Archive for the ‘warehouse management’ Category

10 Ways To Promote Your Promotions

Monday, September 14th, 2009

I originally posted this article last October with the title “Free Shipping: Got It? 10 Ways to Flaunt It.” With the holiday season rapidly approaching, I wanted to remind you that no matter what your promotion is (free shipping, flat rate shipping, gift with purchase, free ship-to-store, free returns, 20% off etc), you want to make sure your offer is clearly reinforced at every touch point. Remember you can substitute “free shipping” with whatever your value proposition is in all the following:

1. Meta Tags and Descriptions

Famous for its Free Shipping Both Ways & 365-Day Return Policy, Zappos used to include its value proposition in its title tag and meta description tags. As I blogged about back in August), this can help achieve higher click through on your listing than search results above you.

As I mentioned in the blog post, people do search for “keyword + free shipping” in search engines, and including your offer in your title tag is crucial to optimize for these searches.

Interestingly, since August Zappos has changed its tactic to simply “Free Shipping.”

Before I say this is a bad idea, the simpler message may be easier on the eyes and there may be a good reason for the switch (like testing, for instance). Unfortunately, Google doesn’t hand over click-through data for organic search like it does with…

2. Search Ads

It’s a bit easier to test click-through rate for shipping offers in search ad headlines and body copy, since Google reports impressions and clicks for each ad you test:

Since most people scan headlines first, don’t you think “Auto Parts Free Shipping” would stand out?

Judging how long it took me to find an example of a retailer bidding on “keyword + free shipping” – it tells me this is a valuable keyword many aren’t taking advantage of.

3. E-mail Marketing

Test free-shipping calls to action in e-mail subject lines, but always repeat the offer in your e-mail creative and landing page. Examples from this summer include eBags’ “Pain at the Pump? Stay Put. We’ll ship it to you for Free” and Macy’s “Gas prices got you down? This week clearance items ship for only 99¢.

4. Data Feeds

Take advantage of optional promo fields. Many comparison-shopping engines like Shopping.com and PriceGrabber allow you to flaunt your special offers through these fields. Other comparison engines allow shoppers to select the term “free shipping” from a menu of predetermined promotions, or include a Free Shipping section – like Yahoo Shopping. Your listing may even include a “Free Shipping” icon or appear higher in results when users sort by total cost (inclusive of shipping), depending on the engine.

5. Affiliate Promotions

If you’re offering free shipping for a limited time only, make sure your affiliates are notified in advance, and that all coupon codes work before you post them or send them out.

6. Offline Advertising

Mention your free shipping offer in radio ads, direct mail, in-store signage, on sales receipts and any other offline ads. Don’t forget to state your restrictions clearly.

7. Homepage

Devote significant homepage real estate to the free-shipping offer, including delivery date cutoff times as the holidays draw nearer, in addition to banners at the top of each individual Web page.

8. Category Pages

Endless.com shows “Free Overnight Shipping” below each product thumbnail and price on its category pages, communicating the value proposition to visitors who land on the category page through search and ignore the call-out at the top banner (banner blindness), and reinforcing it for customers already exposed to the offer.

9. Product Pages

Mentioning a product’s free shipping eligibility on the product page (near the price or “add to cart” button) also is useful, for the same reasons as noted above.

10. Shopping Cart

If you offer free shipping above a threshold, use a “carrot” that reminds customers “You’re only away from free shipping!” and a “continue shopping” link. Most online retailers who offer free shipping above a certain cart total don’t do this.

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

In-Store Pickup Tips for Multichannel Retailers

Friday, September 4th, 2009

With the holiday Christmas shopping officially underway, and many holiday shoppers using the internet to ROPO (Research Online, Purchase Offline) - offering ship-to-store services to online customers is a competitive advantage to multi-channel retailers.

Here are some tips to ensure a satisfying online and offline experience of your ship-to-store service for your customers:

On-Site Messaging and Usability

Because ship-to-store is a key customer service, it needs to be communicated well throughout your site (to remind customers you offer it, and to inform first-time visitors about it, regardless of which “landing page” attracts the visitor — it might not be your home page).

Wal-Mart does a great job at branding its “Site-To-Store” service throughout the site, and even uses a unique icon for it - including it in the navigation header, search and category results and product pages:

Navigation / Header

Category Pages

Product Pages

Estimated Arrival Date

Wal-Mart also uses an estimated arrival date for various shipping methods. It uses an absolute date which is better than “3-7 business days” which is not as clear to the customer (requires some mental gymnastics).

