The Brutal Truth About Consumer Trust in Home Care Why do some brands inspire trust effortlessly while others struggle to convince consumers? Home care isn’t like beauty or food, where customers instinctively check labels. For decades, legacy brands have relied on familiarity over transparency—building trust through big advertising spends rather than real ingredient disclosures. But that’s changing. Consumer trust is now shifting toward brands that disclose, educate, and take a stand. 1️⃣ The Parle-G Effect: Legacy Trust vs. New-Age Transparency For years, people have trusted brands like Surf Excel, Vim, and Harpic—not because they knew what was inside, but because they were always there on shelves and TV screens. This is the "Parle-G effect"—familiarity breeds trust. But today, trust is no longer inherited; it’s earned. The rise of brands like Kapiva (Ayurveda transparency), The Whole Truth (ingredient honesty) shows how modern brands build trust differently—by being upfront about what’s inside. 2️⃣ The Johnson & Johnson Shock: When Legacy Trust Breaks For decades, J&J was the gold standard for baby care. But lawsuits over talcum powder contamination with asbestos shattered consumer confidence worldwide. Even in India, brands like Mother Sparsh surged because young parents started reading labels—they no longer assumed safety just because a product was from a heritage brand. 3️⃣ The Patanjali vs. FSSAI Scandal: Why Trust Must Be Backed by Proof Consumers initially believed in Patanjali’s “natural” positioning. But repeated quality violations (like the recent FSSAI crackdown on misleading claims) eroded trust. The lesson? Trust cannot be built on slogans alone. If a brand claims toxin-free, natural, or safe—it must prove it consistently. 4️⃣ The Decathlon & Ikea Strategy: Trust Through Radical Transparency Decathlon shares detailed product breakdowns—how much polyester is used, where a product is made, and even the carbon footprint. Customers trust them because they don’t have to “guess” what they’re buying. Ikea lists every material, every environmental impact, and even assembly instructions upfront. No surprises. Just facts. In home care, Koparo is taking the same approach—putting ingredients front and center. Not just saying "toxin-free," but explaining why certain ingredients matter for better or worse (like the bioaccumulation of harmful chemicals in traditional cleaners). So What’s Next for Consumer Trust in Home Care? ✅ Brands that educate will win over brands that advertise. ✅ Ingredient transparency will become a non-negotiable (just like food labels). ✅ Consumers will demand not just safe products—but proof of safety. At Koparo, we’re all in on radical transparency. No vague claims. No marketing gimmicks. Just home care that’s safe, effective, and backed by science. The real question is—do you know what’s inside your cleaning products? #ToxinFree #Koparo #HomeCareRevolution 🚀
Analyzing Customer Behavior Trends
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
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Every sales leader I talk to at the moment is struggling with some version of the same issue. The symptoms are different, but the underlying cause is the same. - Sales cycles elongating - Deal slippage - Prospects not showing up to meetings - An uptick in ghosting - Poor forecast accuracy - A drop in deal volumes - A drop in conversion rates What's actually happening out there in Buyer land? I've been delivering win-loss reviews for B2B companies around the world since 2011 and I'm seeing buyer behaviours I've never observed before... Let me break down some of them quickly for you and share some guidance on how to use these lessons to your advantage: Trend #1: Risk has jumped up the decision tree in order of importance, to the very top of the list for many clients, even more so when it's a new vendor. Action: Go deeper on risk in your discovery conversations, recognise that risk is both organisational and personal...find ways to better manage, mitigate and share risk with your clients...Be the low risk option. Trend #2: Value for Money, Responsiveness and Cost are consistently selected as the most important decision criteria by many clients. Action: Responsiveness should be an easy one to get right, but many sellers are stretched too thin right now...do less, but do it better. Trend #3: Change in Strategic Direction is the most frequently cited reason for customers coming to market for a new solution at the moment. Action: Try to reverse engineer this reason, to understanding what caused this change in direction and what it actually means for the business. These are your keys to the kingdom, when building a rock solid business case. Trend #4: Feedback from Peers and Colleagues has emerged as the most trusted information source for almost all respondents. Action: Case studies and customer references are losing their luster...find ways to tap into the trust which prospective clients have in their own peer network, as a way to unlock deeper connections and build trust. Trend #5: Customers are demanding more detail in the proposal documents, tender responses and business cases which they are receiving. Action: Put in the work, avoid the cookie-cutter responses, find your win themes and weave them in, share the detail they need to make an informed decision. I haven't got a crystal ball, so I can't tell you if/when the pendulum will swing back the other way, from a buyer behaviour perspective. What I can tell you with a high degree of certainty is that prospective customers have raised the bar, in terms of their expectations from their vendor partners. It's our job now to to elevate the preparation, patience and professionalism of B2B sellers everywhere, to meet these changing needs and maintain our relevance to the customers we serve.
