We have a bulk discount! Buy 20 or more cases priced at $9.50 each in a single order and automatically get 50% off!

array of four mastercard cards

Mastercard

Raw, Online

Vendor
Yale School of Management
Regular price
$9.50
Sale price
$9.50
Quantity must be 1 or more

When Raja Rajamannar became Mastercard's CMO in 2013, the company was doing well. He inherited a marketing department that had led one of the most successful brand-building campaigns in history. And yet, there were ongoing changes in consumer behavior and use of technology that required reevaluating the department’s strategy.

Marketing Mastercard always had been complex. The company’s logo might have been ubiquitous, but its products and services were behind the scenes. At the point of purchase, users were often indifferent to their choice of card, basing their selection on factors such as functional benefits from an issuing bank rather than a positive desire for any given payment network.

Adding to the challenge, the customer journey was changing. There were over 2 billion smartphone users around the world, and 8 billion devices were connected globally. Technology had brought social media, ad-blocking software, and commercial-free content channels. Customers had become more sophisticated, shifting loyalty to brands linked to their "passion points" rather than to products and services.

Rajamannar decided that changes in consumer behavior and use of technology required Mastercard to substantially alter the company’s marketing strategy. Believing that the company needed to inspire customers to create their own stories, he guided his department to build experiential platforms that would emotionally connect with the passion points of customers and encourage them to connect with Mastercard.

As with any substantial change such as this, Mastercard faced questions of whether the new approach would work. Did it better leverage the features of the new consumer landscape? And more importantly, did it help Mastercard reach new consumers, merchants, and banks? And how should the company measure the success of the new programs?

Rajamannar also thought that the new approach required alterations to the way the marketing department worked with other departments, including a merger with the communications department. Furthermore, he needed to integrate people with new skills into his group and insure everyone worked together.

Published Date: 06/04/2018

Suggested Citation: Jean Rosenthal, Ravi Dhar, Vineet Kumar, Amy Wrzesniewski, and Jaan Elias, "Mastercard: Marketing Transformation for a New World," Yale SOM Case 18-013, April 6, 2018

Keywords: organizational design; global management, digital marketing