Wal-mart also leverages its meta description:

Other areas Wal-Mart could flaunt (like free shipping offers) its Site-to-Store service are email subject lines, pay-per-click ads and shopping engine data feed promo fields.

It’s also a good idea to have a functioning store-lookup tool from every product page, and a link to your ship-to-store policy. Don’t forget to explain which items are eligible for in-store pickup (e.g. perishable items or very heavy, oversized products). You may consider offering a policy that if it’s not there on time for any reason, customer receives a gift card (similar to Best Buy’s arrival date guarantee).

Ship to Store Customer Service Recommendations

  • Make store shipping free
  • Offer an express shipping offer for a premium
  • Ask customer to indicate notification preference - email, telephone (even SMS)
  • Send confirmation email post-purchase with store information - location, hours of operation, telephone number and even Google Map
  • State how long you will hold merchandise for
  • Send email when order is available for pick-up, or call customer if that’s an indicated preference
  • Explain what the customer is required to present as identification/proof of purchase
  • Make sure your pick-up station is always staffed and staff understand how to handle pick-up, returns and exchanges
  • Offer a one-day-only incentive to buy more items than the pick-up order, e.g. 10% off

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Yes Virginia There Is a Santa Claus And He Searches for Free Shipping

Friday, August 28th, 2009

This post was originally published in August 2008 and is part of our Get Elastic rerun series.

Here’s a tip for retailers who offer free shipping on one or more products during the holidays. (My apologies to those who don’t offer free shipping, but bookmark this anyway - you may offer it down the road!)

Free shipping offers consistently top surveys of what customers want from online stores. And people do search for “free shipping,” and most often in November / December - as you would expect.

Now I’m not saying you have a hope in the North Pole of ranking for the term “free shipping” alone (though Amazon, Zappos, Shoes.com and Shoebuy have succeeded). The point is people really care about free shipping, and even search for it in search engines. And if you offer it, you should flaunt it when customers do searches for the products you carry — in your title tags and meta descriptions.

Even if you’re not ranked number one in the search results, if your offer is more attractive than the highest ranking link, you can win the click.

And if you offer other guarantees or customer-friendly policies, throw them in too. Yay, Zappos!

We can also assume many customers will append their product searches with “free shipping”:

PS this goes for PPC ads too, “free shipping” in the ad copy is a great offer that would likely increase click through rates. Just triple check that your landing page repeats the offer and the promotion applies to the product and the geographic area the ad is being shown. Don’t bait-and-switch. Same goes for your title tags for your organic listings. And only add the offer to the pages the offer applies to.

PPS If you want exposure on the sites that do rank tops for the term “free shipping,” you contact them to submit your offers or start an affiliate relationship. The top 3 are FreeShipping.org, FreeShipping.com and Shopping-Bargains.com.

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Cross-Sells and Upsells: What is the Diff?

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Cross-Sell, upsell, really - what’s the diff? Generally…

  • An upsell is to get the customer to spend more money - buy a more expensive model of the same type of product, or add features / warranties that relate to the product in question.
  • A cross-sell is to get the customer to spend more money buy adding more products from other categories than the product being viewed or purchased.

The terms cross-sell and upsell are often used interchangeably because, let’s face it, this gets confusing. Say the customer is viewing a 4GB iPod Nano for $169.

8 GB iPod Nano, $229 -> Upsell, same product family, more expensive
8 GB iPod Touch, $299 -&gt Upsell, same product family, more expensive
16 GP iPod Touch, $399 -> Upsell, same product family, more expensive
Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic , $79 -&gt Cross-sell
Skull Candy headphones, $69, -> Cross-sell
$25 iTunes card -> Cross-sell
8 GB Microsoft Zune, $249 -> Upsell, more expensive, same category
4 GB Creative Zen mp3 player, $159 -> Neither cross-sell or upsell, rather an “alternative product suggestion”
Portable DVD player, $299 -> Cross-sell. Cool gadget, customer “may also like” but not related to mp3 player.
Griffin FM transmitter for car, $79 -> Cross-sell

Really, there should be a third category - “alternative products” which are really a navigation aid rather than something that truly boosts the cart value or items per sale. Consider the following example from Harry and David:

The label “Go Deluxe” suggests an upsell. One suggestion is to double up on the chocolate truffles and get 2 for $44.85, a true upsell. The other takes a product from another category (that is of higher $ value) which would be considered a cross-sell if suggested in addition to, rather than instead of the product being viewed. In this case, the popcorn is an alternative product suggestion rather than a true upsell of the truffles.

Clear as mud?