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We talk a lot about content, channels, and campaigns in #demandgen. However, the most important thing is understanding your customers. Without that knowledge, you're just guessing. Jumping straight into campaign mode is a big mistake. Even if you already have a file of your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP), it's still worth it to double-check for any new trends to understand your audience in real-time. 👉🏾Who are they? 👉🏾What are their (present) frustrations? 👉🏾What keeps them up at night? Understanding these factors changes everything. There are many ways to gather such insights: 👉🏾Using surveys gives you quantitative data. 👉🏾Interviews provide qualitative depth. 👉🏾Social listening (very important) reveals what people are saying online. 👉🏾Competitor analysis shows the overall landscape. Recently, I was working on a campaign for a new product. My assumptions were way off, especially after reviewing recent customer interviews, which revealed a different path. Together with my team, we updated our messaging and saw a massive increase in engagement. To say the least, market research saved the (our) day! #b2bmarketing #ABM #marketingstrategy
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My recent interview by the The Australian Financial Review focuses on how cost‑of‑living pressures are reshaping consumer expectations in financial services. With inflation lingering, Australians are becoming far more discerning. Tolerance for high fees, uncompetitive rates and generic products is falling fast. What’s replacing it is a clear expectation of value, relevance and personalisation. In the article, I spoke about how personalisation is no longer a “nice to have”. Whether it’s tailored alerts, proactive support when finances are strained, or modular products that let consumers dial features up or down, expectations are being set by the best digital experiences — not just by other banks. These demands are even more pronounced for people living and working across borders, where fragmented accounts, multiple currencies and regulatory complexity make seamless, personalised services a functional necessity rather than a luxury. The real differentiator going forward isn’t personalisation alone, but trusted execution at scale: using data responsibly to reduce friction, deliver relevance, and earn consumer trust. https://lnkd.in/gZtEsdsj RMIT University RMIT College of Business and Law Centre for Organisations and Social Change (COSC) #FinancialServices #Personalisation #ConsumerBehaviour #Fintech #Banking #CostOfLiving #TrustAndData
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Five years ago, Warburg Pincus LLC invested in BetterCloud and urged us to work on a project to narrow our ideal customer profile (ICP). It's the most impactful thing I've ever done to improve conversion rates, shorten sales cycles, increase deal size and ultimately transform the company. A big mistake many CEOs make is believing their product is for everyone. It’s tempting. More potential customers should mean more sales, right? But in reality, chasing too broad a market drains resources, distracts your team, muddles messaging, confuses your product roadmap, and kills go-to-market efficiency. Being laser-focused on your ICP drives alignment across product, messaging, and the go-to-market motion. When the right prospect engages, they’ll feel like you built it just for them. Anyone who has built a product or service knows that the things a small business needs are very different than what a huge enterprise needs. A company is different from a school. An IT buyer is different from a security buyer, a sales buyer is different from a marketing buyer, a director level decision maker is different than a C level decision maker… but we still believe we can sell to different segments and personas as the same time. The process to define and use your ICP is relatively straightforward but does take time. The larger your business, the more data you have, the more resources you have to crunch that data the more time you should spend to do it as scientifically as possible. The high level steps are: 1. Build a Customer Dataset: Gather all your customer data. Current and churned customers, won and lost opportunities. Enrich it with firmographic, business-specific, and buyer demographic data. 2. Engage Your Team: Your best sales and customer success people hold invaluable insights about your most successful (and worst) customers. 3. Analyze & Identify Pockets of Gold: Identify common attributes of high-performing accounts and avoid the traps of poor-fit customers. 4. Communicate the ICP to the entire company with the “why” behind the attributes that make up an ideal customer. 5. Rework your messaging to appeal to your newly defined ICP and narrow your growth initiatives to be focused only on the accounts that matter. 6. Assign the right ICP accounts to your reps and ensure they’re focused on the right buyer personas. 7. Product Development: Reassess your roadmap to align with the needs of your ICP. You should see impact fast. GTM funnel metrics will improve. Conversion rates should rise, with better leads turning into stronger opportunities. You may not get more leads, but their quality will increase. I’ve been discussing this with many Not Another CEO Podcast guests, so don’t just take my word for it. I wrote a deep dive on how to “Narrow Your ICP and Transform your Company”, with real examples from other companies. You can read the full article here https://lnkd.in/e5EN3XSR
