Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category
Wednesday, February 27th, 2008
I heard a true story years ago about a telephone service in the UK, where lonely women would call to hear a soothing, pre-recorded male voice say things like “you know what, you’re really beautiful.” Apparently it was hugely popular.
Well, Australian natural male grooming product company Vitaman has put this idea on steroids with its interactive and innovative online store.
Meet Nikki, a leggy Micha Barton lookalike with an Aussie accent. She is your personal shopping valet. When you drag items into your shopping bag, Nikki complements you on your selection with lines like “Mmmmmm, this smells amazing on your skin,” and “Oooh, I love a brave sportsman who puts his body on the line.”

What’s genius is, Nikki changes her outfit for each product category, so that motivates guys to at least check out each product category. Unfortunately, most of the products on the shelf have identical packaging, so it might be a bit better for Nikki to give a quick spiel on each category’s offering and what makes them so amazing. You’ve got a captivated audience, girl, sell!
Another unfortunate is that products must be added to the bag to be rewarded with the purring praise for your selection. This means many overloaded carts filled with products not really intended to buy. But Vitaman makes it easy to remove items from your cart when you’re ready to check out. The best part of the cart is when you view your cart, Nikki says “Are you sure that’s all you want?” Don’t you wish you could say that from your cart page?
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Effective Online Merchandising: What Sells?
Free webinar: March 13th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Mike Svatek, Director, Marketing & Product Management, Baynote
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in Technology, Viral Marketing, Marketing | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 19th, 2008
Picking up where we left off in discussing Office Max’s “Elf Yourself” campaign (our post Can Dancing Elves Move Product Off Shelves? and Robert Gorell’s How To Elf Yourself Out of Millions), I noticed another nail in Office Max’s coffin in my feed reader today.
Office Max drew much criticism from the marketing world, despite the phenomenal success of its Elf Yourself viral campaign, because it had nothing to do with office supplies. But driving sales wasn’t even the intention, rather it was an effort to bring a human face to Office Max’s brand. If at #2, Avis has to “try harder,” I suppose Office Max - #3 behind Staples and Office Depot - decided to compete on personality rather than price or customer service.
But that’s all for naught if everyone loves your campaign, but attributes it to your competitors - or completely different industries. Robert Gorell noted in his post:
Ask anyone who’s aware of Elf Yourself — and pronounce it carefully when you do — whether they can recall who sponsored the campaign.
Most of the answers I’ve gotten thus far (”Starbucks?”; “Barnes & Noble?”; “Wasn’t that Staples?”) have been guesses.
But this is the kicker: Not even Adweek can recall the sponsor correctly:
Burger King’s online Subservient Chicken from 2004, in which typed-in words triggered the responses of a man in a chicken suit, and Office Depot’s Elf Yourself microsite for the 2006 and 2007 holiday seasons, where people were turned into dancing elves, as well as other unique campaigns are proof that interesting tech tools can create marketing that is fun, engaging and certain to go viral.
D’OH!
Effective Online Merchandising: What Sells?
Free webinar: March 13th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Mike Svatek, Director, Marketing & Product Management, Baynote
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in , , , , ecommerce articles, Social Media, advertising, Viral Marketing, Marketing | No Comments »
Wednesday, February 13th, 2008
The following is an email I received from Circuit City the other day. I think this last-minute Valentine’s Day email campaign pulls together appropriate design elements, messaging and calls-to-action. And reflects what we’ve been talking about for months here at Get Elastic about holiday marketing.

Now that you’ve given your scroll-wheel a nice workout, let’s break this email down:
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Love Your Landing Page: Tips to Increase Ecommerce Conversion
Free webinar: February 14th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Ayat Shukairy, Managing Partner, INVESP Consulting
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in web design, Design, Email Marketing, Marketing | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 30th, 2008
Almost every website with any resemblance of professionalism uses stock photography. Although it is usually very high resolution, it is so often very low in realism.