You May Also Like?

There’s no stock way to present product recommendations. Common labels for recommendations are:

“Recommended products”
“You may also like”
“Customers who bought X also bought”
“Customers who viewed X also viewed”
“Frequently bought together”
“Stuff you need” (Radio Shack, for accessories)
“Stuff you may want” (Radio Shack, for items in other categories)
“More from this (category, brand, author, artist)”
“Looks hot with”
“Complete the look”

For usability, the best labels clearly communicate why products are being recommended (”this is a more fully featured item than the one you’re looking at,” “people like you liked this,” “these are top sellers in this category,” “these items will look good with what you’re looking at…”) rather than “Recommended” or “You might also like.”

Often retailers mix of upsells, cross-sells and alternatives in their merchandising zones. CompUSA separates upsell from cross-sell with “Want to Upgrade?” suggestions and “More Recommendations”:

Aside from label clarity, another benefit of separating your suggestions into separate merchandising zones is more accurate tracking of what types of suggestions are more effective. Are you more successful persuading customers to add to their order or upgrade to a more expensive model?

So while we don’t need to get too hung up on what cross-sell is vs upsell (there’s room for a bit of crossover in definition), and we should add the third category of “alternative products,” understanding the general differences can help us make better decisions in selecting product associations, labeling merchandising zones and measuring the conversion of different suggestions.

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Retailers Embrace API-lliate Marketing

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Back in 2007, Facebook opened its API (application programming interface) to allow any developer to build an application that could extend the functionality of Facebook (and maybe make you a bit of money). Facebook understood that it couldn’t possibly create all the cool things possible with the resources it had, and that creative folks would be happy to do the job for free. Today there are over 50,000 Facebook applications. While most applications are at the bottom of the haystack, some have become wildly popular.

Online retailers Amazon, eBay and Best Buy have opened up their own APIs. Like Facebook, they can leverage a force of free developer talent to create innovative, fun and useful applications and bring their product catalogs to more places around the web — not just their own .com sites or shopping engines. This could be the next ecommerce trend. Gartner predicts that by 2012, 25% or more of top retailers will allow software developer partners to access their APIs (application development interfaces) to connect to product catalogs and payment systems for affiliates.

eBay and Amazon have offered their APIs for a while, and I’ve spotted some interesting creations like the eBay Auction Misspeller. The idea is to help bargain hunter find poorly optimized listings (that get little or no bids) and find eBay deals. Others have built their own Amazon Wishlist applications for Facebook by mashing up Amazon and Facebook APIs:

More recently, Best Buy launched its Remix API asking “Can you build a better best buy?” It incentivizes its developer community with contests at RemixChallenge.com with prizes like flat panel TV screens and cash.

The challenges are product and customer experience focused, like the Flat Panel TV Challenge:

Here is your opportunity to help customers find the right TV for them. Create a complete customer solution around large, flat panel television systems. The purchase of a large TV is particularly difficult on-line, Best Buy wants to help their customers navigate all of the different choices they are presented with, in order to make the correct decision for their circumstances.

There are also idea generation contests: “How do we make Best Buy the best ink destination? What would attract more people to our experience? Ease of use? Better assistance tools or applications? You tell us.” Developers can interact with Keith Burtis, the Best Buy Remix community manager through Twitter.

Check out some of the featured creations at the Remix Sample Gallery. One of my favorites is the GPS Discovery Tool, an interactive product finder a bit like what Telus Mobility does with its handsets.

Another developer is using the API to feed Twitter accounts for video game preorders, with a separate account for Wii, XBox, PS3 etc.

Even if developers don’t win Best Buy’s coveted prizes, they can still use the API to enhance their own affiliate sites and make money through referrals. The more Web sites out there displaying Best Buy products, the more sales Best Buy makes. This is a win-win situation.

It will be interesting to see what kind of applications the community comes up with to solve Best Buy’s challenges, and to see which retailers follow suit.

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Hot Ecommerce Trend: Embedded Video in Email

Monday, June 8th, 2009

I’m often asked what I think the hottest trend in ecommerce is and I believe it’s video content. So I’m excited to see more new technology emerge that can embed video right into retail email, and retailers experimenting with it. Anna Yeaman reports one retailer boasting a 20-27% click through rate without linking to video, and 51-65% with links to video. And Forrester Research reports video in email can increase click through by 2-3X.

As Mark Brownlow explains in his state-of-play update on video in retail email, early use of video in email was really linking an image of a video to a video hosted on the Web.