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Buyers rarely choose the objectively best option. They choose the one they recognize. In many B2B decisions, familiarity plays a greater role than features or pricing. Teams may evaluate multiple vendors, but preference often leans toward the one they have consistently seen, heard, and understood over time. The reason is simple. Recognition signals safety. When a brand shows up repeatedly with clear, consistent messaging, it reduces perceived risk. Buyers feel more confident choosing what already feels familiar, even if alternatives may appear stronger on paper. This is where many marketing strategies lose effectiveness. In the pursuit of novelty, teams constantly change angles, campaigns, and positioning. But without consistency, recognition never compounds. Messaging resets instead of reinforcing, and trust takes longer to build. Repetition, when done well, is not redundancy. It is reinforcement. Each consistent touchpoint strengthens recall. Each repeated idea builds confidence. Over time, familiarity becomes preference, especially in longer B2B buying cycles. This week’s newsletter explores the psychology behind recognition, why repetition drives trust, and how to build consistency without losing relevance. For teams focused on sustainable growth, this is a shift worth understanding.
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Surveys can serve an important purpose. We should use them to fill holes in our understanding of the customer experience or build better models with the customer data we have. As surveys tell you what customers explicitly choose to share, you should not be using them to measure the experience. Surveys are also inherently reactive, surface level, and increasingly ignored by customers who are overwhelmed by feedback requests. This is fact. There’s a different way. Some CX leaders understand that the most critical insights come from sources customers don’t even realize they’re providing from the “exhaust” of every day life with your brand. Real-time digital behavior, social listening, conversational analytics, and predictive modeling deliver insights that surveys alone never will. Voice and sentiment analytics, for example, go beyond simply reading customer comments. They reveal how customers genuinely feel by analyzing tone, frustration, or intent embedded within interactions. Behavioral analytics, meanwhile, uncover friction points by tracking real customer actions across websites or apps, highlighting issues users might never explicitly complain about. Predictive analytics are also becoming essential for modern CX strategies. They anticipate customer needs, allowing businesses to proactively address potential churn, rather than merely reacting after the fact. The capability can also help you maximize revenue in the experiences you are delivering (a use case not discussed often enough). The most forward-looking CX teams today are blending traditional feedback with these deeper, proactive techniques, creating a comprehensive view of their customers. If you’re just beginning to move beyond a survey-only approach, prioritizing these more advanced methods will help ensure your insights are not only deeper but actionable in real time. Surveys aren’t dead (much to my chagrin), but relying solely on them means leaving crucial insights behind. While many enterprises have moved beyond surveys, the majority are still overly reliant on them. And when you get to mid-market or small businesses? The survey slapping gets exponentially worse. Now is the time to start looking beyond the questionnaire and your Likert scales. The email survey is slowly becoming digital dust. And the capabilities to get you there are readily available. How are you evolving your customer listening strategy beyond traditional surveys? #customerexperience #cxstrategy #customerinsights #surveys
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Here's the new rule of GTM for 2025: it's about about TRUST not DISTRACTION. In 2024 and earlier, most companies were STILL playing the volume game: More cold emails More ads More noise But here's what I learned building partner programs at WeWork and Amex: 1. Identify Trusted Advocates Customers are more likely to trust recommendations from voices they already know and respect. Who influences our target audience? Who already has their attention and trust? These could be industry leaders, complementary solution providers, or niche communities. Build partnerships with those who already have a strong connection to your ideal customers. 2. Collaborate to Add Value, Not Noise Instead of interrupting your audience with another cold email or ad, collaborate with partners to create meaningful, value-driven touch points. - Co-host a webinar addressing a shared customer pain point. - Develop a joint white paper showcasing both brands’ expertise. - Offer bundled solutions that make life easier for the customer. 3. Leverage Existing Trust to Open Doors Partners are amplifiers AND bridges. They help you cross the “river of distraction” and reach customers without the noise. A well-placed introduction or co-branded recommendation carries far more weight than another outbound message. 4. Measure the Shift from Interruption to Influence If trust-building is your new GTM focus, your success metrics need to change too. Track things like: - Partner-Sourced Leads: Leads generated through trusted partner referrals. - Engagement Rates: How customers interact with co-created content or campaigns. - Pipeline Velocity: How quickly partner-driven deals progress compared to direct sales efforts. Breaking through the noise requires genuine relationships. It's no longer about whose voice is the loudest, it’s whose voice your audience already trusts. The future isn't about interruption and distraction. It's about trust.