Do people actually respond to fake, photographs? Only your own testing can tell for sure, but one thing’s for certain, if the images on your site are actual unique, and actually speak to your customer, you have an advantage over everyone else.
Here’s my favorite examples of the too-stock photography that we see everywhere!
The collaboration

Great ideas come from conflict and discussion, not cooperation. If everybody’s happy, then chances are nothing is getting done.
The corporate team

When you take a picture of a bunch of models in business suites, you end up with… A bunch of models in business suites!
The business professional

Hmmm. Just out of college and standing around dreaming. My advice is to stop standing around and get to work.
The customer service rep

If it were this much fun to work in a call center, they wouldn’t have the highest turnover rate of any job.
The grunge factor

Nothing says professional like a scruffy face or a crumbling wall…
However, You shouldn’t take this as a recommendation to put a bunch of low quality pictures on your site. But, trying to find some realism isn’t a terrible thing.
Do this:
- Show realism!
- Connect with your visitor!
- Don’t choose a photo just for a pretty face!
- Choose photos that have some relation with your service!
- Use only clear, sharp, and high quality photos!
- Take time to choose any stock photo for your website. Be able to easily define why you chose that image!
Here’s an interesting article about how people in photo’s can affect your website’s conversions.
Original post by jestep
Posted in , Marketing | No Comments »
Monday, January 28th, 2008
If you recognized this was NOT an official OfficeMax Elf Yourself video, perhaps you’re one of the 26.4 million people who took part in the real OfficeMax viral campaign last Christmas. (For our non-US readers, you can read up on this campaign here).
There’s no denying that this was the biggest social media marketing success for a major retailer in 2007. Hitwise ranked ElfYourself.com as the 51st most visited website in December, and users spent a total of 2,600 years on the site. Even more remarkable, 40% of visitors to ElfYourself.com were 55 years or older - proving that social media campaigns can engage boomers successfully.
OfficeMax VP of Marketing and Advertising Bob Thacker said: “We were looking to build the brand, warm up our image. We weren’t looking for sales. We are third-place players in our industry, so we are trying to differentiate ourselves through humor and humanization.”
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Love Your Landing Page: Tips to Increase Ecommerce Conversion
Free webinar: February 14th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Khalid Hajsaleh, President, INVESP Consulting
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in , , , , , , , Social Media, social media marketing, advertising, Viral Marketing, Marketing | No Comments »
Thursday, January 24th, 2008
This post is a companion to today’s Webinar “12 Things Retailers Must Learn From Christmas ’07” and points to Get Elastic posts and other websites mentioned in the session, along with some additional resources you might find helpful.
Whether you caught the presentation or not you’ll find this a handy reference for your holiday marketing planning.
Planning
• Full Holiday 2007 post-mortem from MarketingCharts.com
• OneUpWeb’s 2006 Holiday Online Retail Buying Trends white paper - excellent resource.
• Marketing Experiments has a great merchandising calendar that you can download.
Choosing the right promotions
• Valentine’s marketing ideas that can be applied to any holiday.
• Offering free shipping to Canada? How to optimize your site for it.
Off-site messaging
• Examples of Facebook marketing creative and landing pages.
On-site messaging
• Future Now’s 2007 Retail Customer Experience Survey results.
• Examples of Christmas home page designs.
• Palmer Web Marketing’s post on saving stockout sales.
• Trigger email tip for recovering abandoned shopping carts with email, you can use this for low-stocked items sitting in an abandoned cart.
• Detailed post on shipping cutoff dates.
• Store locator usability examples and tips.
Building trust
• User Reviews: The Power of Social Commerce webinar replay and summary blog post.
Returns
• Example of the word-of-mouth effect that Zappos-type return shipping policies can have.
Essential email
• 12 Can’t Miss Email Strategies for Online Retailers
webinar replay and summary blog post.
• Net-A-Porter’s example of emailing your wishlist.
• If you’re looking for inspiration on a particular season, check out RetailEmail.Blogspot’s seasonal archive. From Breast Cancer Awareness Month to Earth Day, you can see screenshots of email campaigns and scan subject lines.
Masterful merchandising
• Cross-selling dos and don’ts with examples from top online retailers.
Capturing last minute shoppers
We have several posts on this:
• Last-minute holiday marketing tactics for online retailers
• Optimizing your store for last minute shoppers
• Tips for converting last minute shoppers
• In-store pickup usability tips
• Upresent.com is the service that allows you to add gift notification services to your e-store.
You’ll also enjoy our Webinar with Melissa Burdon of Future Now: 7 Simple Ways to Boost Your Holiday Conversion Rate.
Happy holiday marketing!
Love Your Landing Page: Tips to Increase Ecommerce Conversion
Free webinar: February 14th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Khalid Hajsaleh, President, INVESP Consulting
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in , Marketing | No Comments »
Monday, January 21st, 2008
Thinking about running a Facebook advertising campaign? It helps to pick apart what advertisers are already doing. Today we’ll examine several campaigns of online retailers from ad copy and design to landing page and boil them down to 11 tips for Facebook banners and graphic ads.
Apple
Ad