Some retailers like Overstock, REI and Sears got clever and converted video to animated gifs. (Hat tip to Chad White of the RetailEmailBlog for these examples). REI uses Liveclicker, but Anna Yeaman has a DIY tutorial on how to convert video to animated gif.

What’s so tough about embedding actual video in email?

Deliverability is the issue. Large video attachments are often a red flag for spam filters, and ISPs (Internet service providers) block “complex data” including Javascript for security reasons.

ISPs have banned Javascript Sending video in an e-mail has been a challenge for deliverability, since large video attachments often alert spam filters. The way that Goodmail gets around this issue is that their e-mail class, called CertifiedEmail, is a paid service that does not go through typical e-mail filters.

How to beat the filters

Last month, email certification company Goodmail launched its video certification project, CertifiedEmail. CertifiedEmail includes a trust stamp which is like a VIP pass through spam filters. Goodmail customers pay a fee to send email with CertifiedEmail, and embedded video will play at Goodmail’s partner ISPs which for now includes AOL, with more ISPs to follow.

The CertifiedEmail service locks down the bit of code that calls the video server, allowing actual video code to live in the email rather than just a placeholder. Target is one of the first companies to sign on with the service.

Google recently announced it would support Youtube links in email for Gmail accounts. It’s not an embed, rather Gmail recognizes Youtube code and displays the video in the email — provided that the Gmail user has enabled the feature through Google Labs. It’s unlikely the average Gmail user is going to turn this on — so don’t get too excited. But it’s possible this will become default in the future.

For now, the animated gif trick seems the most reliable method. CertifiedEmail is promising but needs a few more ISPs on board.

Stay on top of retail email trends

3 great retail email blogs are RetailEmailBlog, StyleCampaign and Email-Marketing-Reports. 2 hot retail video blogs are VCC and Videoretail. I follow these folks to stay in the loop. And do read the entirety of Mark Brownlow’s post Video Email: Current Practices.

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Multichannel 2.0: Are You Ready for the Next Generation of Commerce Channels?

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

The following is a summary of Elastic Path’s webinar Multichannel 2.0: Are You Ready for the Next Generation of Commerce Channels? The webinar is also available for replay or download.

What is Multichannel 2.0?

Traditional, Multichannel 1.0 includes retail, mail order, call center and online store. Emerging technologies like mobile phones, Internet protocol TV and set-boxes, store kiosks and digital signage and consumer electronics like iPod touch, gaming consoles and portable book readers like Amazon kindle — the next generation of shopping channels is what we at Elastic Path refer to as Multichannel 2.0 — anything that has the potential potential to access your information assets and facilitate transactions through them.

Mobile

Mobile Commerce Beginnings

  • First appeared in 1997 in Finland with 2 mobile phone enabled Coca Cola machines that accepted payment by SMS (text messages)
  • The same year, Finland’s Merita Bank also began accepting SMS transactions
  • In 1998, the first downloadable ringtones appeared in, again in Finland
  • In 2000 we saw mobile parking payments in Norway, mobile train tickets in Austria and mobile airline tickets in Japan

Mobile Commerce Today

  • North American mobile commerce totaled about $346 million in 2008
  • Expected to hit $577 million in 2009
  • Predicted to quadruple to over $2 Billion by 2010

Compared to all ecommerce which was a $204 billion industry last year, this doesn’t seem much. But it’s an area of growth and can greatly enhance the cross-channel experience. You can also use the mobile channel for marketing and loyalty programs which also add value.

Mobile Payment Methods

PSMS Transactions

Sending a premium text message (or SMS — Short Message Service) to a short code allows customers to pay and a premium charge is added to the customer’s phone bill and the goods released when the merchant receives payment.

Because the SMS doesn’t include billing and shipping address detail, this is most common for digital downloads or proof of payment for tickets or physical product in which case a MMS (Multimedia Message Service) might send a barcode confirmation to the customer to present when redeeming goods/services.

SMS payments are not perfect as they can suffer from latency (time lag between “purchase” and merchant’s receipt of payment. Consumers may not get their downloads instantly, and some messages can get lost completely. There’s no guarantee.

Operators may also bill the customer for the text message and typically keep a percentage of the sale from the merchant for supporting the payment service. Other third party service vendors may also take a cut.

Amazon’s Text-Buy-It

Amazon’s Text-Buy-It service allows you to send Amazon a text message with a product name, search keyword, UPC code or ISBN number to “AMAZON” (262966). Amazon sends back a list of matching products. To purchase, select the number beside the product. TextBuyIt uses your mobile phone number to find your account settings for your default shipping address and billing information. It’s free to use aside from any SMS charges from your carrier.

