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Target
and Personanalize Marketing Your e-Commerce
It is one of the supreme ironies of the Internet that
the computer, so long derided as impersonal, is now
being used to create highly personal experiences for
Web site visitors. Because a computer can sift through
vast amounts of existing information according to preprogrammed
rules, computers can now take company information (or
special interest information) and combine it with information
supplied by prospective customers and digest it in a
way that is meaningful to each individual.
What
are the best ways for businesses to personalize selling
and customize products in order to build business.
Although many of these methods are still in their infancy,
a great deal can be gleaned as to current strategies
and technologies and techniques and strategies can be
implemented.
To
attract new customers, companies can now establish Web
sites that provide highly individualized recommendations
based on information provided by the customer. In this
way, it's possible to tell a prospective customer exactly
which product, among a plethora of possibilities, is
just right for that individual or that business. The
strategic idea behind these efforts is clear: By empowering
the customer with information about how a specific offering
meets his or her needs, the company positions itself
as a knowledgeable place to buy and also demonstrates
how its products are just right for that individual
customer.
This
information, properly used, gives an existing supplier
or retailer a clear leg up on the competition: The Company
is able to use its information to establish itself as
the supplier of choice and to suggest services to existing
customers before they request them. Companies can maintain
effectively private Web sites for individual clients
so that they can both provide extraordinary service
and recommend new products that will be of value to
these customers.
In
the past, this type of personalized communication was
virtually impossible: Retailers and suppliers lacked
the detailed information necessary to provide these
recommendations and the ability to cost-effectively
communicate it to individual customers.
However,
today we have moved into an era where technology allows
firms to cater to the individual needs of customers
in a way that have not been possible before. The value
of these initiatives, both in tightening the bonds with
existing customers and in attracting new customers,
is high. Another business tool made possible by the
Internet is something that previously was available
only to the wealthy: product customization, done quickly
and inexpensively.
In
an era where a single click can take customers away,
leading-edge companies are finding that ongoing, personal
relationships can be key to winning. Personal selling,
"marketing intimacy," if you will, deepens the commercial
relationship, adding tremendous value for the customer
("This saves me so much time—and it's just right for
me!") and making it painful and costly for the customer
to leave ("Why should I buy from anyone else? Company
X knows exactly what I like and need"). Therefore, the
more your company can "get personal," the more likely
the potential for long-term retention of customers.
How
are companies making use of several levels of "personal"
recommendations ?
In
adopting any strategy based on personalization, privacy
is a central issue. The ability to make the customer
feel comfortable enough to give you the information
you need to create a tailored product or solution is
among the primary challenges companies must overcome.
1)
The Web's ability to help companies establish marketing
intimacy is possible because a Web site combines five
elements:
2)
An opportunity to present information in an interactive
format, permitting customers to express their preferences
to the owner of the Web site
3)
Virtually costless online communications between the
potential buyer and seller
4)
A visual component that lets potential buyers see prospective
purchases and how they would appear if personalized
The ability to store tremendous amounts of personal
information about their customers
5)
An unprecedented ability to create systems that configure
products so that costly errors are eliminated, thus
reducing the expense of creating custom products
Presently,
one-to-one selling can be viewed in two general categories,
recommending and customization.
Brick-and-mortar
companies have long known that for the most part, either
a motivated buyer has done a great deal of research
on a particular product, or a product has been enthusiastically
recommended by a friend or business associate. This
knowledge leads to two keys to establishing a Web site
that motivates buying:
Ample
information (so that the buyer needn't do any more research—and,
in the process, possibly depart your Web site for another)
A
positive recommendation
In
the past effective recommendations were generally person
to person, there are several reasons why these technology-based
recommendations are valued now. One has to do with the
dizzying array of choices that now faces consumers.
A cosmetics firm may offer hundreds of shades of lipstick
or eye shadow; financial services companies have become
true supermarkets filled with choices; well-known cold
remedies now have multiple versions that end with words
such as "plus" and "sinus" and "cough."
A
generation ago, the dilemma posed by the array of choices
was generally solved through one-on-one interaction
(selling, if you will). Someone with a cold would have
stopped by his or her local pharmacy and chatted with
the pharmacist about which of the three or four cold
remedies carried by the pharmacy would be best.
