How the Web Has Changed Markets: The Zero Moment of Truth
Marketers have traditionally thought of three "moments" in the marketing experience:
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The "stimulus," where the prospect is presented some information, such as through
advertising, that arouses interest in purchasing
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The "first moment," where the prospect selects the product from the shelf or the store,
and
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The "second moment," when the product is taken home and is used
Today the Web has introduced a fourth "moment," between the stimulus and first moment, called the
"zero moment of truth" by Google and others. The zero moment is the prospect's search for
information between the stimulus and the first moment. That search may take place with friends, on
social sites such as Facebook, on the Web by adding the term "reviews" to the product name and
searching. Of course, there's always radio, television and print advertising that can provide
relevant information.
Recent research shows that the average shopper uses 10.4 sources of information to make a
purchase decision today! That's an increase of almost 100% over one year ago.
What Does This Mean?
Previous advertising, sometimes called Interruption Advertising, interrupted a
prospect's reading or radio listening or television watching to present a sales proposition. The hope
was that someone would pay attention to these interruptions and come to the store.
Today we must realize that these other 10.7 sources of information are going to be consulted, and we
need to put ourselves into those sources as much as we can. We need to be on Facebook and have a lot of
fans. We need to pay attention to those Yelp ratings. We need to be reading blogs about our
business areas and make sure that we are reflected there.
And the devices are changing as well. A mobile device, a laptop or tablet or even a telephone
is increasingly a zero moment device! If you've seen people in stores scanning product codes with their
phones to get information--and competitive prices--are bringing the mobile zero moment into the
store.
There is a new challenge here, and also a new opportunity. There's the opportunity for us to
travel with our customers through their entire product evaluation journey and provide them helpful
information all along that journey.
What do we do about negative information that inevitably gets out there? The balanced reader
who is using a lot of sources of information won't be scared off by just one item, particularly if we have
joined that dialogue constructively.
The Bottom Line
Marketing has changed. Today we must understand what's happening during the zero moment.
We can't just have a single Web site or even a few Web sites. We must consider all the sources of
information that our customers use, and be sure that we are represented constructively in all those
places.
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