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feelbest.com

feelbest.com

For online stores like feelbest.com using Sitebrand’s Segment&Serve Web personalization technology, creating more relevant experiences is comparable to having a virtual sales assistant. The concept behind Web personalization is very much based on what consumers have come to expect from the traditional brick and mortar shopping experience. Consider the traditional brick and mortar store where a sales person
easily observes and responds to variousshopping behaviors and body language. If someone is a repeat customer, they get to know their buying habits. If someone is a new customer, they work to build a level
of trust by offering helpful suggestions, sharing information about a hassle-free return policy, showing the layout of the store and so on. If someone is looking at high end fashion apparel, they look to cross-sell high end accessories. If someone is looking at sale items, they show them all the sale areas and so on.

Understanding visitor intent

But move online and suddenly the visual cues are gone. However, thanks to Web analytics, there are other cues the online marketer can follow. From the moment a visitor arrives, there’s intent to do something – to research, to buy, to register etc. And every move is monitored through Web analytics. The bottom line is that every move a visitor makes tells a story – from how they arrive to what they click and how long they stay on any given page. If someone arrives using the keyword “sunscreen”, they’re looking for sunscreen. If a Web site responds appropriately by showing a selection sunscreen and the visitor clicks to learn more or buy, they are that much closer to buying. They are being guided through the sales funnel. But if they bounce out of the site before converting – either pre-checkout or during check-out – something went wrong. And it likely relates to lack of guidance and direction from the Web site.

Responding to classic e-commerce challenges

Feelbest.com is Canada’s largest online health and beauty aid store and it faces many of the classic ecommerce challenges, including low conversion rates. As such, it is always looking for innovative ways to convert a higher percentage of Web traffic into buyers. The company also wants to recognize and respond to visitors’ geolocations; especially in terms of seasonality trends associated with many of its product categories, such as sunscreen. And it wants to create a superior, personal online experience that makes feelbest.com the online retailer customers turn to when they can’t find what they need in a regular store. The company actively encourages customers to tell it what they are looking for, no matter how obscure it may seem. The retailer specializes in finding and offering hard to find health care and beauty aid products. “If there’s demand – even from just five or ten customers – and the product is available somewhere in the world, we’ll go directly to the manufacturer and make it available to our customers,” says Darrin Pickard, feelbest.com’s sales and marketing manager.

The need to convert more traffic into buyers

The retailer’s approach is quaintly reminiscent of the corner-store owner who would get to know his/her customers one person at a time and stock accordingly. Although this personal approach to serving customers is like those of days gone by, the scale of the operation is surely different. Products are shipped to clients around the world with roughly 65% heading to the US. That’s also the nub of the challenge: motivating feelbest.com to explore an alternative strategy for further customizing and personalizing the Web experience of all visitors. The explicit goal was to find a solution that would convert a higher percentage of new and repeat traffic into sales. “Back in the late 1990s, it was easier to stake your claim as a top online retailer. But today, it’s much more competitive and you can never be complacent,” says Pickard.

Changing each visitor’s experience in real-time

Feelbest.com chose Sitebrand with its promise of superior traffic conversion to literally change the experience of every visitor in real-time while on a Website. What the retailer particularly appreciated
about the Sitebrand solution was the extensive support provided to help get up and running with a customized solution quickly. “Sitebrand is like a natural extension to our marketing team,” says Pickard. “It’s not a one-strategy-fits-all approach. What Sitebrand does is analyze your traffic and provide you with customized solutions based on your business goals and what your customers are looking for.” In the case of feelbest.com, the Sitebrand solution resulted in recommendations for the type, placement and frequency of marketing campaigns to target specific customers and boost sales in specific product categories. In Pickard’s words, “I think any online retailer worth their salt knows you can’t mass market on the Web and expect to achieve success. As best you can, you must try to speak to each site visitor as an individual. When you show people you are interested in getting to know them, they’ll show interest back. It is “Customer Service 101” and we’ve seen this with the personalization campaigns we’ve built with Sitebrand.”

