It was a conversation about agile marketing, kicked off by John Cass, digital strategist and host of the Deep Dive into Agile Marketing podcast. But the point which struck us was less about agile marketing than about the digital journey in general. Lyndon Johnson of Think Different[ly], an agile communications group, wrote: “I think one of the biggest challenges in relation to digital marketing is an assumption that the primary trigger or compulsion mechanism for an action taken online needs to occur online. It is something we need to address (or be able to test in the context of the organization and the marketing audience).” Cass responded: “I’m reminded of a conversation with a group of AMA chapter Presidents around 2005 where every chapter leader was confirming their members weren’t responding to email.” Why we care. It’s an important insight, and one easily overlooked, that journeys aren’t necessarily 100% digital or non-digital. In the current environment, perhaps we sometimes think you can toggle between digital or virtual and in-store or in-person. But it’s not that simple, and we’re certainly hearing from both B2B and B2C marketers that engagement with tangibles — direct mail, gifts, subscription boxes — can be effective. And can, of course, trigger digital actions. |