Wow. Tamar Weinberg at Techipedia has roundup of 250 marketing links for 2007. It’s an excellent list and not to be missed. Bookmark this: Best Internet Marketing Blog Posts of 2007.
Enjoy!
etail strategy beyond the cart
Wow. Tamar Weinberg at Techipedia has roundup of 250 marketing links for 2007. It’s an excellent list and not to be missed. Bookmark this: Best Internet Marketing Blog Posts of 2007.
Enjoy!
The good news: The folks at TryPhone have done quite a good job at bringing the brand experience online for cellphone companies.
The bad news: since cellphone user interface design is incredibly bad (with the exception of iPhone), this type of online demonstration hurts many of the brands it demonstrates. (I’m not saying that’s their intent, nor am I saying it’s a bad thing.)
Notice how all the cellphone advertisements you see fail to show you even a single screen of the user interface for the device? (Microsoft, with outstanding chutzpah, chooses to create stylised — and totally fictional — visual interface designs for it’s Windows Mobile ads.)
Compare that with iPhone ads, which feature nothing but user experience.
Get it?
We all hate signing up for site registrations — tired of creating (and remembering) passwords, dealing with retailers’ idiosyncrasies for profile information, security, etc. Until a reasonable identity aggregation service comes along (sadly, Passport and OpenID didn’t work, but Paypal and Google Checkout just might make the cut!) users are doomed to maintain separate profiles in a million different etail sites.
Well, Linda Bustos at GetElastic has gone through that trouble on her own, creating new registrations a 100 top etailers, and commenting about the contents of their “Welcome to Our Site” emails. Below is the summary of the 20 items she observed as top features, but you’ll want to read the full post here, which is Excellent.
- Branding in Headline: 88%
- Used the Word “Welcome” in Headline or Body: 61%
- Used the Words “Thank You” in Headline or Body: 66%
- Included Multiple Links Back to E-Store: 52%
- Included Login Details: 52%
- Used HTML Layout: 42%
- Provided Customer Service Contact Information: 42%
- Reminder of Membership Benefits: 39%
- Personalized With My Name: 33%
- Provided Link to Privacy Statement: 33%
- Used Self-Promotional Language: 24%
- Asked for Subscription to Newsletter or Special Offers: 21%
- Linked Back to Homepage (As Only Link) : 21%
- Offered Incentives: 15%
- Asked for Sale / Merchandising: 15%
- Asked to Save to Address Book: 12%
- Provided Unsubscribe Option: 9%
- Personalized Signature: 9%
- Explain How To Use the Site: 6%
- Double Opt-In (Account Confirmation Link): 3%
[techtags: email_marketing, email_design, etail, ecommerce]
The etail site I talk about the most is Woot.com. They best embody the concept that Auragen calls “Brand Membership,” and they have in a single year amassed 500,000 registered users, despite their small size.
Woot’s online catalog contains only a single item each day, and they do not tell users how much stock is on hand. This strange sales concept is a powerful conceit which enables Woot’s domination as a web marketer, allowing Woot to achieve the “holy grail” of Internet retail marketing: daily visits by users eager to buy. How do they do it? They leverage the promise and purpose of the Internet in a way which demonstrates a deep and abiding understanding for how the Web works.
Woot’s copywriting is reason enough to visit the site. Funny and irreverant, it epitomizes Internet culture through self deprecation, dry wit, and tell-em-like-it-is bravado. They often qualify their products as “mediocre” “ridiculous” or “unecessary” even while asking the user to buy. Add to this the daily “Wootcast” an original song (yes, a song) recorded about each day’s product. In addition, Woot uses other techniques to get people to return to the site each day:
Scheduled Features:
Real and Implied Contests:
“Blockbuster” Events
The ultimate measure of consumer Brand Membership is how quickly an oversight or mistake will be forgotten. In Woot’s case, their site regularly crashes at midnight as the new item is offered. But customers quickly forgive: if the site is overwhelmed, it must be a great Woot tonight!
In Woot’s case, Brand Membership has translated into rocketing sales, strong loyalty, and a network of word-of-mouth referrals which can’t be beat. Perhaps you’d be interested in the same results for your etail site?
[techtags: woot, bag_of_crap, brand_membership, etail_design, ecommerce_design, brand_experience]
See this report from e-consultancy.