I’m not too crazy about the ad text - it seems a bit awkward. It could be shortened to “Hottest Phone, Lowest Price. $399 + Free Shipping from the Apple Store.” Easier to read, capitalized letters are proven to convert higher in PPC - why should this be any different? Oh, and ditch the Christmas messaging, it’s January 21st!
Landing Page
This is a great landing page choice - leading right to the conversion page for the product advertised. BUT this is the Apple.com store, and the ad was served to me as a Canadian. Geo-targeting is available, please use it. It’s not clear that this is the US store unless you check the address bar. Especially disappointing as the iPhone requires “hacking” to be used in Canada. Can the average Facebook user figure this all out?
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12 Things Retailers Must Learn from Christmas ‘07
Free webinar: January 24th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Linda Bustos, Emerging Media Analyst, Elastic Path Software
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in , ecommerce trends, , , , ecommerce articles, MySpace, Uncategorized, Social Media, social media marketing, Facebook, Marketing | No Comments »
Monday, January 14th, 2008
Today is January 14th, which means we’re only one month away from what some believe is the 2nd largest retailing event of the year. Last year, Valentine’s Day raked in $905 Million in online sales.
Though men are expected to spend the most on Valentine gifts and are stereotypically procrastinators, ecommerce marketers should not run a last-minute Valentine’s campaign. Today we’ll talk about ways you can sell lovin’ through email, social media and your website.
Interesting Statistics
Last year, Discovery Card conducted a Valentine’s Day Shopping Survey and found that:
- Men expected to spend an average of $127 on their ladies, and the ladies $74. Of the women, 53% said they would purchase gadgets for their men.
- 65% would make their purchase one week before February 14
- 10% of men would wait until February 14
- 39% of women planned on spending nothing
- 22% of men and 15% of women planned to purchase a gift online
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12 Things Retailers Must Learn from Christmas ‘07
Free webinar: January 24th, 2008, 9am PT/12pm ET
Guest Panelist: Linda Bustos, Emerging Media Analyst, Elastic Path Software
Register to Attend
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in ecommerce articles, Merchandising, ecommerce trends, , , Design, Email Marketing, affiliate marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Social Media, search marketing, Marketing | No Comments »
Thursday, January 3rd, 2008
Cross-selling (offering items related to the product like accessories and warranties) and up-selling (suggesting more expensive alternatives) are effective merchandising tools both online and offline. You could think of cross-selling as an etailer’s answer to “would you like fries with that?”
Cross-Selling and up-selling have a number of benefits, and can increase:
- average order value
- conversion rates by guiding customers to appropriate alternatives if a product they’re viewing isn’t right
- exposure for high margin items
- customer satisfaction by suggesting related items to enhance or augment the product and user experience
- awareness about the depth of your product offering
There are many places on your website where you can cross-sell, the most common being the product page and on the view cart page - right before checkout. You can also cross-sell on the home page (if you logged a user’s last visit or they sign in) or in a post-purchase email. Today we’ll just focus on the product pages and view cart.
Not all retailers use cross-selling in both areas, some only cross-sell on the product pages to avoid confusion, indecision and cart abandonment upon checkout. It’s important to cross-sell wisely on view cart pages as this is a valid concern - let’s look at some dos and don’ts for both product pages and view cart pages, and then dig into some real life examples from top retailers.
Cross-Selling Dos
- Show relevant items whether they are accessories or alternatives to the same product
- Show larger sizes or other same-product up-sells when possible (Example: Tiger Direct)
- Use personal words like “you” rather than “we” - “You Might Also Like” vs. “We Suggest”
- Use emotional words like “need” and “want” (Examples: Palm.com “Need accessories?” and McDonald’s “Do you want fries with that?”)
- Use words like “Special Offers,” “Special Offers for You” or “Great Deals” to communicate savings and value
- Create urgency with “Limited Time Offer” or “Limited Quantities” (Example: Tiger Direct)
- Do save your sale / low margin items for the view cart page. Show regular priced / high margin alternatives from the product pages.
- Make it easy to return to the product page after you add a suggested item - even better to keep shopper on the product page but clearly let the shopper know an item was added to the cart
- Offer a mix of price points when suggesting items on the view cart page
- Show “no brainers” like gift cards, warranties, batteries et cetera that are easily understood by the customer, don’t require a click away from the page and are easy sellers
- Offer discounts on one item when you buy another item on the “view cart/bag/basket” page (Examples: Blue Nile and Macy’s)
- Provide enough detail on add-ons (thumbnail, price and description) so customer is less likely to click away from cart page
- Let the customer check off add-ons from the view cart page rather than buttons for each product. Customers may think adding a product to the cart will take them away from the cart page and they’ll get lost (Example: Palm.com)
- It’s a good idea to show “top rated” suggestions along with review content to build trust and catch interest. I haven’t found an example of this, please comment if you’ve seen one
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Analytics: 12 Things to Learn from Christmas ‘07
Free webinar: Date To Be Announced, January 2008
Guest Panelist: To Be Announced
View the ecommerce webinar archive
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in ecommerce tips, , , ecommerce trends, ecommerce articles, Marketing, Shopping Cart Abandonment, Merchandising, Usability | No Comments »
Monday, December 24th, 2007
Some believe December 24th is the busiest shopping day of the Christmas season, as everyone scrambles for last minute gifts, decor and food - at least in local stores. Holiday shipping deadlines are now behind us, so what do online merchants do? I went to check out the home pages of 100 of the Internet Retailer Top 500 expecting to see a lot of last-minute pitches for electronic gift certificates and in-store pick up. (Homepages were checked late in the evening on December 23).
Everybody loves statistics, so here goes:
Promoting Electronic Gift Cards - 32%
- 25% made e-gift cards very prominent on the home page, sometimes in more than one place (for example, banner and sidebar box).
- The most popular tagline was “It’s Not Too Late!”
- Many included the purchase cutoff dates for guaranteed delivery, as some take up to 12 hours for delivery. Others claimed instant delivery.
- 10% reminded you of in-store gift cards, but did not offer e-mail gift certificates.
- Musician’s Friend provided an added incentive for purchasing an e-gift certificate with a “$20 ComeBack Cash in the New Year” - when you buy a gift certificate of $100 or more, you will receive your own $20 gift card to use before February 15, 2008. A great way to bring the gift-giver back to spend more money during some of the slowest months of the year.
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Analytics: 12 Things to Learn from Christmas ‘07
Free webinar: Date To Be Announced, January 2008
Guest Panelist: To Be Announced
View the ecommerce webinar archive
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in Design, Uncategorized, Marketing | No Comments »
Thursday, December 13th, 2007
It’s a shame that CompUSA will not be with us much longer, because it gives us a great example of the potential for RSS feeds for ecommerce sites. Check it out while you can: http://www.compusa.com/help/rss_feeds.asp