Bill to Phone (No SMS)

Another bill to phone option involves a PIN and OTP (one time password) that bypasses banks and credit card companies. The problem for retail is the retailer needs to offer different payment options for different carriers with carrier co-operation - which makes it just too complicated. Right now it’s mostly used for digital downloads or services partnered with a Telco.

3rd Party Payments

PayPal, Amazon Payments & Google Checkout all have mobile options. You sign up on the Web, register your mobile and create a PIN to use when you want to pay with your mobile. This requires remembering your PIN which may lower conversion.

Similarly, iPhone and iPod Touch users can purchase digital content, games and applications through the iTunes Store with an iTunes account, using a password as authentication.

NFC

NFC (Near Field Communication) uses a short range to transmit information. Because it’s a short range, it can only be used close to a terminal like an in-store kiosk/self checkout, a ticket machine, a bank machine etc. Many credit cards already have the chip for “contactless payment.” You might have one and not even know it.

Currently this is big in Japan for mobile train tickets, you just wave your phone at the machine. NFC payments may or may not require a PIN.

M-commerce Roadblocks

Customer roadblocks:

Smartphone Penetration

Smartphones are still only 6% of the US mobile market - thought that equates to 50 million Blackberries and 37 million iPhones. A high percentage of smartphone owners use them to surf the web, but not necessarily for shopping. Most mobile purchases are for ringtones, wallpapers, games, applications and other digital content.

Findability

Some retailers have mobile specific sites optimized for mobile browsers. There’s no conventional way to name your mobile URL – some use m.domainname.com or domainname.mobi or even subfolders. The best practice is to use device detection and redirect any visitors to your regular site to your mobile version – but that’s not 100% foolproof, and it can be hard to guess the mobile URL or find in a search engine.

Usability

Smaller screens, slower page loads, smaller images, disabled Flash, AJAX and video hinders mobile usability. Stay tuned for a Get Elastic post on mobile website usability tips.

Cost

SMS and mobile web usage charges can deter people from mobile shopping. Think of e-stores with home, browse categories, product page, add to cart, whole checkout process – lots of time and data and battery juice.

Security Fears

Security fear is enough to deter 30 to 70% from mobile shopping. In reality, payment options available do improve security. The real threat is storage of personal information on the retailer’s end which just as much if not more of a threat in other channels. But new technology usually brings fear and misunderstanding. The industry has a lot of public education to do.

Retailer roadblocks:

Cost

Building mobile sites requires separate design, content strategy, possibly mobile platform subscription.

Lack of Standards Across Devices

You can create different style sheets for mobile, but there’s no guarantee a given device is going to pull the right stylesheet. You have to test across multiple devices - smartphone and non-smartphone. Application development is device-specific to the operating system. Building an iPhone and Blackberry app may only serve maximum 6% of customers – maybe 1% are interested in your app.

Mobile Websites

Home Pages

Notice the difference between Tickets.com web and mobile home pages. The mobile site uses only high level navigation – no product merchandising.

Barnes and Noble’s Flash and AJAX wouldn’t work on the mobile web. It’s home page cuts right to the chase: search, find a store, browse the menu.

Product Pages

Target and Sephora both strip out side navigation in favor of breadcrumbs. Text is larger (no need to resize, zoom). Target uses bullet points for the description and shows large default images.

Should you have a mobile version of your site?

Despite extra cost for design and mobile platforms, there’s a night and day difference in usability. If your goal is to do anything over $1 a year with m-commerce, get a mobile site and use device detection to redirect mobile visitors. Anyone who reads their email on their phone might click through to your site.

You don’t have to have a fully functioning store. If you have retail locations, store locators and inventory lookup alone might suffice – an example is Best Buy. All it has is search and a store locator. Some products have a click to call link so you can order by phone.

Think about your industry, would shopping by phone enhance the customer experience? Do your customers want it? Look at web analytics and survey customers. Then look at your store on a few devices and ask yourself if you could stand shopping through it as-is.

Mobile Applications

Not an alternative to, rather a companion to the mobile site. Works well for rentals/subscription/repeat purchase industries, like gifting. 1800flowers has apps for Blackberry and iPhone that access customer accounts and their phone’s Address Books.

Amazon’s app has some innovative features including “Remembers.” Snap a picture of anything and it will try to locate a product you can buy through image recognition. If that fails, it will get humans involved. This shot is from a blogger who snapped a photo of his Zicam medication and 10 minutes later he had a response with links to buy more online.

