B2C Marketing Strategies Tech Companies Should Know About - Ascent Conference

B2C Marketing Strategies Tech Companies Should Know About

B2C Marketing Strategies Tech Companies Should Know About

B2C or business-to-consumer marketing is all about reaching individuals. As opposed to B2B marketing in which decisions are made by groups of entrepreneurs or industry experts, B2C marketing deals with influencing the decision-making of the end consumers. For this reason, B2C marketing often relies on emotionally driven or personal problem-solving strategies. Although retail is the sector that first comes to mind for most when the topic of B2C marketing is breached, tech and other specialized sectors also have a lot to gain from this type of marketing as well.

As interconnected emerging technologies continue to become more advanced, cheaper to produce, and readily accessible, more and more B2B enterprises are targeting the consumer markets. Let’s take a closer look at how some B2C companies are successfully reaching these audiences.

Develop a deep and long-term relationship with your target market

Knowing your consumers inside out is the single most crucial task for any B2C marketer to accomplish. In terms of establishing the conditions for long-term growth, the best way to understand your target consumers and influence their buying habits is by developing a deep and mutually beneficial relationship with them. Laser 3D printer company Glowforge did this by partnering with the libraries and emerging tech programs at the University of Washington, the Cornish College of the Arts, Western Washington University, and many other schools and educational institutions.

Although primarily aimed at consumer markets, Glowforge has become the largest provider of laser equipment to public schools in the U.S. The fact that the laser printer itself is an easy-to-use tool with tons of educational opportunities certainly helps. Apart from that, Glowforge also has a dedicated educational sales department that works on establishing and developing relationships with educational organizations. All this helped their product to organically penetrate these key markets, selling directly to educators seeking innovative and tech-driven teaching methods. This is a strategy that can be useful for any specialized company that seeks to activate dormant markets and create long-term marketing opportunities.

Outsourcing essential marketing tasks

Specialist firms often feel bogged down by the task of having to communicate with mass consumer markets in order to sell products or services. The fact is that it’s rare for entrepreneurs to have both specialized tech and marketing skills, which is why many tech companies rely on outside help for branding and marketing tasks. The problem is that professional marketers in the digital era tend to be expensive to hire full-time. As the career purview of the online bachelor’s in marketing program at Maryville University reveals, students trained in market research analytics, social media strategy, and demand generation stand to rake in five to six-figure salary jobs. From research and analytics firms to advertising agencies, sales, and government organizations, these experts are highly in-demand.

This is why outsourcing B2C marketing is an essential tool and strategy for many tech companies. By hiring any of the aforementioned specialists via project-based contracts, companies can focus on what they’re actually good at while leaving the marketing to the pros. Furthermore, as the next generation of professional marketers have been trained to work remotely, coordinating with them in a freelance or contractual basis should be relatively easy.

Simplified and emotional messaging

Tech entrepreneurs often make the mistake of wanting to tell their consumers every bit of detail about their well-developed products. This is fine for B2B marketing in which the decisions of the target buying group are equally based on logic and long-term business strategy. However, B2C marketing is more emotional. Impulse buys are dictated by different feelings, instant gratification, and personal problem-solving. For these purposes, simplified and emotional messaging is often the best communication strategy to employ. This is how tech giants like Apple and Samsung continue to dominate the consumer electronics markets. Rather than seeking to explain the science behind their products’ innovative new cameras, apps, or other features, their communication is instead focused on explaining how these features can solve specific consumer problems.

In conclusion, keep your messaging simple and based on emotions, don’t be afraid to outsource for B2C marketing tasks, and aim towards developing a long-term relationship with your target consumers. These are just some of the key B2C marketing strategies that tech and other specialized enterprises need to know about.

 

A blog article by Avery Thomas
Written exclusively for ascentconf.com

Privacy Notice

This privacy notice discloses the privacy practices for (www.ascentconf.com). This privacy notice applies solely to information collected by this website. It will notify you of the following:

  • What personally identifiable information is collected from you through the website, how it is used and with whom it may be shared.
  • What choices are available to you regarding the use of your data.
  • The security procedures in place to protect the misuse of your information.
  • How you can correct any inaccuracies in the information.

Information Collection, Use, and Sharing

We are the sole owners of the information collected on this site. We only have access to/collect information that you voluntarily give us via email or other direct contact from you. We will not sell or rent this information to anyone.

We will use your information to respond to you, regarding the reason you contacted us. We will not share your information with any third party outside of our organization, other than as necessary to fulfill your request, e.g. to ship an order.

Unless you ask us not to, we may contact you via email in the future to tell you about specials, new products or services, or changes to this privacy policy.

Your Access to and Control Over Information

You may opt out of any future contacts from us at any time. You can do the following at any time by contacting us via the email address or phone number given on our website:

  • See what data we have about you, if any.
  • Change/correct any data we have about you.
  • Have us delete any data we have about you.
  • Express any concern you have about our use of your data.

Security

We take precautions to protect your information. When you submit sensitive information via the website, your information is protected both online and offline.

Wherever we collect sensitive information (such as credit card data), that information is encrypted and transmitted to us in a secure way. You can verify this by looking for a lock icon in the address bar and looking for “https” at the beginning of the address of the Web page.

While we use encryption to protect sensitive information transmitted online, we also protect your information offline. Only employees who need the information to perform a specific job (for example, billing or customer service) are granted access to personally identifiable information. The computers/servers in which we store personally identifiable information are kept in a secure environment.

If you feel that we are not abiding by this privacy policy, you should contact us immediately via telephone at 202-256-9707 or [email protected].