While many marketers are now getting involved in automated media buying -- i.e., programmatic -- Kimberly-Clark has been at it for a few years.
Aiming to have more control of its
first-party data, along with greater transparency about media costs, the consumer packaged goods giant brought automated and audience-based media buying in-house four years ago. Mindshare continues to
manage the process and implementation for Kimberly-Clark.
“We wanted to bring everything in-house because we wanted to own the data to get to targeting consumers in a behavioral fashion,
versus. a demographic perspective,” said Lisa Giarcosa, global head of experience planning and integrated media, Kimberly-Clark, speaking last week at the GABBCON Chicago Audience Buying Summit.
"We’ve realized that unlocking the data is about knowing a customer and how the person engages with brands, shops online, and how they interact with loyalty programs.”
"Behavioral targeting ensures that Kimberly-Clark can look at the different types of behaviors people have across various touchpoints including in-store,” said Cameron Friedlander,
marketing technology and integrated media, Kimberly-Clark.
So what has the brand learned from taking everything in-house?
“We’ve gained an understanding of how we can use
multiple partners and data points to pinpoint people on their buying journey. And how to ensure that we don’t expose personally identifiable information,” Giarcosa said.
Other
lessons have enabled the brand to buy media in a different way. For example, while programmatic is most associated with digital media planning and buying, it also extends to addressable TV.
“We’re thinking about how to target people in conventional [media] channels using programmatic,” Giarcosa said.
Kimberly-Clark has also learned how to improve messaging and
creative. The company sees data as a creative lever; data can inform campaign creative. “The learnings swing back to how we think about creative and how we can use data to create specific
assets,” Friedlander said.
“We had to look at content as it relates to our audience in a way that’s agnostic of channel. We’ve used dynamic creative optimization on the
backend.”
He noted that data, content and technology have converged and must be addressed all at the same time. “There’s an infinite amount of data, channels, times, places,
and devices,” Friedlander said.
Friedlander said that with data and technology evolving so quickly, many people forget about creative and how people are consuming and interacting with
it.
Where measurement is concerned, Giarcosa said: “How do we take all the existing metrics we have and start to make them mesh together to build a much more accurate and causal
picture?”
She noted that return on investment measures need to be meshed with brand equity and sales volume. “As you apply more and more data, you get into a deeper niche and you
might do well, but you’re not delivering on the volume that’s required. How do the metrics work together?” she asked.
Interestingly, while many marketers are drowning in
ad-tech partners, Giarcosa noted, "It's better to have more partners that enable you to achieve your business goal than to have less just because it was easier. The days of few channels are over."
She added, "My question is, how do we move the masses of marketers and our agencies to think about data-driven marketing without throwing out the old metrics that work for us? It’s not saying
that everything must be new, it’s about how do we look at causal metrics that enable us to move the data-driven marketing philosophy and the metrics that we know that work, to move brand
equity."