Leveraging best industry practices to create smart content

All Sitebrand’s recommendations are based on industry best practices, backed by hundreds of successful implementations in similar industry sectors. This enabled feelbest.com to quickly develop “smart content” for specific customers and product categories. With the Sitebrand solution, specific areas of a Web page are allocated for the strategic placement of ads or campaign messages. Campaigns are developed around various criteria, including geo location, keyword searches, seasonal promotions, product categories, and many others.

Salvaging underperforming segments and sales

Campaigns result in a highly customized and personalized Web experience for all visitors from the moment they land on the Web site. In doing so, online retailers like feelbest.com report immediate and measurable increases in sales lift, superior click through, and higher conversion of existing traffic. “We see an immediate increase in the number of existing visitors converting in the checkout process,” says Pickard. “Seeing success around existing customers in currently established product categories makes us want to leverage Sitebrand to build campaigns around new, underperforming product categories. These new product awareness campaigns will be designed for existing and new customers,” he adds. In this way, feelbest.com will be able to test different offers with respect to new product categories. This ability to raise the profile of lower performing product categories will be designed to help increase average cart spends and total sales.

Close up of 1st-time visitor promo

Close-up of first-time visitor promo

Recognizing a first time visitor has its rewardsTapping into underperforming segments, like first time visitors, has also proved highly successful. The first time visitor needs a different experience than the repeat visitor. They want a feeling of trust. They want to feel reassured they’re on a credible site.

When this first time visitor segment is served personalized messaging that reinforces credibility and trust versus the control group segment that receives no reinforcement, the personalized messaging always sees higher revenue per impression.

In the case of feelbest.com, the revenue per impression lift for personalized first time visitor campaigns is 207% higher than the default control group campaigns with no personalization.

Increased ROI from the feelbest.com e-newsletter

Sitebrand also provided feelbest.com with specific recommendations for print ads and its e-newsletter to create a more holistic and integrated marketing program. The company sends monthly emails to roughly 25,000 opt-in subscribers to promote the e-newsletter. Sales generated from the newsletter had begun to drop. Once the Sitebrand solution was integrated with the email program, feelbest.com saw an increase of 34% in the number of orders received within five days of the newsletter being broadcast. “Whenever we send emails, there’s an instant spike in Website traffic,” says Pickard. “It’s going to get even more interesting when we start adding more automation into the mix.” For an online health and beauty aid store, it will be a highly beneficial to trigger purchase reminder emails, i.e. “Your 90-day supply of vitamins is almost gone. Don’t be disappointed. Buy more now…”

The power of personalization for unique market segments

“The way I see it, not having a personalized approach to online marketing is like calling every one of your customers ‘Bill’. Worse yet, it’s like expecting them all to take advantage of a deal on mint toothpaste. But in reality, your customer’s name might be ‘Susan’ and she wears dentures…” says Pickard. “Website personalization allows you to find these unique market segments so you can serve up relevant offers that will convert visitors to buyers.”

NOTE: This post is also a featured article I contributed to the October 2008 issue of ”Direct Marketing” – a Canadian publication about interactive marketing and sales. Since it’s print-only (odd for an interactive pub, and apparently a website is in the works…but hey!) All that said, I felt compelled to share it online. I hope you enjoyed the read and I welcome your comments!

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When we met with some folks from Silverpop for lunch at the DMA08 show in Vegas last week, we were really excited to hear about their developments with email marketing going social.

It’s what Silverpop is calling “Share-to-Social” – and it’s email’s first integrated and measurable social networking solution of its kind.

When users choose to share a message with friends in their social network, Silverpop’s systems are able to report on how many of their friends opened and clicked on the links in the message. This also means that marketers can get the same kind of 360 degree view of social networks as they do with email today.

It’s very much an updated forward-to-a-friend type of viral marketing because now instead of keeping the messages exclusive to the email channel, people are able to share their messages via popular social channels like Facebook and MySpace. It’s a great way of bringing all the channels closer together. And since this is today’s reality, it’s brilliant.

Since Sitebrand partners with Silverpop, this is exciting news for us and all our customers. For our many customers, especially retailers looking to sell more, this will be a great way to extend their marketing reach into the very populated social channels. But now more than ever, this also means the pressure is on to create really enticing offers that subscribers and customers want to share across their social network! Do this well, and you’ll find unparalleled reach.

