Monthly Archive for June, 2008

Restaurants that Can’t Spread Peanut Butter and “No One” Flying JetBlue

In a moment of convenience induced shame, I drove through Tim Horton’s this morning instead of drinking my own.  Truth is, I wanted a bagel with Peanut Butter.  Motoring away, I opened my bagel to find it un-peanut-buttered.  Instead, there was a little tub of peanut butter in the bag. I drove back through and asked for a bit more attention.   I was told that the “can’t spread peanut butter because of allergy concerns.”

So we’ve finally reached the level of restaurants being afraid to make peanut butter sandwiches.

While this is a good lesson in how our lawsuit-a-feared culture has gone overboard, it’s also a convenient lesson in how to match user behavior with product delivery. I don’t know about you, but I’m no good at spreading peanut butter while driving, so why would I want it from a drivethrough?

Understanding common customer behaviors and expectations are key.  I would not commonly spread peanut butter while driving, and I expect a restaurant to be able to spread peanut butter for me!  (I know, I’m demanding, ain’t I)

Which brings us to a nice little post over at Functioning Form where they talk about a mismatch between common consumer behaviors and site design.  It details a poorly designed form on JetBlue.com which I have noticed often but never blogged about.

Enjoy.

In-Store Lessons for an Online World

I really enjoy analogies between online and offline shopping, since I think they simplify the (actually simple) role of technology in the process.  It’s shopping!

I was, therefore, delighted by this excellent post from E-Consultancy, highlighting how merchandising and catalog-assortment decisions typically made by a grocer can have a thoughtful influence on even the least-grocer-like online retailer.

What in-store retailing can teach us about how to sell better online.

We were talked through this supermarket’s key categories: “Destination”, “Traffic”, “Routine Volume”, “Routine Assortment”, “Impulse”.

Have you ever really thought about the real value in selling milk if you’re a supermarket? Is this a destination, traffic or routine volume category? How many categories, or sub-categories do you need for wine to provide the optimal customer decision tree?

For every category there is a very clearly defined purpose and role, very clear guidelines for store managers on the in-store promotional strategy, tactics, placement and pricing for each category.

And this is all before even thinking about shelf and space planning etc.

Web editors: 5 reasons to love standfirsts

Copy can be a very powerful tool on your site, and I like it when people point out the simple stuff: Five reasons to love standfirsts (via E-consultancy.com)

Coat-tails and Situational Awareness

Let’s imagine for a moment that you were a partner (or, rather, a coat-tail rider) for one of the most anticipated product launches of the year. The whole Internet is talking about the product — so much so that online services like Twitter are going into red-alert just to handle the mobs of people talking about the product.

Yes, I’m talking to you, AT&T. For the multitudes of iPhone prospects now visiting your site, they are seeing the following:

ATT Wireless Homepage, the day after the iPhone Launch.  (I have put a red box around the iPhone portion)

I’ve added a red box to show the EXCELLENT placement of the iPhone advertisement. Unfortunately, clicking on this item sends me to the following page:

After clicking on the iPhone on the home page, this is what you see.

(Perhaps they didn’t know the product was launching?)

This wasn’t a case study… I was trying to find out more about the phone! I’m ready to order, pre-order, or simply gawk. I’d have provided my email address. I’d have sent the page to friends. I’ve have blogged about it (in a good way). Even though I can’t buy this product for a month, I could make my purchase decision today, or I could simply become a valuable lead for AT&T to use on July 11th.

Lost financial opportunity for sure, but this also leaves with a decidedly negative impression of AT&T which will become a permanent part of how I view the brand.

Your website is the first place most customers will turn for the latest information and news. Make sure you maintain situational awareness of the role your brand plays in the current web/etail landscape. It means dollars in the door — and a stronger brand.

The Four S’s of Social Media

Pretty much all of us have “googled” at this point.  But increasingly, some of us are “tweeting,” some “facebooking,” others are “stumbling” and “tumbling,” and many many many of us “flickr.” When Time Magazine named “You” their person of the year in 2006, they were talking mostly about how you’re using these new types of online tools—all captured under the moniker “Web 2.0.”  And they were right: these websites make you the most powerful force in communications ever.  You have become the most knowledgeable, the most connected, the most published, and the most discussed.  Nicely done.

Facebook, Flickr, and MySpace are cool, but these hotshot websites are just the latest embodiments of concepts originated in weblogs.  Weblogs—“blogs” for short—amount to personal websites where “regular people” (read: non-technical types) share information about themselves and spark discussion.  Cynics charge that bloggers suffer from needy exhibitionism, but ultimately the whole of the Internet has always been—and continues to be—driven by the subtle truisms that people love to share, love to talk, and tend to trust each other. Blogs merely brought these truisms into finer focus.

Be it egocentricity or human nature, the drive to blog created a far more important side effect for marketers: blogs gave a permanent online home to personal opinion, and they made those opinions easy to Save, Send, Share, and Syndicate. These “four S’s of social networking” reveal the true power of Web 2.0; they connect informal knowledge with trust, in the form of personal relationships.

This connection holds vast implications for marketers.  Brands were invented as stand-ins for real people—to endow mass-produced products with the same assurances and personality that a local maker or shopkeeper had traditionally provided.  For the last hundred years, marketers built brands by publishing brand-centric messages, in the channels and formats they chose, in a way un-personalized to end customers.  Brands literally controlled the airwaves, and “you” were forced to tune in on the right channel, at the right time.  This was broadcast marketing, and it worked well: national brands like Coca-Cola, Ivory, and McDonald’s became far more trusted than their local or boutique counterparts.

But now, ever since “you” took control, you decide the where and when.  And you demand that communications be personal—if they are not, you can now simply tune them out.  Tivo past the commercial break.  Tune in to XM.  Read the newspaper via RSS.  Though brands were created to build trust, consumers now trust each other more than they trust brands, or experts, or newspapers, and certainly more than they trust advertisements.  Web 2.0 has enabled customers—both advocates and detractors—to endlessly opine on brands and products.

The result is that Web 2.0 turns traditional branding inside out. Social networking sites like Facebook are popular because they help to uncover hidden relationships between people—expanding each person’s network of opinions that can be trusted.  To marketers, these networks are a bounty of information about consumer preferences, but they also represent an as-yet-untapped marketing communications network.  Now “you” can share information fast and easy.  Now you’re able to uncover expertise within your social network, effortlessly.  And like never before, you can know about a product’s flaws and faults, in detail, from a trusted source—before you even think about buying.

Instead of creating stand-ins—broadcast brands—to provide products with “person–ality,” marketers should engineer their brands to engage the public directly and participate in the social networks and relationships that characterize Web 2.0.  Marketers can know who’s evangelizing a product—and who’s complaining.  And they can respond.  Instead of placing ads on broadcast networks—radio, TV, print—use the network of existing customers to directly engage their like-minded friends.  After all, a friend’s referral is a more trusted channel than NBC or PBS.  This is narrowcast marketing.

Because of this dramatic shift in the communications landscape, national brands have never been more vulnerable to insurrection.  For the small business, this spells opportunity.  Brands were invented to help large companies compete with local businesses, but if the brand no longer functions efficiently for that purpose, then small businesses have a chance to level the playing field.  Consumers desire a personal relationship; who’s better positioned to offer that relationship, a large company or a small one?  Take advantage.