Brands and businesses are beginning to realize the power of the customer’s voice. Whether it’s online reviews, word-of-mouth recommendations, or support forums, word-of-mouth is an incredibly effective tool for building your brand.
Building a customer-to-customer (C2C) community is about empowering your customers to be a part of something larger than themselves. Instead of speaking to customers, customer-to-customer brands empower them to speak to each other. They realize the importance of taking the corporation out of the conversation and giving the torch to the customers. These companies are harnessing the power of human interaction and using it as their most effective marketing, customer success, and market education tool.
Read on for our guide to building a customer-to-customer community program!
The most powerful interaction someone can have is face-to-face with another person. This forms a much more significant connection than a newsletter or social post, and that’s why companies are opting to bring their communities together in real time.
A distributed event program is the best way to implement customer-to-customer marketing into your business. Connecting your customers directly to one another (in-person or virtually) is a low-cost, revenue-efficient way to generate demand and build your brand. CMX even has its own C2C program: CMX Connect, powered by Bevy!
Customer-to-customer brands harness the power of human interaction and use it as their most effective marketing tool. Not sure where to start? We’ve rounded up come examples of incredible C2C community programs. These communities are grouped by the different value they provide to a business, based on the SPACES model.
C2C community can be used as an extension of a customer success team that builds a stronger relationship between members and the company.
Community events give users a chance to showcase their expertise on the product. This means super-users have a chance to share their knowledge, and they’re able to answer questions about the product. Users are excited to teach each other about products they love, and create content to help others fall in love too.
By bringing users or customers together, companies can leverage the collective insight of their community to get ideas for innovative features and identify the most important changes that will improve their products. Some companies take this even further and bring their community into every step of the product development process, from design to development, to ensure that the voice of the community is present in everything they create.
C2C community can increase customer loyalty and brand advocacy. When a company invests in the development of its community members, their relationship with the company is ten times stronger. Nobody knows the product better than the people who use it everyday, and nobody markets a product better than its users.
C2C communities give customers an opportunity to share their knowledge with each other, to learn new things, and improve their skills together. Sometimes, the best way to learn new things is to teach and practice. A community gives users an opportunity to meet and connect with other people in their local community who may have the same questions or have answers to those questions.
Some companies just get that if they identify the common interests and needs of their target customers and build a community around that passion, it will lead to increased loyalty, advocacy and—ultimately—sales.
This can be a hard sell internally, but it’s working for a number of large brands today. Community is powerful because it gives people a common sense of identity and belonging. If the brand is the leader that gives them that sense of identity, it doesn’t matter if the community is focused on their product or not. Members will feel a stronger connection to the brand.
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