Looking for how to maximize your email’s social potential? Sitebrand has a team of email experts who would be thrilled to brainstorm with you!

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I recently had the pleasure of contributing to Constant Contact’s Hints&Tips e-Newsletter. I was specifically tasked with sharing five B2C holiday email tips and five B2B holiday email tips. Under the headline “Holiday Email Tips — Go Beyond Simply Sending More“, I listed some original ideas you might be able to use yourself (regardless of what ESP you’re using)…overall theme – segment and send smartly!

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As holiday selling strategies are in full swing, conversations around e-coupons surface. Coupons – whether they are online (via email or a website) or traditional (like those in the Sunday paper which are also referred to as free-standing inserts or FSIs) – are a great sales incentive, margins permitting of course. In reviewing MarketingSherpa’s 2008 Email Marketing Benchmark Guide, I came across some interesting numbers in terms of average redemption rates. I suppose it shouldn’t come as any huge surprise that traditional coupons account for 84% of all coupons used by US shoppers. But the average redemption rate is just 1.2%. I know for a fact that I’ll occasionally put these types of coupons in my purse…only to have them sit past the date of expiry because I forget to use them. You see there’s a gap of time between the time you get the coupon and the time it takes to get to the store to purchase.

On the flip side, you’ve got online coupons that have reported average redemption rates of 5-20%. And I think the rationale is simple. When we’re online – either on a website or reading email – we’re just a few clicks away from making a potential purchase. There’s no major gap in time like the previous scenario with traditional coupons. Therefore the e-coupon sets the shopper up for immediate savings and gratification.

According to Sherpa, most agree that online coupons have a higher redemption rate than traditional coupons because online coupons are directly sought out by consumers and not received passively in the Sunday paper.

But for e-commerce marketers who take targeting and personalization seriously, these online consumers don’t have to be sourcing online coupons on their own. They can also be served or presented with very specificly targeted online coupons. Why wait for them to find your incentive when you can serve it to them on a silver platter?

At Sitebrand, we have several clients using our personalization platform to recognize and respond to various shopping segments. For the segment that might be searching for bargains, an online coupon / 10% discount type campaign makes a ton of sense. But other segments that might be looking for things like “what’s new”, perhaps you don’t want or need to offer an online coupon. Instead it probably makes more sense to present a campaign that features “See our new fall line-up…” or “Check out these top-rated products”. You get my point. Just because you can offer an e-coupon with special savings doesn’t mean you should. Understanding your buyers. This is what it all comes back to. Using web personalization technology to help you create the online dialog. This is a competitive advantage.

To see some innovative uses of web personalization – discount coupons included – check out the full line-up of Sitebrand case studies

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We all know that with summer comes lots of holiday times and schedule juggling…

But as marketers, we can’t stop marketing! So thought leadership and lead generation remain a top priority 12 months a year. So here’s a tip I’ll share with you and it’s something I wish I had thought of earlier.

It’s with respect to our beloved webinars. All too often, I hear people tell me that they didn’t register for a webinar because they were going to be away on holidays or they had a conflicting meeting or this or that. But here’s the thing. Juggling schedules and conflicts is not an issue when you use webinar technology like GoToWebinar or WebEx. You see these guys make it easy to archive the webinars once the live recording is done. Then they make it even nicer because they allow you to set up a trigger email notifying all registrants – even the no-shows - that they can now view the webinar online at their convenience. Of course a link is provided and all is good. The prospect or customer can view the webinar when they want. The marketer boosts registrations and lead generation.

So here’s my tip – let people know about this option to view later! I’ll even share the copy I included right below the date and time of our upcoming webinar in a reminder email that went out today. It reads:

“Got a scheduling conflict? Register anyhow so you are notified when the webinar is archived for on-demand viewing at your convenience…”

Such a simple message, but doesn’t it make so much sense! In all fairness, it’s too early to tell whether this will get more people registered for our August 21 webinar, but time will tell. All I know is it certainly wont’ hurt the numbers!