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I just finished reading Flywheel's "The Big Shift" report on redefining ROI with Return on Consumer, and it crystallized something I've been thinking about for months. Here are my key takeaways and what they mean for Amazon advertisers. While ROAS has served us well for immediate conversion optimization, it falls short in identifying and nurturing long-term customer relationships. What's exciting about Amazon's canvas is the quality of identity resolution we can achieve. When customers interact with ads and make purchases, we can connect those touchpoints with much higher confidence than other platforms. This isn't just about tracking sales – it's about understanding the complete customer journey. Amazon Marketing Cloud: A Bridge to the Future The recent expansion of AMC's lookback window to five years is more than just a feature update. It represents a fundamental shift in how brands can understand and activate their customer data. This unprecedented access to purchase history, combined with privacy-safe behavioral insights, allows brands to: • Measure true customer lifetime value • Identify high-potential audience segments • Optimize point of market entry (POME) • Drive sustainable growth through data-driven decisions Beyond Last-Touch Attribution One of the most common conversations I have with advertisers centers around breaking free from last-touch attribution. The reality is that customer journeys are complex and non-linear. With AMC, brands can now see how different touchpoints – from Sponsored Products to Streaming TV – work together to drive both immediate sales and long-term customer value. Real-World Impact The report illustrates this perfectly: a consumer might enter a brand's portfolio with hand soap one year, then purchase detergent and dryer sheets the next year, followed by air fresheners and storage products in the third year. This insight, only possible through long-term customer journey analysis, completely transforms how we should think about acquisition strategy and budget allocation. Looking Ahead • The future belongs to brands that can effectively: • Verticalize their ROI approach within Amazon's canvas • Focus on customer lifetime value rather than individual transactions • Use behavioral signals to fuel sustainable growth • Balance immediate performance with long-term customer value The Question for Advertisers The shift to ROC isn't just about new metrics – it's about fundamentally rethinking how we measure success. Are you still optimizing for short-term ROAS, or are you building for sustainable customer lifetime value? Want to learn more? Read the report: https://lnkd.in/gd2DNBfT Like to listen? Check out the podcast: https://lnkd.in/gPzvS7ci How is your organization adapting to this evolution in measurement and optimization?
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In an era where only 63% of consumers trust brands to do what is right, here’s how companies can crack the code by becoming true guardians of societal good! Consumers are increasingly skeptical of brands that appear self-serving in their marketing. I found this particularly relevant when reading a fascinating 2024 study examining more than 150 award-winning Cannes Lions campaigns from 2018-2023. Here's what stood out to me about brands that successfully built trust and drove real impact: 1️⃣ They identified authentic societal challenges where their involvement could make a tangible difference. Take Patagonia's "Don't Buy This Jacket" campaign. The company encouraged consumers to think twice before making purchases and choose quality over quantity, emphasizing environmental sustainability. 2️⃣ They demonstrated unwavering commitment beyond quick publicity stunts. Consider Domino's "Paving for Pizza" initiative: in 2018, the brand filled potholes in towns across America and earned one billion media impressions in just eight months. 3️⃣ They prioritized education and mentorship. For instance, K-Lynn, a multi-brand lingerie retailer, creatively used its catalog poses to demonstrate breast self-exam techniques. This led to greater awareness of mammogram benefits and an increase in local mammogram screenings. In my view, the most impactful brand initiatives emerge when companies identify problems where their expertise and resources can create meaningful change. The focus shifts from "getting attention" to "driving impact." I'm curious to hear your thoughts—what examples have you seen of brands successfully balancing business goals with genuine societal impact? #BuildingTrust #SustainableMarketing #SocialGood
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