The arrival and rapid evolution of voice-enabled digital assistants – first on mobile, such as Siri; then on stand-alone device such as Google Home – made online recommendation more immediate, reactive and engaging.
Then Dominos and Ocado last year became two of the first brands to offer voice-activated shopping via an in-home device, in both cases via Alexa, taking voice purchasing to a whole new level.
Moving forward, as people interact with an ever-expanding array of connected devices the algorithms driving next generation digital services will learn our wants, dislikes and behavioural patterns to become both our life and work coaches and also companions. And the net effect will be further consolidation of in-home as a powerful new point of purchase with significant growth potential.
Small wonder, then, that with comScore now predicting that 50% of online searches now expected to be done via voice rather than screen by 2020 [ii], the future of brand:consumer interaction is now being tipped by many observers to be ‘voice-first’.
With a radically different marketing environment now imminent - with brand content, products and services increasingly activated by spoken words - brand owners and agencies must adapt their thinking and approaches accordingly.
For a start, they must get to grips not just with the vast quantities of data generated by our digital interactions but the potential for personalisation at scale that comes with the rise and rise of mobile, artificial intelligence and machine learning, cloud-based marketing techniques and technology generally.
But they must also prepare for – and optimise – an imminent and inevitable split between what customers will want and accept in different environments, notably: outside and inside the home.
In the world outside the home, there will be opportunity for (and, as important, acceptance of) more personalised, large-scale brand experiences. But in the world inside – within consumers’ personal environments, notably their home and car - consumers will be more choosey, only allowing in those brands they trust and see offering clear and tangible value.