Speaking of which, have you registered for our webinar yet? Don’t let a scheduling conflict stop you! It’s going to be a fun one – Web Personalization | What it’s NOT and why you should care. Register today…

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Laptop with Canadian FlagJust a real quick post to let you know that further to last Friday’s post referencing part 1 of Marketing to Canadians (a Special Report from MarketingSherpa), we’ve now got a link for you to view part 2 of the report …which is is equally informative. Part 2 includes creative samples of Canadian-specific online banner ads that Kiyonna (a Sitebrand client) has used to geotarget Canadian visitors…

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It’s called Rue La La and it’s creating a shopping revolution that has to be one of the most brilliant online retail ideas I’ve seen in a while! It’s got designer brands, exclusivity, urgency, community and incentive…and that’s just the beginning. Here’s the gist of Rue La La…

First of all, you have to be a member. And to be a member, it’s invitation only via email so you have to be connected to someone hip and in the know. In my case, that would be fellow Sitebrander Dan Auns = thanks Dan! In your case, it’s now me, lol – I’m serious, if you’re interested I can send you an invite. It’s totally worth the discovery. Hmm, can you see the huge viral potential here too!?! Especially since when you send an invite to someone, Rue La La will give you a $10 shopping credit when any of your invitees make their first purchase. So bottom line – no membership, no access.

But once you’re a member (which is free), Rue La La is a destination that’s always changing. Any time you visit, you’ll have different and exciting offerings. No more of that same old, same old. And they love feedback because they want to be responsive to what members want most.

Now for the really cool part. Each private sale boutique is only open for 2-3 days!! Talk about creating a sense of urgency! When they say don’t delay, they mean it! And when you check out the featured boutique, there’s a days, hours and minute countdown ticking away. Now of course, they’re not foolish. In addition to seeing “Today’s Boutique”, you’re also teased with a mini list of the “Next Boutiques”. In this listing, you’ll see the upcoming days and hours of operation.

I love it because this concept is totally maximizing so many of the things you need to do to be successful online. On top of it all, the entire concept is awesomely framed around building that sense of community through social marketing.  With this post alone, I’m clearly feeding right into it!

Who are the brains behind Rue La La you ask? I wish it was me but it’s actually part of an exciting new division of Retail Convergence, Inc., featuring ”a portfolio of e-commerce companies leveraging a common technology platform, customer database, and management team to revolutionize online shopping”. In addition to owning the Rue La La brand, Retail Convervence also owns SmartBargains.com which just happens to be #100 on the IR500 list.

They are a self-proclaimed group of people who love shopping. They’ve built the connections required to negotiate private sale prices on some of the most sought after brands in fashion and home. And they have the exacting standards required to present only the best-edited collections. I should mention that Rue La La is not about trashy stuff that’s going to rip, tear and break. I’m talking about high-end designer brands that just happen to be selling at fabulous prices. Right now they are featuring Joseph Abboud. But only till 11 am EST. As of 11 am today and for only 2 days, they’re opening a boutique for vineyard vines.  Then 2 days later it’s PUMA, and so on…

So there you have it! If you want to get a taste of the ooh la la shopping experience at Rue La La, let me know and I’ll send you an invite. Just send an email to cgardner(at)sitebrand(dot)com 

Happy Shopping!

 

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Checking email?!?Just finished a fun webinar with Loren McDonald from Silverpop – watch for it on our archive tomorrow! There was a lot of interest and buzz around mobile devices; specifically the reality of how HTML emails or even multi-part emails are rendering in the mobile environment. We had a ton of great questions and a very engaged group of attendees. If you were one of them, thanks!

For more thoughts and opinions on email, I encourage you to listen to the smart strategies of sitebrand customer ProAthlete (aka justbats.com). And you can do this via a podcast that was recorded live from the floor of the recent Internet Retailer conference in Chicago. This podcast speaks well to the opportunities around triggering capabilities and automation…

PSST – This new “Getting Personal with Sitebrand” podcast series is a natural extension to our webinar series. If you have a topic idea for one of our upcoming podcasts or webinars, I’d love to hear from you!