This is a close-up:

This is how a sample feed appears in my Google Reader:

Online retailers that use RSS syndication for product content are few and far between, the ones that do usually are electronics and computer related (more tech savvy audience, I assume). It’s likely that the general public still doesn’t understand what RSS is or how it can help them, so CompUSA provides a nice little introduction to what RSS is with links to resources and popular RSS readers.
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Analytics: 12 Things to Learn from Christmas ‘07
Free webinar: Date To Be Announced, January 2008
Guest Panelist: To Be Announced
View the ecommerce webinar archive
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in e commerce articles, ecommerce articles, , , Technology, Customer Service, , Email Marketing, rss, Marketing | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 27th, 2007
SEO Digger is a free SEO tool that instantly shows you keyword rankings in Google for yours or any other website URL along with Wordtracker keyword counts. This makes it so easy to hone in on the most popular keywords (or products) that you’re ranking for so that you can optimize those pages even better.
Make sure you register so that you are able to see results for your deep pages, not just your home page. Registered users also don’t have a limit on the number of searches you can do in one hour.
How This Works
SEO Digger keeps a database of the top 20 results in Google for over 57 million keywords and keyphrases updated every 2 weeks. When you type in yours or any other URL, you’ll get a chart like this:

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Is Your Affiliate Program Your Top Sales Generator? If Not…
Free webinar: Tuesday, December 11th, 9am PT / 12pm ET:
Affiliate Marketing: What Every Retailer Ought to Know
Guest Panelist: Shawn Collins, Author, Successful Affiliate Marketing for Merchants
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in keyword research, e commerce, blog seo, seo digger, ecommerce seo, search marketing, SEO, Search Engine Optimization, blogging, Marketing | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 27th, 2007
SEO Digger is a free SEO tool that instantly shows you keyword rankings in Google for yours or any other website URL along with Wordtracker keyword counts. This makes it so easy to hone in on the most popular keywords (or products) that you’re ranking for so that you can optimize those pages even better.
Make sure you register so that you are able to see results for your deep pages, not just your home page. Registered users also don’t have a limit on the number of searches you can do in one hour.
How This Works
SEO Digger keeps a database of the top 20 results in Google for over 57 million keywords and keyphrases updated every 2 weeks. When you type in yours or any other URL, you’ll get a chart like this:

