Thanks so much Joe. Your post caused me to go back and rewatch the video you shared (below).Ed,
Google's ThinkAuto conference on ZMOT introduced me to John Ross, CEO of Shopper Sciences. There are few people who's words & observations Rock my foundation and throw my work into hyper-drive. IMO, John Ross is to ZMOT, as Dale Pollack is to the Used Car Industry. Were talking rare, world class talent.
Simply put... Of all of the "touch points" A shopper makes in their journey, none influence the final decision more than the visit to the dealership.
...Granted, if your stimulus and ZMOT blows, you'll never see the up, but, from my seat, visibility is a separate marketing task. Once visibility is in place, My John Ross/ZMOT lesson is that if the visit to the dealership is the consumers strongest influencer, then all ZMOT content needs to put all of my shoppers "un-answered worries" to rest (is the sales rep pushy, is the dealer reputable, will the manager be there for me if the car I buy is a junker, what's the warranty, if my credit is fair, will they screw me... Etc)
As you noted John Ross starts at 1:06:00
I absolutely agree the store visit is the absolute most important step in gaining a sale. FMOT trumps ZMOT every time. But again, with shoppers visiting fewer and fewer stores, and only after doing extensive online shopping, your ZMOT game had better be a whole lot better than "not blows". Without a good ZMOT game you'll never have your FMOT opportunity with that customer.
My big John Ross take away was at the end of his presentation at about 1:52:00. Where he talks about how the manipulation of the shopper doesn't work the way it used to. That we need to let the customer have the control they seek. This quote drove it home. "He who rewards me with the information I need, that makes me feel smarter, better, faster - that's gonna earn my dollars."