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What ~ Email Marketing: That was then. This is now.
When ~ This Thursday, June 26, 2008
Time ~ 2:00 PM – 2:29 PM EDT

REGISTER NOW…

You might think you’ve got your emails figured out, but judging by what I keep seeing in my inbox, I think there’s lots of learning to be done…and this Thursday’s webinar with Sitebrand and Silverpop is a good place to start. It’s free. It’s 29 minutes. And most of all, it will help you optimize your email marketing efforts (translation: happy, clicking subscribers = loyal, converting customers).

To all of you who are “blasting” your emails on a regular basis, good for you. But when I hear you calling it a “blast”, I cringe. What kind of quality control goes into a “blast”? And if you’re sending another “e-newsletter”…is it really an e-newsletter? Should it really be an e-flyer or an e-update? Do people really want more looooonnnnngggggg e-newsletters anyway?  

And how about your subscriber preference centers? Do you even have such a place? Or do you just assume that everyone who buys from you wants weekly emails forever after? Do your subscribers have any say in what you send them? It’s 2008…they should.  

Email marketing and the rules of engagement have changed. In addition to insight from two industry pros, there will also be time for some Q&A right after the webinar. So register today and have some burning questions ready for us!

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Since our June 26 webinar is an advanced session on email marketing with Loren McDonald from Silverpop co-presenting, I thought I would take a minute to share an awesome ”before and after” email case study featuring Sitebrand client, Legendary Whitetails. The study isn’t hot of the press; in fact it was picked up by MarketingSherpa back in March.  But you know what, the findings are highly relevant and there’s still a lot of learnings to be learned! According to the Email Experience Council’s recently published “Retail Email Rendering Benchmark Study”, a shocking 53% of marketing execs say they are NOT factoring the realities of “images off” into their email designs. Call me crazy, but there’s a lot of money being left on the table! Let me explain why…

Very simply, this case study zeroes in on the impact of an email design’s ratio of HTML to text…especially as it relates to deliverability and response rates…which of course lead to revenue.

For this study, we did an A/B split test: the retailer’s image-based campaign vs. a nearly identical ‘email-optimized’ version which factors in best practices for preview pane/image blocking software.

KISS (Keep it simple, silly!) was the driving factor behind the creative strategy for this campaign. The message was simple and compelling “Free shipping for a limited time”; therefore the creative was simple and straightforward, using common look and feel elements from the web and previous campaigns. The only difference between the two versions was that text from the optimized version was coded in HTML (not images) in order to render properly even when images were disabled. In the screenshots below, you can see how both versions appear with images on…and then off…

Before and After...

While the concept, message and creative may be summed up as ’simple’, the results are nothing short of amazing. To get meaningful, accurate results, the database was randomly split into two with each containing almost 33,000 recipients.  

The optimized version received higher results across the board. Deliverability went up from 78% to 98%, opens climbed from just under 10% to over 13%, clicks went up from 3% to nearly 5%. While, aside from deliverability, the improvement may not seem too dramatic, the most important metric, conversions, were unbelievable. The ‘before email’ brought in 139 purchases at a 0.4% conversion rate. The ‘after’ version brought in a whopping 495 purchases, or 1.5% conversion rate.  This represented a revenue lift in excess of 379%.

With results like these, Legendary Whitetails could clearly see the lifts associated with optimizing emails for the inbox. And the “after” is the “always” when it comes to their email designs.

While this campaign may not be glamorous, complex or even have any bells and whistles, it does have the power of best practices and respect for the email medium backing it up. The numbers don’t lie and they show a compelling argument for what email expertise can do for a retailer’s bottom line. Unfortunately, as exposed by the EEC, many retailers are ‘behind the times’ in this area.

That said, I believe this case study and its results are another ”wake-up call” to those who’ve been ignoring or skeptical of industry expertise.

In closing, I have two questions and I encourage you to comment with your thoughts:

1. As a recipient of retail emails, are you seeing a trend towards emails that render well even with with images off or are you still receiving lots of image-heavy, direct mail style emails?
2. If your email client defaults to images off, how often do you turn images on? Never? Sometimes? Often?

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