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DATE | 2013-10-18 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Tagged and stamped
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http://rssbroadcast.com/?p=19468
Advertising: For CVS Regulars, Ads Tailored Just to Them
ONCE, the letters in the name of the CVS drugstore chain stood for Consumer Value Store. Now, they could also stand for Customized Virtual Shopping.
CVS Pharmacy is taking a big step forward in the increasingly popular realm of personalizing and selecting products for shoppers. The effort will offer customers who belong to the chain’s ExtraCare loyalty program tailored versions of the weekly print circulars distributed through newspapers and in stores to an estimated 45 million people.
The initiative, under the rubric of myWeekly Ad, will use the data gathered by CVS from ExtraCare members’ purchases to do things like suggest sale items based on previous purchases and make available in one place all ExtraCare savings and rewards offers.
Users will also be able to build digital shopping lists that can be personalized based on the CVS store at which they shop most often — down to the aisle in which each product can be found.
The myWeekly Ad platform will be available on desktop and laptop computers, tablets and mobile devices. A campaign, with an estimated budget of $7 million, will carry the theme “What’s your deal?” and encourage customers to sign up online at cvs.com/myweeklyad.
MyWeekly Ad is emblematic of a trend as brick-and-mortar retailers seek to fend off growing competition from online retailers. That was underlined on Thursday as Amazon introduced the Luxury Beauty Store, a section of its Web site devoted to premium-price products in categories like hair care and fragrance.
For decades, “CVS and other retailers have distributed billions of circulars,” said Rob Price, chief marketing officer for the CVS Pharmacy division of CVS Caremark in Woonsocket, R.I., because “that’s the best thinking on what we believed would excite and motivate customers.”
Today, technology enables retailers to customize offers to meet “customers’ passion for relevance,” he added, “making shopping easier.”
The myWeekly Ad platform is bigger than previous efforts by CVS to personalize communications, Mr. Price said. “We think the advantages are dramatic from top to bottom in the customer experience and are going to speak for themselves.”
Also, personalized aspects of the ExtraCare program like custom coupons sent by e-mail and printed on sales receipts have conditioned members “to highly relevant offers coming to them,” he added.
Mr. Price said he was aware of a recent Internet meme about how multiple coupons can extend the receipts received by some ExtraCare members to Brobdingnagian lengths of five or six feet. Introducing a program that capitalizes on customization can be unpredictable, he acknowledged, and if there is an online reaction, CVS will respond “on Internet time; every week we’ll refine and improve it.”
Prashant Malaviya, associate professor of marketing at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown, said, “Making recommendations to consumers sometimes comes across as being intrusive, and it has to be done with careful thought.”
In reaction to the myWeekly Ad campaign, Mr. Malaviya said: “My initial reaction is this sounds like a great idea. Customizing deals and promotions to your needs and your past behavior is something consumers have wanted.”
Most coupons and offers “are designed to get consumers to switch from one brand to another; if you buy Coke, you get a coupon for Pepsi,” he said, adding: “For me to be able to get a coupon to buy more Coke is a lot more relevant. I value more getting coupons for products I like, not for products I don’t care for, which is wasting my time.”
The “What’s your deal?” campaign, created by the agency Standard Time in Los Angeles, includes ads on television, in print, online and in social media. A commercial features three celebrities — Nick Cannon, George Hamilton and Joan Rivers — shopping among everyday customers at a CVS store.
Ads in print and on Facebook present consumer archetypes like a mother of two mischievous children who needs items like cleaning wipes and Excedrin Migraine pain reliever, and a lovelorn guy who needs Altoids, hair gel and a box of candy.
A goal of the campaign is to reach “a younger demographic that spends a lot of time online looking for deals,” said Michael Sharp, creative director at Standard Time, which is reflected by Mr. Cannon’s role in the commercial.
“We hope people will say ‘What’s your deal?’ a lot to each other,” he said. “You can have a lot of fun with it, and the word ‘deal’ seemed to fit nicely.”
“We’re trying to get people to change their behavior,” Mr. Sharp said, by “going online for a much more personalized experience” rather than checking weekly circulars.
“The print circular is going to be around for a while, but eventually it’s going to go away,” he added. “We have to prepare for the future.”
Mr. Price said paper circulars “still have a very important role, for reach,” but they were continuing to decline. “It’s happening before our eyes.”
Other agencies working on the campaign include Mindshare, part of the GroupM division of WPP, and its social media unit, M80, and Matter Communications. Internal teams at CVS that handle tasks like creative work, public relations, social media and marketing also collaborated. This entry was posted in BUSINESS and tagged Coupons, Customer Loyalty Programs, CVS Caremark Corporation, Online Advertising on October 11, 2013.
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