Should you have a mobile application?

Again, you need to develop for different operating systems like Blackberry, iPhone and Android so you might do all this work for only a few customers. But the customers who do add your app are likely the loyal customers so giving them that extra experience can have its payoff.

The app should do something or meet a customer need that your online store doesn’t do effectively. 1800flowers works for busy people on the go, Amazon also adds value with the camera/image search. Other ideas are mobile shopping lists that you can create on the web and push to your phone or reminder to refill a prescription.

Apps don’t have to be commercial as long as they’re on-brand. Example: a meal planner or fitness tools if you’re an enterprise diet chain like Nutrisystem or Jenny Craig. People buy a lot of food on a regular basis but also need other tools and support — mobile can be that “pocket coach.”

Oakley has a GPS Surf Report application, North Face has a Snow Report and Harndmark has a GPS enabled golf course locator for travelers. Get creative.

Whatever you do, make it useful for customers or it will get lost in the application haystack. If you have a Purple Cow of an idea for an app, do it if you are willing to throw all the money for development away if it doesn’t take off or have immediate ROI. Building the app is not rocket science but you should have resources set aside to evangelize it and user test it just like a regular website.

Otherwise, you can still sell to mobile phone users without an app through the mobile web.

Mobile Marketing

Mobile marketing is gaining traction and there’s much you can do:

  • Opt-in SMS marketing (Moosejaw)
  • Text order tracking # post-sale (Moosejaw)
  • Locative coupon push (use GPS and send coupon when they’re near the store)
  • QR codes (Ralph Lauren)
  • In-store iPhones for product info lookup (Moosejaw)

In-store iPhones are a good way to market your app if you have one.

Kiosks

Kiosks can bring all the advantages of the web right into the store: cross-sells, customer reviews, detailed product information, video content, search, inventory, checkout etc.

A perfect example of an industry that kiosks work well for is book selling. For example, Borders’ inventory is 10x the size of its biggest store. Kiosks give customers access to the “long tail” of products for home delivery or in-store pickup. Borders reports 35% of customers who pick up in store purchase additional items in store.

Canada’s biggest bookstore chain Chapters/Indigo surveyed over 5000 of its customers who use its store kiosks and found that 50% have used the the kiosks to make online purchases (plus kiosks support in-store sales). 37% visit Chapters/Indigo specifically to use the kiosks and 80% said they would visit the store again to use the kiosk. Their latest feature allows registered customers to swipe their loyalty card at the kiosk and instantly receive a set of personalized recommendations.

Kiosk popularity will drive the need for IT investment and commerce platforms for businesses that have managed to survive without online stores until now. Think gas stations, restaurants, grocery stores, service providers, etc. Eventually POS systems as we know it will be extinct. Kiosks also have their own design and usability guidelines, so we could see a new industry born — Kiosk Optimization Experts. or Gurus.

Kiosks also make it possible to set up mini stores in airports, shopping malls, grocery stores, schools, stadiums, movie theaters – pretty much anywhere. In this economy, cutting out floor space, rental overhead, employees, theft problems etc makes this attractive.

Digital Signage

Digital signage can display much of the same information ask kiosks but may have a larger screen, the ability to wave a product in front to display infomation or just replace traditional signage (can be updated globally with one click). When proximal to the product it makes more sense than going to a kiosk in the middle of a store.

Right now JC Penney is testing a “smart fixture” in the Home departments of 3 pilot stores. Hold up an item and scan it to learn about its features, colors, sizes and even washing instructions, and that information can be e-mailed. Again in the future you could use the signage to checkout.

IPTV (t-commerce)

Nearly 2.5 million North American broadband households want to purchase a connected TV, willing to pay $100 more than for non-connected TVs. 33% of broadband households want on-screen widgets and 27% want to access content stored on home computers. One study found more than 66 million consumers watch television while surfing the internet (computer, phone or other device) — so making TV interactive makes sense.

Cable companies are already shipping set-top boxes that can access the ‘Net and last October, Panasonic introduced the first true2way HDTV to the market.

true2way is another name for the Open Cable Application Platform (OCAP), a Java based software/middleware standard for developing apps and widgets for interactive TV. Advertising will become truly direct response - with a link to a local store finder, product locator and online checkout. 1800flowers actually has a fully transactional advertising widget for the internet right now, which would be easy to access through TV.

The nice thing about OCAP being an open source standard is you don’t have to worry about buying licenses or developing for different platforms/formats. Really innovative retailers can find creative ways to offer shopping widgets or perhaps explore partnerships with television programs.

