Choose your language

Choose your language

The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

Dismiss

How BrandLab Is Bringing People to the Table Digitally

How BrandLab Is Bringing People to the Table Digitally

5 min read
Profile picture for user mediamonks

Written by
Monks

The first speakeasy hidden within an ecommerce platform

No matter where in the world you are, there is one thing that never fails to bring people together. Beyond differences across cultures, the emotions that come from sharing food are universal—it’s an opportunity to connect with others, and is an important bonding activity for any community. But with quarantines and social distancing guidelines continuing in many parts of the world, food and beverage brands faced the same challenge: how to connect with people when getting together is off the table

The way people gather and connect has undoubtedly changed. So, through our BrandLab partnership with Mercado Libre—Latin America's dominant ecommerce platform—we helped beverage brand Diageo and cookware brand Jade Cook find meaningful ways to connect with consumers. The recipe for success? A digital destination that provides brand-new experiences for shoppers.

Spark Curiosity Through Exclusivity

To improve the user experience within Mercado Libre and motivate consumers to learn more about Diageo—one of the world’s largest producers of spirits and beers—we developed Speakeasy Market, a digital destination like no other. “Just like 100 years ago, restrictions are preventing us from enjoying bars, so millions of Mexicans are now purchasing spirits in Mercado Libre,” says Creative Director Pablo Tajer. “We know this trend is here to stay, and it inspired us to replicate the speakeasy concept online.” Hidden within the platform, shoppers can only access the brand’s landing page with a secret code. Once inside, they get exclusive benefits like free shipping and recipes to prepare cocktails at home.

A landing page where users can get cocktail recommendations based on their taste

Users can get a personalized recommendation based on their taste and budget.

“With Speakeasy Market, shoppers can enjoy special discounts and unique recipes through video tutorials,” adds Digital Producer Matías Villagra Herrera. “The catalog and cocktails are constantly renewed, so there’s always something new to find.” But just like any speakeasy, this one has its rules. To keep the site secret, consumers were asked to be discreet and share the link only with people they trust—guaranteeing the exclusivity of the first virtual liquor store on the ecommerce platform. “By limiting access in the first stage, we created more buzz, engagement and media coverage,” explains Tajer. 

Speakeasy Market helped improve the brand’s position on the platform, but to make it work, influencers were key in finding consumers where they are. During the first week of the campaign, they were the only ones who knew how to access the site—and through their Instagram accounts, they gave their audiences subtle clues to figure out the secret codes, which had to be typed into Mercado Libre’s search box. This is a great example of how new rituals and habits open the door to innovation. In doing so, customer-obsessed organizations always have an easier time finding their consumers and figuring out how to engage them. 

Motivating Consumers With Real Interaction

Think about your favorite recipe. Maybe it’s your father’s risotto, or your grandma’s chicken pie. Perhaps it’s one you came up with yourself. Either way, there’s nothing quite as emotionally powerful as one’s favorite foods and the memories that come with them. For food brands, finding ways to evoke those feelings and truly connect with people are key parts of their job—and it can’t be done through TV ads alone.

Monk Thoughts At a time in which we’re talking about cryptocurrencies, online payments and ewallets, we found an opportunity to connect with consumers through something that had never been monetized before: their recipes.

From mobile ads to creative content, BrandLab facilitated Jade Cook’s virtualization, putting Mercado Libre at the center of the experience. The core element of this transformation is a hub within the platform, where shoppers can find all the information they need about the products they’re interested in, with each purchase just one click away. More importantly, the landing page features video content on the brand’s top offers. One of them is the “Cook With Taste” campaign: if customers share a recipe alongside a photo of a completed dish made using Jade Cook cookware, they receive a rebate of 15% of the cost of the cookware used.

“At a time in which we’re talking about cryptocurrencies, online payments and ewallets, we found an opportunity to connect with consumers through something that had never been monetized before: their recipes,” says Tajer. In addition to getting a discount—and as the main ingredient on a broader user-centric strategy—shoppers will become part of the brand’s first user-made cookbook. “Recipes have always been valuable, but more so now than ever.” 

Available in both print and digital, the cookbook represents a unique way in which brands can interact with their customers and build loyalty. To power its journey toward virtualization, Jade Cook focused on the most valuable aspect of its products: the food people make with them. As a brand with almost no previous online presence, having this clear North Star helped guide their efforts through an equally demanding and necessary process. 

Jade Cook's promotional banner

When customers share a recipe, they get a rebate of 15% of the cost of the cookware used.

About the benefits of Jade Cook’s hub within Mercado Libre, Tajer explains, “New and existing shoppers can explore all the possibilities that the brand has to offer, which ultimately is BrandLab’s goal.” Jade Cook’s and Diageo’s landing pages are not the first ones to go live. Not long ago, the team released the L’Oréal Paris “Beauty Click” site, a digital destination for beauty product enthusiasts that balances commerce with content, such as makeup tutorials. Although each hub is designed according to the client’s needs, they all answer to a very clear, pressing urgency to facilitate the space for people to interact with the brand—and with each other. Once that space is provided, the customer experience is determined by the brand’s ability to evoke the right emotions and create something as engaging as food itself.

A Consumer Centric Experience Brings People Together

The customer experience is continually evolving—which means your strategies to reach consumers should, too. As long as your brand efforts are rooted in delivering high-quality, exciting experiences to consumers, you’ll be on the right track. For both Diageo and Jade Cook, the approach is ideally suited to helping the user make a more informed purchase decision—all through a disruptive strategy that attracts new consumers.

“Jade Cook’s main channel used to be TV commercials,” explains Digital Producer Matías Herrera. “But with TV, the consumer is limited to being a spectator, so we wanted to give them a chance to become the protagonist and truly interact with the brand in a way they weren’t able to before.” That’s the spirit of a consumer centric approach, and of BrandLab as a whole: to meet people’s changing needs, differentiate the brand and drive loyalty.

Particularly with a millennial audience, the desire to discover new things can be one of the most important emotional impulses driving their decision making. From rewarding the culinary creativity of consumers to creating an exciting, exclusive space within a popular platform—and everything in between—brands can engage their customers and evoke feelings of closeness that will build a stronger connection with them. Throughout this process, one thing is contingent to success: opening up the space for interaction.

Evoking feelings of closeness is key for food and beverage brands, especially with social distancing. This is how we’re helping them connect with their customers on Mercado Libre. Evoking feelings of closeness is key for food and beverage brands, especially with social distancing. This is how we’re helping them connect with their customers on Mercado Libre. Mercado Libre ecommerce social ecommerce customer experience

Fast-Forwarding Through Feeds, Consumers Pause for Shoppable Video

Fast-Forwarding Through Feeds, Consumers Pause for Shoppable Video

5 min read
Profile picture for user mediamonks

Written by
Monks

Video content is compelling to users that have flocked to visual social platforms like Instagram, Snapchat and (more recently) TikTok. And after Instagram began to offer features that link content directly to the point of sale, video has captured renewed interest for brands and marketers as well.

Shoppable video has caught on with brands and consumers as social networks like Instagram have aimed to support consumers in not only discovering products within the platform but in making purchases as well. In “The Forrester Tech Tide™: Video Technologies For Customer And Employee Experience, Q1 2019,” Senior Analyst Nick Barber notes, “One aim of the technology is to bridge the gap between virtual and in-store shopping experiences. When US online adults choose to shop in stores rather than buy online, 38% do so to touch, see, feel, or smell products before purchasing them.” With these consumer needs in mind, shoppable video becomes an important way for consumers to engage with a brand and get to know their products better.

So, video is useful within an ecommerce setting. But how can it elevate the social experience? As it turns out, consumers enjoy turning to “Story” content—the quick, one-to-many snippets of video content distributed on platforms like Snapchat, Instagram and Facebook—to learn more about brands and products. An eMarketer analysis notes that 69% of Facebook Story users feel that “brands using stories is a great way for people to get to know new products or services,” and 62% say they “become more interested in a brand or product after seeing it in stories.”

Monk Thoughts 69% of users feel that “brands using stories is a great way for people to get to know new products or services.

Realizing this, brands have been using shoppable video to drive consumers throughout the purchasing funnel, letting users discover, save and purchase content directly through the platform. Instagram Checkout, a feature that went live last year, is one such feature that makes shopping on the platform easier than before: previously, brands had to link out to an external website to complete a purchase—a barrier that risked losing a sale by prompting users to save the purchase for later (and possible forget to go through with it).

Approach Shoppable Video as a Storytelling Opportunity

Shoppable video offers a potential revenue stream for brands, but it can also be a compelling storytelling medium in its own right, helping to build the story behind a brand or explain product benefits in a captivating way. This means that before you invest in shoppable content, you’ll want to consider what your goals are and what types of creative experiences you want to offer with the medium.

“Whenever investing in a new channel, brands must ask themselves if their target audience is there and if it makes sense for them to be in that space,” says Heather Hosey, VP Client Engagement at MediaMonks. “For example, some luxury brands may be concerned with whether channels that increase accessibility, like shoppable video, video cheapens the brand. They might turn to social to approach an audience that skews a little younger but will wonder how they can elevate that experience.”

Approaching the creative experience with a sense of purpose is critical to ensuring the channel is both effective but also compelling for the brand. Too often, we’ve seen marketers treat mobile video as a smaller TV screen, often featuring cutdowns of TVC’s and linear film. This approach flies in the face of what makes mobile—let alone social content found there—so special in the first place: its potential to spark interaction and collaboration, two characteristics that have contributed to the meteoric rise in platforms like TikTok.

PHOTO-2019-06-18-13-56-51

At the Facebook Stories Xperience, a collection of vertical videos stand apart...

20190617_044141

...or come together into a cohesive, visually impressive whole.

In exploring the creative potential of stories to build authentic connection between brands and their audiences, MediaMonks partnered with Facebook and 72andSunny to build an installation of 12 mechanically moving monitors at Facebook Beach at Cannes last year. Each monitor features best-in-class use of the medium; visitors to the installation could control the display by bringing the monitors together into a cohesive whole, showcasing Stories’ power to change perspective and disrupt—two uses of mobile video that we’d love to see brands lean into more.

Consider Shoppable Video’s Role Within the Overall Customer Experience

Like anything else, it’s important to note that social doesn’t exist in a vacuum: it’s just one ingredient that sits within the wider context of the brand’s overall marketing strategy. For example, Misty Gant, SVP USA at our influencer activation team IMA, notes that brands that don’t have a strategy in place might find themselves looking at abandoned carts—but that doesn’t mean the content, which consumers might come across at the top of the funnel, wasn’t valuable.

“It’s very important from an analytical standpoint, because you have the data,” Gant says. “Back in the day, through flipping through a magazine or watching a commercial, you couldn’t quantify who purchased from that ad.” But through shoppable content, you get a better sense of who’s tapping through, what they tapped next, what was the bounce rate and more—data that can be essential to understanding the path to purchase. “A good marketeer is always looking at that kind of data,” says Gant. “You want to see what’s working but also what the problems are, to figure out where in your ecosystem you can better support and work with that.”

Hosey agrees that taking a holistic view of the overall customer experience is critical to success with shoppable content. “For CPG brands in particular, it can be a challenge to determine where that link will actually send the user,” says Hosey. “If you don’t typically support buying direct, how do you choose which retailer to connect users with?” Hosey notes that establishing an exclusive deal with a retail partner opens up all sorts of new questions about a campaign that brands must consider—for example, how long the promotion will run for.

phone demo

Brands should also consider how a shoppable campaign remains cohesive with their existing creative. For the launch of L’Oreal’s Unbelieva-brow, we began with the brand’s existing global campaign and assets as inspiration for a social-first video campaign—this time, targeting millennial consumers in Italy. The strategy was built around a handful of influencers that knew their audiences best, catering to a diverse group of interests and segments—beauty-oriented, sporty, travel-focused and an on-the-go actress—allowing the brand to tell relatable stories about the product’s durability throughout the many situations someone might run into throughout the day.

Shoppable content is an excellent way for brands to play to video’s strengths in helping consumers discover brands and learn about their products. Connecting directly with consumers and prompting them to pause and consider content, shoppable video offers a more authentic way to engage with consumers at any point of the funnel—prompting a sale or simply driving initial awareness—provided that brands are strategic in their approach.

Shoppable content makes brands more accessible than ever throughout the path to purchase – especially when users turn to video for product research. Fast-Forwarding Through Feeds, Consumers Pause for Shoppable Video Shoppable content lets brands lean into a rising consumer behavior: researching products via video.
Shoppable content shoppable video social content social video influencer marketing ecommerce social ecommerce

Choose your language

Choose your language

The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

Dismiss