Success
does leave clues and Ana Pia Guzman-Briley, MBA is the Director of
CRM and Customer Engagement at TGI
Fridays and she is one smart marketer according to Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA
based Foodservice Solutions®.
A brand is an invitation. If you want to
invite consumers to your brand you must do it proactively, in an interactive participatory
way, that focused approach is exactly what Guzman-Briley did last September
when she launched a texting campaign.
The conundrum was on one hand, she had a
hunch that there were certain customers who wanted more direct
communication with TGI Fridays. Yet, on the other, there was the
chance that texts from a restaurant chain could be disruptive or too
intrusive.
Guzman-Briley stated, “SMS seems like a
very direct channel that not a lot of people, in my opinion, would want to
be connected to,” Success for the initiative, which pings users with
product news and promotions, would be measured against the chain’s traditional
loyalty program, Fridays Rewards. That channel was averaging 20,000
signups each month during the pandemic, down from 40,000 previously.
Guzman-Briley continued, “We figured, OK,
if we are able to get the same as the loyalty program, this is worth the
effort,”.
Four and a half months after it launched
SMS marketing with software provider Attentive,
the program has far exceeded that benchmark. The initiative is now
averaging 62,000 signups a month, Guzman said, and generating better conversion
rates than some of the chain’s other marketing channels. After four months, it
had 300,000 users.
TGI Fridays sends about two or three
texts a month with “very strategic news” about new products, special offers or
bundles. (“Our users love learning about new products,” Guzman said.) Signups
are driven via a popup on TGI Fridays’ website that offers 10% off the
customer’s first purchase if they join.
Messages are accompanied by a link
leading to an ordering page. About 15% of users click through those
links, and 84% of that group order the item, Guzman said, a rate that
is “absolutely” better than its email marketing conversion.
Overall, the SMS program has a 4.5%
conversion rate, while email is between 0.5% and 0.9%, Guzman said.
Dallas-based TGI Fridays, which has about
380 U.S. locations, had been planning to do a text program since 2019. But for
many restaurants, the pandemic has been a catalyst for adopting the new form of
communication, said Amir Zamanian, general manager of Attentive’s food and
beverage division.
“If you’re relying on your foot traffic
and nothing else to get in front of your consumers, that’s not possible
anymore” with dining rooms closed or limited for significant chunks of the past
year, he said.
Many restaurants had previously used SMS
for transactional purposes, like letting someone know their table was ready.
Now, they are using it in particular to drive signups for
other platforms such as an app or loyalty program,
Zamanian said.
New York-based Attentive works with “a
couple hundred” clients across the restaurant, grocery and food delivery
industries.
For TGI Fridays, the next step is to
integrate the texting pool with Fridays Rewards so it can analyze the data
and see how users behave and where they overlap. One initial takeaway has
been that SMS users are more likely to be in-store customers. They use the
texts to “understand what is new at TGI Fridays and then go to Fridays,”
Guzman said.
“For me, the definition of loyalty is
understanding your known users,” she said. “End of the day, if somebody
doesn’t want to be part of loyalty and wants to be an SMS user, that’s
fine. ... We still have a communication channel with them, we’re still
encouraging that frequency.”
Are
you looking for a new partnership to drive sales? Are you ready for some fresh
ideations? Do your food marketing tactics look more like yesterday that
tomorrow? Visit GrocerantGuru.com for more information or contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Remember success
does leave clues and we just may have the clue you need to propel your
continued success.
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