Posts Tagged ‘flash’

Mobile Rules of the Road for E-Retailers

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

dk-photo1Mobile devices like the iPhone and G1 are letting consumers take advantage of the growing number of high-speed networks, an opportunity that e-commerce retailers are recognizing as users are increasingly using websites for shopping from mobile devices. Some people are even using their mobile devices as their primary online browser.

Any retailer looking to the growing mobile audience for new revenue should deliver shopping sites that are mobile friendly. This means paring back content – or re-organizing it – so that users can access relevant items more easily.

While wireless devices have come a long way, their screen size limits what can be displayed and still be read by the average user. Features such as panning and zooming can only compensate so much for the smaller real estate available on handhelds.

Most websites are still using cascading stylesheets (CSS) optimized for personal computers. Designing and embedding CSS specifically for mobile users will help ensure that the user experience on handheld devices is high quality. The CSS Mobile Profile 2.0 developed by the W3C (the standard-setting World Wide Web Consortium) is now available, giving retailers a widely supported standard to follow.

Other common shopping features, such as large tables of product images and Flash animation, also need to be rethought. Just a decade ago, many websites were built successfully without these features. As screen resolutions and bandwidth grew, these were added to create richer online experiences. Handheld devices may not support all of these technologies, so the emphasis should be placed on simplicity, clarity and speed. And make sure that commonly accessed features, such as viewing the shopping cart are readily reachable.

While the technical aspects of mobile are important to consider, retailers must also focus on marketing fundamentals, such as understanding the needs of this changing audience. Research and analysis on what users want and how they want to interact with your site are critical. One quick tip: use the mobile device itself to gather research information, rather than relying solely on traditional research channels.

Retailers that can use messaging, web content, e-mail, and social networking in an integrated fashion, centered on the handheld device, let users engage with their brands. A basic practice: rather than just asking for e-mail addresses on your sites, permit users to give you addresses for text messages as well, and let them know about special mobile content.

One last piece of advice: do not let mobile marketing become a new outlet for spam. Mobile devices give unprecedented access to retail customers; respecting your customers’ time will lead to longer, two-way relationships.

David King is CEO of Fulcrum, a leader in advanced analytics, technology and multichannel program solutions for marketing.

Retailers: Turn Passive Website Visitors Into Active Customers!

Monday, December 15th, 2008

jeff-haggin-photo.jpg Marketing the experience of ownership is critical in making the sale, whether it’s products in a store, catalog or website. With plenty of evidence to show that desire, more than product features, drives consumers, we need to further explore the creative opportunities to capture website visitors’ imagination in ways that will increase sales.

Every e-commerce website looks to engage and sell, but we need to look beyond such traditional formulas such as session length, page views and conversion rates to keep the customer experience fresh and profitable.

Get a Conversation Going
Use blogs to regularly update tips, trends and special offers conversationally—while cross-selling your product. It’s OK if your people write it; people will come back if they are entertained and informed. The Wal-Mart company blog is a great example.

Vox Populi
This Latin term for “voice of the people” has taken on a new life as user-generated content (UGC) at the heart of Web 2.0. If customers rate and review products on your website, tell your visitors about it. They can find out which products have the best reviews, and give feedback on prior purchases, as Amazon.com has so successfully shown.

PURLs of Wisdom
Personalized URLs (PURLs), web pages filled with merchandise based on the individual’s past purchase behavior, are proven to engage customers at a higher rate. eBay has created millions of unique PURLs that give up-to-the-minute deals on relevant products.

Sales in a Flash

Flash and other rich media can create a website to marvel at, like the Dutch department store Hema, which took a seemingly simple page of everyday products and created a fanciful display of flash genius that has been shared worldwide.

Learn Their Tastes
Marketers can dive into e-commerce with a wealth of customer data never before imagined. As sites like Netflix and the iTunes music store have shown, creating an intelligent, responsible recommendation system can create fantastic end results.

Add Sales Dimensions

More than just a basic selling proposition, customers want to visualize how the product will benefit their lives. Try a 360Ëš photo tour, video of your product in use, a full-screen view or colorization options.

…Worth a Thousand Words

Are you selling swimwear or a day at the beach with friends? You can take your visitors to an aspirational setting, where interactive environments can show valuable content and products. At the AT&T Blue Room microsite, visitors check out exclusives on music, sports, movies and more while surrounded by AT&T ads for DSL broadband and other related services.

eCatalog
eCatalogs are a hybrid vehicle that mix the page-flipping catalog experience with the click-and-buy e-commerce experience. Customers find the end result to be familiar, easy and fun, and multimedia can enhance the customer’s product consideration experience even further.

Effective as these methods are, you’ll need to tap their power with strong copy. Pictures invite. Words sell. Check out the Oh-la-la pants from the J. Peterman website—a terrific example of hard working copy powered by story.

Jeff Haggin is CEO and president of Haggin Marketing.