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What does a good preference center look like? How can you enhance yours to strengthen your relationship with your users? Let’s dig into a few common areas with room for growth!
Answer a few questions about your preference center and take a look at some real-life examples to find out.
If you’re not giving your customers the choice to opt down instead of opting out, you’re missing out on a crucial opportunity to retain about-to-churn customers.
Stitch Fix
I arrived at this page after clicking “Manage your communication preferences” in an email footer, but there’s not much for me to manage.
Avoid asking customers to make this all-or-nothing choice, and offer at least one option to opt down (e.g. once a month, only when there’s a sale) to avoid closing off this marketing channel altogether.
Your customer has opted into some combination of push, SMS, and email, and you’re in a great position to create powerful multi-channel marketing campaigns. Score! But with great power comes great responsibility—make sure you allow customers to adjust how they are contacted on each channel.
Spotify
Spotify does a great job with this. For every type of notification, users can choose email, push, both, or neither. This allows me to say yes, send me all the emails about concerts, but everything else I’d prefer to receive as a push notification.
Let’s go back to Spotify, which has a wide and ever-expanding list of product offerings—music, concert tickets, podcasts, audiobooks, etc. Allowing users to subscribe only to the product offerings they’re interested in is crucial to providing a best-in-class engagement experience.
More often than we’d like, the answer to this question is no. Or yes but:
Sound familiar? Siloed customer data is one of the most common problems that companies face. If you’re struggling to capitalize on user data (or if it’s taking all week), a CDP may be your answer.
How does this translate to customer experience? Let’s dive back into my inbox to take a look.
When customers give you information about themselves—they expect to see that information reflected in the communications you send them. This includes not just your preference center, but purchase history!
1-800 Contacts
There are a lot of great things about this preference center:
But even with all of these great options for the customer, marketers still need to proactively personalize campaigns.
In May, I bought a year’s supply of contact lenses. The onboarding experience was so great I even opted into SMS. The copy was fun, the emails were great, and the contacts were delivered on time! I was following the happy path (a user who completes all of the actions as intended).
But 1-800 Contacts missed out on a crucial opportunity to link my purchase history to order reminders.
In the six months that followed my purchase, I received 5 SMS messages and 8 emails asking if I’d like to order more. (Note: I’m not counting the glasses cross-sell, eye-health newsletters, or end-of-year FSA reminders, which I’d consider valid use cases for this user).
It’s crucial to make sure purchase history is available to your Marketing Team in-platform so they can segment, trigger, and personalize messages effectively.
When implementing these recommendations, the most important thing to remember is this: Make sure you can honor any options you offer in your preference center. If users take the time to provide you with information about themselves, ensure that you respect those preferences (no horror movies for your rom-com lovers or cat food for your dog parents).
Want to chat more about activating your customer data with a CDP, revamping your preference center strategy, or making the most of your CRM? Send us a note! Reach out to billy.fischer@willowtreeapps.com.
Join WillowTree experts Billie Loewen and Billy Fischer for a deep dive into growth marketing on the Room for Growth podcast. In each episode, Billie and Billy will discuss the latest news and topics in lifecycle marketing, chatting with a wide array of guests including WillowTree colleagues, client-partners, and industry thought leaders. Let's grow!