Evangelism Marketing is an advanced form of word-of-mouth marketing (WOMM) in which
companies develop customers who believe so strongly in a particular product or
service that they freely try to convince others to buy and use it. The
customers become voluntary advocates, actively spreading the word on behalf of
the company.
Evangelism marketing is sometimes confused with affiliate marketing.
However, while affiliate programs provide incentives in the form of money or
products, evangelist customers spread their recommendations and recruit new
customers out of pure belief, not for the receipt of goods or money. Rather,
the goal of the customer evangelist is simply to provide benefit to other
individuals.
As they act independently, evangelist customers often become key
influencers. The fact that evangelists are not paid or associated with any
company makes their beliefs perceived by others as credible and trustworthy.
Evangelism comes from the three words of 'bringing good news,' and the
marketing term justly draws from the religious sense, as consumers are driven
by their beliefs in a product or service, which they preach in an attempt to
convert others.
History
Many people believe Guy Kawasaki, the former chief evangelist of Apple
Computer, to be the father of evangelism marketing. In his books “The Art of
the Start" and "How to Drive Your Competition Crazy” Kawasaki states
that the driving force behind evangelism marketing is the fact that individuals
simply want to make the world a better place. Evangelist customers spread their
recommendations and recruit new customers out of pure belief, not for goods or
money.
Kinds of Evangelism Marketing
- Evangelism marketing is applicable to any kind of product.
- Technology evangelism is the evangelism marketing of a tool.
- Platform evangelism is the evangelism marketing of the opportunity to create complementary goods for a multi-sided platform, which also involves non-marketing functions such as regulation of the platform's commercial ecosystem to maximize network effects.
Customer Communities
A strong avenue for evangelists is in the form of customer communities,
which bring together groups of users of a product or service to share
information and discuss common issues. Some companies assist with such events,
for example General Motors' Saturn division in Tennessee organizes an annual
summer picnic for thousands of customers. Another example is the Harley Owners
Groups (HOGS), organized by Harley Davidson, which associate bikers locally and
globally through quarterly and annual meetings held all over the world.
Starbucks Corporation, the coffee company, started an online customer
community in 2008 called My Starbucks Idea, designed to collect suggestions for
products or services and feedback from customers. During the first year of the
program, My Starbucks Idea generated 70,000 ideas through the site and
approximately 50 changes based on customer suggestions were implemented.
e-mail : pratheepvasudev@gmail.com
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