Faaez Samadi
Jun 20, 2019

‘Headless’ content the key to personalisation

Having a single content source feeding different channels is the best way to achieve consistency in digital marketing, according to Four Seasons Hotels' marketing VP.

‘Headless’ content the key to personalisation

When it comes to personalisation, it pays to be headless, according to Chris Cocca, vice president of digital experience at Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts.

Speaking at Salesforce Connections 2019 in Chicago Tuesday, Cocca said the brand’s success in driving better digital engagement with its guests was down to a disciplined marketing approach that has a single content source for all Four Seasons’ channels, which he called its “headless CMS”.

Developed internally, Cocca said the CMS is designed specifically to be independent of any front-end—such as website, app, or social media—allowing all “headless content” stored in it to be customised for any channel.

“That single content source stores everything you need for any personalised conversation,” which, Cocca told delegates, is the driving force behind Four Seasons’ digital transformation strategy.

The company has rebuilt its website, will relaunch its mobile app in August, and launched a consumer chat platform two years ago, allowing guests to interact with the hotel brand through a variety of messaging apps. To date, 6 million messages have been sent back and forth.


“There’s value in that conversation,” Cocca said. “As much as personalisation is about the right content, for the right person, at the right time, there’s this element of having a conversation. Asking the right question, at the right time, can get more engagement, be more personal and build that connection any luxury brand is looking for.”

Cocca said effective personalisation at scale require marketing content that is consistent across all platforms, and that as well as content being single sourced, there must be one dataset that powers all channels. “We did a lot of A/B testing around personalisation, but we found if you only do it within one channel, all the knowledge stays in that channel,” he said.


Having an integrated data stack that feeds all the brand’s marketing touchpoints has allowed Four Seasons to make much better use of its content, Cocca said, pointing to the brand’s conversation ‘prompts’ with which it engages guests.

“It nudges them to take action,” he said. “We shape the conversation into a relevant area without being creepy, so we engage people rather than just give them something to look at.”

The interactions let Four Seasons’ build a deeper picture of a consumer’s behaviours and preferences, which in turn allows the brand to offer a more personalised service.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

6 hours ago

GroupM Southeast Asia CEO Himanshu Shekhar exits

Based out of Indonesia, Shekhar, a key figure in GroupM's regional growth, is leaving the agency after 25 years.

7 hours ago

'The truth doesn't take sides': BBC’s global news chief

In an era where algorithms reward outrage and newsrooms rush to take sides, the business case for impartial journalism faces its toughest test yet. BBC's Jonathan Munro unpacks whether swimming against the tide still makes strategic sense.

8 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Rudy Khaw, AirAsia

Khaw’s journey from brand executive to CEO is a culmination of his visionary leadership, business acumen, and commitment to inclusivity—reshaping AirAsia as a leading global brand.

8 hours ago

Hakuhodo and DY Media Partners merge in Japan

The two entities will merge by April 2025, uniting creative and media operations to form a 4,601-strong advertising powerhouse. Here's what it means for the advertising landscape.