personalised experience.
In other words, personalisation is important to both customers and marketers today. We believe it will only become more important in the future — so it’s something to invest in today.
Personalisation software is a tool that customises content based on customers’ characteristics and behaviours. These platforms or add-ons help businesses optimise their offerings by creating a more individualised customer experience. Here’s how it works: