Can Incentive
Marketing Work On The 'Net?
by Rosalind Resnick,
President NetCreations
Theres no doubt that incentive
marketing works. Frequent flyer miles have practically become the
universal currency of the corporate world. Rewards programs, affinity
clubs, and sweepstakes promotions have ballooned into a $23 billion-a-year
business.
What remains to be seen is whether incentive
marketing will work on the internetor whether it even makes
sense for direct marketers to tempt online consumers with points,
miles, giveaways and other freebies to get them to respond to their
offers.
Let me explain: Last week, I flew to
Seattle to speak at the NCDM database marketing conference. The topic
was "permission marketing." Joining me on the panel were
representatives from Intellipost (BonusMail), Motivation.net (MyPoints)
and Cybergold --all incentive marketing companies vying for a piece
of the action on the internet.
Snatching The Bait
While each companys business model
is slightly different, the premise is the sameif you dangle
a reward in front of an internet consumer, he or she will take the
bait and snap up your offer.
Participants in the MyPoints program,
for example, can earn 50 points by visiting the Credit Card Sentinel
web site and taking a short "Worry Quiz," 10 points for
checking out the telescopes at Edmund Scientific, and 5 points for
perusing the pantyhose at One Hanes Place. Purchases are rewarded
with additional points.
"Consumers can be trained,"
believes Frank Pirri of Motivation.net, likening the process to Pavlovs
experiments with salivating dogs. "The behavior that you reward
is the behavior that youre going to get."
That may be true. But what kind of behavior
are incentive marketers really rewarding? And is this the type of
behavior that we really want to encourage on the internet?
Founded in the late 1960s by academics
and government employees and underwritten by federal research dollars,
the internet has, from the beginning, been a bastion of free ideas,
free software, and free information. When the internet went commercial
in the early 90s, Netscape tapped into this culture of free
stuff by giving away browsers to gain market share; newspaper and
magazine publishers ladled out free content to build an audience on
the web.
All Free, All The Time
The result: The internet community has
swelled to more than 70 million users, but publishers, software companies,
and electronic merchants are losing millions of dollars because they
have educated consumers that they dont need to pay.
And thats a problem. At the end
of the day, the consumer has to plunk down his credit card in order
for the internet economy to stay afloat.
Magazines that offer points to induce
prospective subscribers to order free trial issues must ultimately
collect their subscription fees. Software companies that offer points
to encourage downloads must convince trial users to pay up. And even
merchants who offer points in return for a purchase must manage to
eke out a profit in a marketplace that is rapidly becoming a zero-margin
economy.
Begging, Bribing, Cajoling..
Ironically, the only behavior that direct
marketers are reinforcing by foisting point systems on the internet
is their own. Accustomed to begging, bribing and cajoling consumers
to accept the offers that they send out via postal mail, marketers
dont seem to understand that many internet consumers may actually
want the products and services that theyre peddlingprovided
that the consumer gets to call the shots.
Thanks to the web, consumers now have
a quick and easy way to tell marketers what offers they want, and
what personal information theyre willing to share in order to
receive information about the products and services that interest
them most.
Lets face it: The days of pasting
green stamps into little books and redeeming them for toasters and
lawn chairs are over. Internet consumers simply do not have time for
that. So, before we head back to the past for inspiration, lets
fast-forward to the future and give internet consumers a chance to
tell us what they want and how they want it. We may all be in for
a very pleasant surprise.