Today,
the pharmacist is hard to find (and is often employed
by a separate entity within a chain drugstore), and
the number of choices of what to take for the common
cold is mind-boggling. Do you want to take the medicine
in the day or night? Do you need an expectorant? A cough
suppressant? Decongestant? Antihistamine? Something
for fever and chills? Normal strength or extra? Customers
could get a headache simply trying to decide! Today
cold or allergy sufferers need only click to the specific
manufacturers "allergy-cold" site, where they are asked
to click off their symptoms (itchy watery eyes, runny
nose, cough, etc.). The site then serves as a "friendly
pharmacist" and recommends the product that will be
right for them. While consumers recognize there is a
given bias to any company-sponsored Web site, they still
welcome the guidance because they trust the branded
product provider and they are overwhelmed by choices.
Depending
on your product and customer, several types of recommending
functions may work best. But first, let's take a moment
to consider how to judge effectiveness.
Thanks
to the interactive aspect of the Web, many technological
recommendations are firmly based on consumer feedback.
At a Web site for a cosmetic company (or in-store) visitor
provides information on hair, eye, and skin color as
well as information concerning breakouts, response to
the sun, and signs of aging. Based on this information,
specific products are recommended.
To
the public, there's little that's more confusing than
figuring out what to do with one's money, so, of course,
information and recommendations are vital in this area.
Financial service companies are having a heyday with
the possibilities offered to them via the Web.
If
the visitor is willing to give a little more information,
then the recommendation can be customized further and
will be that much better.
Personalization,
like any business initiative, should be used judiciously.
There are real costs that accompany developing personalized
applications: They range from the hard cost of development
dollars to the cost of disappointing customers or prospects
who expected a better experience. It's important to
assess whether a personalization effort will be effective
and contribute meaningfully to new sales or customer
retention before investing the time and money in bringing
it to market.
The
criteria for establishing an effective recommendation
system are different for every product. The system chosen
is dependent upon a balance of the following: (1) the
nature of the product, (2) the amount of information
needed from the potential buyer to make an effective
recommendation, and (3) the likely willingness of the
prospective buyer to share this needed information with
you.
As
you go through this process, be aware that we have entered
an age in which consumers want to educate themselves
about everything from which refrigerator to buy to how
to get the best medical treatment. They no longer trust
intermediaries—advice from dealers, brokers, agents,
and even health care providers is being checked and
rechecked by today's consumer. A well-designed Web site
helps meet this need, and the information should be
as rich and informative as if the consumer were meeting
with one of your top salespeople.
Will
consumers will trust the information they receive from
companies on the Web as much as (or more than) they
trust sales representatives? All evidence to date suggests
the answer is yes. People believe that no trusted brand
will risk its good name by posting misleading information
on the Web.
As
you go about creating an online recommendation system,
your overriding goal should be to make the online shopping
experience better than what a customer might encounter
in the physical world. Therefore, you need to ask yourself:
"What can my company accomplish using this medium that
can't be accomplished in the physical world?"
Payment
issues online seemed to have been taken care of by the
credit card companies as a matter of routine.
What
about issues of privacy?
Consider
gathering data anonymously. Recommendation systems that
provide advice to consumers anonymously are likely to
be far more popular and, therefore, more effective.
In these cases, you are able to provide the prospective
buyer with value without needing to jump the hurdle
of "you can trust me with this information."
If
you'd prefer to record the identities of site visitors,
you are one step ahead if you are a recognized brand.
Consumers are already predisposed to believe in your
company name. In this case, address the privacy issue
head-on with a statement that precedes your online registration
form: "The information gathered here is to help us better
serve you; we will not share or sell this information
to anyone."
If
you are not a well-known brand, a strong privacy statement
is recommended, but you should likely take other measures
to more fully establish your legitimacy. There are now
a number of entities, such as the Better Business Bureau's
BBBOnline, that have developed certification programs.
These programs warrant to site visitors that you are
a legitimate business and agree to follow certain ethical
business practices. Members of BBBOnline have the right
to prominently display a logo on their home page. Comcerned
businesses to look into this program.