Leveraging existing ecommerce services for a consistent mulitchannel experience

Your existing ecommerce platform contains a wealth of data that should ideally be leveraged across all channels. The ecommerce platform is the hub for:

• Order history and shipment tracking data
• Product catalog, including full Web-ready product descriptions, rich high-resolution images, media (videos), technical meta data (e.g. feature specs for consumer electronics) and warrantee information
• Shopping carts, saved shopping lists, wishlist and gift registries
• Customer profiles including profile data, saved shipping and billing addresses and even payment methods such as stored credit cards
• Product reviews, user submitted images, video, comments
• Web analytics including product views and best sellers
• Product relationship data for accessories, cross sells, up sells, related products and dependant products
• Purchase history and profile data for personalized recommendations and promotions

Regardless of the shopping channel, all of these data assets in your ecommerce platform need to be leveraged to ensure that:

a. Customers have a holistic / consistent shopping experience, regardless of the channel
b. You can access reports and analytics at aggregate and channel level in one place for a “single view”

SOA (Service Oriented Architecture) allows any existing or future channel to consume these services, and services are exposed via simple APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) using lightweight RESTful* web services

*REST or Representational State Transfer is an approach to software architecture that leverages existing protocols of the Web including XML (Extensible Markup Language) and HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) to pull information from a Web site

Retailers like Amazon, eBay and Best Buy are examples, they provide APIs for internal IT and 3rd party developers to build shopping widgets, mobile applications etc.

Holistic experience between website and mobile application

Example: Amazon.com retains shopping carts, saved lists and wishlists across shopping channels. The mobile application syncs with the Web account.

This is great for shoppers who research online and purchase offline. In the future, customers may be able to locate products in store via RFID chip to the exact aisle and shelf. Big box stores could introduce in-store maps to help customers find product.

Holistic view of order history

Great for both the customer and the retailer, customers can track orders regardless of channel origin. For retailers, the single view of all orders in a single system makes financial reporting, inventory control, sales reporting considerably simpler.

Holistic customer reviews

The ability to access and contribute customer reviews in any channel is valuable for customers and retailers. Reviews can be used in mobile applications and in offline print flyers, digital signage, kiosks and shelf pricing labels.

How can you prepare for the next generation of shopping channels?

Because every business is different, there’s no blanket checklist for how to prepare. We hope this webinar has got you thinking about how emerging technologies will affect your industry, company and consumers and got you excited about the possibilities. We encourage you to assess your own situation in light of the following:

Competitive analysis

Understand what your industry is doing and consider the cost of delaying investment in new channels, even in this economy. Playing catch up can be costly, as Borders demonstrated, entering ecommerce on its own (detethered from Amazon) in 2008, while its competition steadily invested in the online channel even through the dot-bomb days.

Understand your customer

What does your customer want and expect today (especially in light of what your competitors offer)? How can you support the customer experience through new channels?

For some retailers, the mobile channel is non-transactional - it’s there for inventory lookup, order tracking, customer review and product information rather than selling. That’s perfectly fine. And remember there are also non-commercial ways you can leerage applications through mobile and IPTV that can support loyalty, branding and awareness.

Organizational culture

Now more than ever IT deserves a seat at the big kid’s table and for many organizations this is going to mean a big shift in priorities, human resources and budgets. If your CIO is not your best friend, consider taking him golfing. IT is integral to making multichannel 2.0 happen.

Platform issues

Examine your existing ecommerce platform and evaluate its readiness to support new channels. We always recommend looking 5 to 10 years down the road when considering platforms, so you need to figure out if your existing architecture can handle Multichannel 2.0. You may need to invest in SOA and ditch your legacy spaghetti architecture, or begin to leverage commerce platforms that allow you to easily expose services to all channels without the need for bolt on third party products for integrated reporting and consistency across channels. Find out if your existing vendors’ roadmaps support what you are trying to do long-term.

Q&A

Is it just the user interface layer of the application that needs focus when thinking of multichannel or is there more consideration at the middle tier?

The UI is very important, creating a mobile experience that fits within the size of the mobile screen is valuable. But you definitely need to think of middle tier and back end tier as well. It’s important to make sure your existing are readily accessible through an API to be consumed by other channels. But remember these all add workload to your servers, and all of that adds traffic and demand to your infrastructure. Make sure your systems and platform have the capacity to support this, and any spikes that may occur as a result of, for example, a Superbowl ad with an interactive commerce widget through Internet TV.

Do you think Mobile commerce is a real area of growth or will it just cannibalize other channels?

