I’m on month three here at Sitebrand, and man, how time flies when you’re having fun. I find one of the most interesting things to take in, is the company pitch and core values when you’re new. Rarely can you experience this in such an unbiased fashion after you’ve spent time with a firm. So I wasn’t surprised to hear the buzz around web site personalization. Coming from the audience measurement space, I was no stranger to the idea, but was anxious to hear what Sitebrand had to say about it. Let me illustrate with a bricks and mortar example.
This past weekend, I was walking through our local big box hardware store; I needed furnace filters, excitement at its best. I rounded the corner of the furnace aisle and was greeted by a salesman. He very quickly realized my intention and prompted me with ‘What size filters are you looking for?”. Nothing remarkable about that you say. But ask yourself, how does that compare to the online experience? The fact that I entered the store obviously meant I was a visitor and the fact that I walked down the furnace aisle meant I could be segmented. But it was the combination of those facts along with a relevant message that made the experience truly personal, and that’s where I’m going.
Personalization isn’t just about segmenting users, and it isn’t about delivering a unique message to a visitor because you can. It’s about optimizing the conversation you’re having with your visitor. It’s about having a dialogue rather than a monologue. The ability to segment web traffic is no different in the online world than the ability to stand in the furnace aisle and whistle Dixie. The key is combining a set of likely visitor expectations with the information you have, to deliver you guessed it: the right message to the right visitor, at the right time. I wasn’t asked whether it was my first visit to the store, nor was I directed to the humidifiers section.
So what’s the takeaway here? It’s simple, don’t get lost in the technology, or with the variety of methods and techniques to get in front of users. Sure, we now have the ability to stand in that online furnace aisle, and that’s a great thing for Marketers, but that’s not the end of the story. Success always comes down to relevant messaging, segmentation just places you in the aisle.
After I had the right furnace filter in my hand, the salesman kindly asked if he could help with anything else, “no” is what I said, so he pointed me in the direction of the checkout counter.
