The ROI of Relevance according to Jupiter Research

If you have been following my blog, you will notice that my consulting work on Product Design is grounded with a single focus on creating Relevance for the people who will be introduced to the product.

A good positioning strategy, brand and marketing campaign are ALL part of a good product, and indeed almost all banking products are marketing packages alone. Thus successful marketing consultants the world over encourage and emphasize relevance in marketing campaigns as opposed to mass mailing campaigns.

The possible easiest description I can give you about Relevance and what I try to achieve for my clients’ products is this:

A Product is Relevant to a customer, if after looking at or reading about your product once, the customer’s world becomes permanently bent — he stops sleeping or eating or otherwise doesn’t feel satisfied with his life until he actually goes back and buys your product with an almost obsessive desire for it.

That over simplistic definition aside, it is good to finally see actual data to support this focus.

“Despite additional campaign costs, relevant
campaigns increase net profits by an average of 18 times more than do
broadcast mailings, according to Jupiter Research report “ROI of
Relevance”.


I found this data at The Perfect Customer Experience, which is a blog with incredible posts on new-age marketing.

4 Responses to “The ROI of Relevance according to Jupiter Research”

  1. Dale Wolf Says:

    Thanks for the compliment about http://www.perfectCEM.com … we’re trying real hard to deliver good Cx content, but as you know this is more a passion than a vocation. I just put up a post that offers a download of a little research I just completed. I got tired of colleagues who prefer to stay with a product-centric approach instead of making the jump to Cx … the basic challenge was whether this Cx stuff is real or a fad. So I put together a dowloadable document on 25 Business Leaders Who are Committed to Customer Experience. It is accessable at http://contextrules.typepad.com/transformer/2007/03/is_customer_exp.html.
    Best wishes to “the other osama” — Dale Wolf

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  4. ingeriaduntee Says:

    Two new studies show why some people are more attractive for members of the opposite sex than others.

    The University of Florida, Florida State University found that physically attractive people almost instantly attract the attention of the interlocutor, sobesednitsy with them, literally, it is difficult to make eye. This conclusion was reached by a series of psychological experiments, which were determined by the people who believe in sending the first seconds after the acquaintance. Here, a curious feature: single, unmarried experimental preferred to look at the guys, beauty opposite sex, and family, people most often by representatives of their sex.

    The authors believe that this feature developed a behavior as a result of the evolution: a man trying to find a decent pair to acquire offspring. If this is resolved, he wondered potential rivals. Detailed information about this magazine will be published Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

    In turn, a joint study of the Rockefeller University, Rockefeller University and Duke University, Duke University in North Carolina revealed that women are perceived differently by men smell. During experiments studied the perception of women one of the ingredients of male pheromone-androstenona smell, which is contained in urine or sweat.

    The results were startling: women are part of this repugnant odor, and the other part is very attractive, resembling the smell of vanilla, and the third group have not felt any smell. The authors argue that the reason is that the differences in the receptor responsible for the olfactory system, from different people are different.

    It has long been proven that mammals (including human) odor is one way of attracting the attention of representatives of the opposite sex. A detailed article about the journal Nature will publish.

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