No, I don’t believe the new channel create new demand unless it’s digital content specifically for the mobile device (ringtones etc.) Real advantage in growing your own business and own revenue is being where your customers prefer to shop, and if your competitors aren’t there, it’s an opportunity to capture those sales. There’s also opportunity to support higher sales in the retail channel by giving customers access to customer reviews, price comparison and rich product information in-store.

For companies using m-commerce, what percent of their revenue comes from this channel?

There’s not a lot of companies using mobile companies using the channel with the expectation of return, it’s early and very experimental right now. I don’t have access to figures but if anyone wants to share their own results in the blog comments that would be fantastic. I don’t expect it to be very high right now because of the roadblocks, but it’s something to think about and watch.

Mobile shopping - how secure is it?

We discussed the various mobile payment options and they are all fairly secure, using PIN and one time passwords or SMS. There’s always a risk someone could hack through WAP (wireless access protocol) with an unsecured network, but the bigger risk is actually on the retailer’s end where customer information is stored in a database, that it could be compromised. And that is vulnerable regardless of the channel. Really the retailer should be using SSL (secure sockets layer), there’s a small risk but it’s nowhere near where the public thinks it is.

Can we get a copy of the Forrester Report mentioned in the Webinar?

You must be a subscriber to Forrester to read the full document but you can access an excerpt here.

Next Webinar

Requirements Diligence: The Cornerstone to Ecommerce Project Success

Tuesday, June 30, 2009 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM PDT

Whether you are building your requirements for an in-house developed project or just trying to deciding what to do, requirements are the cornerstone of success. But it’s not just motherhood and apple pie. Requirements need to go beyond a wish list of needed features and capabilities.

In this one-hour webinar, ecommerce industry expert Bernardine Wu, CEO of FitForCommerce, will share key strategies and tactics to help you build the most effective, bullet-proof requirements to ensure project success.

Webinar takeaways:

• How to build a comprehensive requirements set
• How to incorporate workflow design and best practices into your requirements
• How to use benchmarking and market data to justify your requirements
• How to distinguish between a must-have vs. should-have vs. nice-to-have

Sign up today

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Convert First Time Visitors With Coupons

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Because the cost to acquire a new customer is much higher than keeping an existing customer, and for many sites new visitors make up over half of all traffic — offering incentives to new customers makes sense.

For example, Organize.com has used a pop-up coupon for first time visitors, offering $5 off if you buy something during your visit (not on your subsequent visit).

Here’s another offer for first time visitors (I used a different browser):

Whether these pop-up incentives are a turn-on or a turn-off for your customers is something you’ll have to test.

A few things to keep in mind if you explore this method of first-time-visitor personalization:

Should You Address “First Time Visitors” as Such?

Visitors that use different computers, browsers or who regularly clear cookies will show up as new visitors even if they’ve been to your site before. Same goes for visitors who visited some time ago whose cookies have expired. When these customers repeatedly see “Welcome first time visitor!” - what does that do to your brand? Does it become spammy?

And because offering discounts to first time visitors is technically price descrimination, it might put off some who think “What about us returning customers? Are we chopped liver?” You can still offer discounts without mentioning “first time visitor” as Organize.com does in the second example.

Incentives are No Substitute for A Clear Value Proposition

If you’re going to use pop-ups, why not split test an incentive vs. a clear one-sentence explanation of why the customer should buy from you and nobody else? Give the first time visitor a compelling reason to stay — especially when customers can easily find coupon codes in search engines for you or any of your competitors.

Don’t forget, it’s important that your UVP/USP (unique value proposition AKA unique selling proposition) is clear on your website for all visitors.

Deliver What You Promise

Test your coupons often to make sure the process works. The worst thing you can do is “forget” to apply or honor the coupon code at checkout. First time visitors are far less likely to ever return if they perceive they’ve been deceived.

You may also like these similar posts:

Original post by Linda Bustos

Things I’ve learned in China so far

Monday, November 10th, 2008

A

Original post by Robert Scoble

FastCompanyTV moves to China (for a visit)

Friday, October 31st, 2008

A

Original post by Robert Scoble

CEO of Healthline talks economy, politics, and privacy

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

A

Original post by Robert Scoble

“Sky isn’t falling” blogger says

Saturday, October 11th, 2008

A

Original post by Robert Scoble

Help, I’m clueless about Web Service scalability

Monday, October 6th, 2008

A

Original post by Robert Scoble

Help, I’m clueless about Web Service scalability

Monday, October 6th, 2008

A

Original post by Robert Scoble