(more…)
Is Your Affiliate Program Your Top Sales Generator? If Not…
Free webinar: Tuesday, December 11th, 9am PT / 12pm ET:
Affiliate Marketing: What Every Retailer Ought to Know
Guest Panelist: Shawn Collins, Author, Successful Affiliate Marketing for Merchants
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in keyword research, e commerce, blog seo, seo digger, ecommerce seo, search marketing, SEO, Search Engine Optimization, blogging, Marketing | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 20th, 2007
SEO guru Stephan Spencer contributed a great overview on tagging and its virtues for usability and SEO to Search Engine Land last week. Do check out Stephan’s entire article if you’re new to the concept of tagging, tag clouds and folksonomy.
A tag, according to Wikipedia, is “a (relevant) keyword or term associated with or assigned to a piece of information (e.g. a picture, article, or video clip), thus describing the item and enabling keyword-based classification of information.” More simply put (with due credit to Flickr.com): tags are like keyword or category labels, and they can help visitors find items which have something in common.
Basically, you can tag a blog post, product or photo with relevant keywords. When you want to check out all the posts, photos or products related to a certain keyword, you can click on the “tag” and voila! Usability-wise, visitors can navigate visually through a “tag cloud” (see the bottom of our page for an example) and even discover tags, whereas in a traditional dropdown menu or even faceted navigation this could get out of hand. Tags are great for SEO too, because your tags generate their own URLs, and each tag is a keyword-rich internal link to that page, reinforced by the tagged items themselves and the sitewide tag cloud, if you have one.
I took a peek at blogs from our list of 75+ blogs from top online retailers to “look who’s tagging” and as I expected, I can easily count them all on one hand. What’s worse, the ones that do are doing it WRONG!
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Is Your Affiliate Program Your Top Sales Generator? If Not…
Free webinar: Thursday, December 6th, 9am PT / 12pm ET:
Affiliate Marketing: What Every Retailer Ought to Know
Guest Panelist: Shawn Collins, Author, Successful Affiliate Marketing for Merchants
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in netconcepts, folksonomy, ecommerce blogs, community tagging, search engine land, stephan spencer, tagsonomy, tagging, tag clouds, blog strategy, blogs, blogging, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, Marketing, Social Media, ecommerce, amazon, wikipedia, e commerce, Usability | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 20th, 2007
SEO guru Stephan Spencer contributed a great overview on tagging and its virtues for usability and SEO to Search Engine Land last week. Do check out Stephan’s entire article if you’re new to the concept of tagging, tag clouds and folksonomy.
A tag, according to Wikipedia, is “a (relevant) keyword or term associated with or assigned to a piece of information (e.g. a picture, article, or video clip), thus describing the item and enabling keyword-based classification of information.” More simply put (with due credit to Flickr.com): tags are like keyword or category labels, and they can help visitors find items which have something in common.
Basically, you can tag a blog post, product or photo with relevant keywords. When you want to check out all the posts, photos or products related to a certain keyword, you can click on the “tag” and voila! Usability-wise, visitors can navigate visually through a “tag cloud” (see the bottom of our page for an example) and even discover tags, whereas in a traditional dropdown menu or even faceted navigation this could get out of hand. Tags are great for SEO too, because your tags generate their own URLs, and each tag is a keyword-rich internal link to that page, reinforced by the tagged items themselves and the sitewide tag cloud, if you have one.
I took a peek at blogs from our list of 75+ blogs from top online retailers to “look who’s tagging” and as I expected, I can easily count them all on one hand. What’s worse, the ones that do are doing it WRONG!
(more…)
Is Your Affiliate Program Your Top Sales Generator? If Not…
Free webinar: Thursday, December 6th, 9am PT / 12pm ET:
Affiliate Marketing: What Every Retailer Ought to Know
Guest Panelist: Shawn Collins, Author, Successful Affiliate Marketing for Merchants
Original post by Linda Bustos
Posted in netconcepts, folksonomy, ecommerce blogs, community tagging, search engine land, stephan spencer, tagsonomy, tagging, tag clouds, blog strategy, blogs, blogging, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, Marketing, Social Media, ecommerce, amazon, wikipedia, e commerce, Usability | No Comments »