Finally,
if you plan to share customer data with others, then
you need to be explicit about it and receive the customer's
permission. The worst thing you can do is fail to inform
the customer that some piece of information you determine
about him or her may be used in some way the customer
does not expect.
Product
customization is possible because of a convergence of
two elements: the Web as a one-to-one communications
technology and manufacturing processes that allow for
the development and delivery of custom products.
Designing
your own custom desktop computer at Web sites such as
Dell has become "commonplace," but what about designing
your own swimsuit or, perhaps, golf clubs? These customized
services provide several valuable benefits for companies:
(1) They help to drive new business, and (2) customers
are willing to pay a premium price for an individually
designed product, which means these products and services
sometimes have higher profit margins than standard
offerings..
The
ability to interact with customers and say, "I can create
the product that is just right for you," is one of the
most powerful features of the Web. Expansion of this
Internet capability will be the inevitable result of
the combination of (1) manufacturers creating products
that permit increasing customization, (2) further advances
in computing power at ever decreasing costs, and (3)
new software that is continuously enhancing the options
available to businesses to personalize.
Smart
companies realize that the more involved the relationship
becomes with the customer, the better their rate of
retention. They are implementing this strategy in a
wide variety of creative ways, involving both personalization
and customization, and will certainly enhance their
applications significantly over time:
1).
Companies are creating extraordinary convenience for
customers and establishing systems to speed the fulfillment
of custom orders.
2.
E-mail communications and reminder systems are going
to be used increasingly.
The
ultimate goal of every business is to have a customer
who wants to hear from the business about new products
that he or she might want to buy. E-mail, for the first
time, provides this type of powerful tool, since it's
an almost costless communications vehicle.
3.
In business-to-business selling, smart companies are
also linking tightly to their customers.
Leading-edge
technology companies are offering custom password-protected
Web sites for their corporate accounts and high-volume
small business accounts. These sites are typically designed
to simplify the buying process, and they offer
(1)
customer online malls offering products preselected
by the company to be bought by employees at volume discount
prices,
(2)
electronic mail links to account managers responsible
for serving that customer,
(3)
the ability to track the status of orders, and
(4)
dramatic increases in the speed of order fulfillment
through the elimination of paper forms and a reduction
in errors.
This
is a clear way of providing customers with additional
value and of tying the customer more closely to your
company. Most companies will also see an increase in
revenues from these accounts.
When
companies first began establishing Web sites, most feared
they would receive an overwhelming amount of e-mail
that they wouldn't be able to handle. In many cases,
two unproductive strategies emerged. Some companies
designed Web sites that did not permit the visitor
to contact them, making the site little more than a
brochure; other companies permitted e-mail messages
and then often didn't respond to them. In either case,
this did not leave potential customers with any feeling
that their visit "mattered" to the company: the exact
opposite of the tight relationship a company wants to
build between itself and its customers in a HyperWars
environment.
What
was called for, of course, was a new category of employee:
"e-mail respondents"; yet no one wanted to add staff
at an additional expense to a project that was in its
infancy.
Enter
"response software."
Several
intelligent software systems, are able to routinely
handle and route questions, so there is no excuse for
underserving your customers with the first and most
basic customer service—answering their questions.
Companies
who are successfully managing their e-mail via electronic
means are also taking the opportunity to benefit from
the Knowledge they glean.
Companies
are finally transforming their Web sites from marketing
brochures to vehicles that turn visits into sales leads.
Those who develop a Web presence and fail to respond
to electronic inquiries in a timely manner run the risk
of losing existing and new customers.
Industry
research also shows that only 30 percent of Fortune
500 companies respond to questions directed to these
companies through their Web sites, which means a large
number of customers aren't getting the personal attention
winning companies need to provide.
As
you consider the possibilities offered by personalization
and customization, I suggest that these initiatives
be weighed against these criteria:
Will
the initiative enhance relationships with my customers
by adding convenience or a better ability to meet their
needs?
Will
the initiative result in potentially high cost-savings
for my organization (as in the case of an intelligent
product configuration that eliminates costly order errors)?
Shaun
Stevens Senior Marketing Consultant Ace Employment Services
Winnipeg Experience in Marketing in the Human Resource
, Training as well as Corrections Fields . http://aceemploymentservices.net/
call_kirk@hotmail.com
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