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Death of a Marketer

Posted by Kevin Butler February 19, 2009

The depression of the early 2000’s seemed to change the promises the internet had made to its users.  The stock market crash ended a particular version of history … that vision being … wait for it … internet marketing.

Okay, you got me.  I may of snagged that line from Christopher Bigsby and Arthur Miller’s legendary Death of a Salesman, but it got you reading, right?  So my job as a marketer is done, right?  Wrong.  How do I know you’ll finish this sentence, paragraph or blog?  I don’t.   I’m hoping I’ve done all I can to entice you to carry on.

Wow.  Why would my job be done once you get to my site?  That doesn’t guarantee me a conversion win, and it certainly doesn’t guarantee a good experience either.

Right now, this blog is being read all across the world, from sunny California, over to rainy England and back to chilly Ottawa – home of legendary personalization firm, Sitebrand.  Whether you found this article from Google, Twitter or have it bookmarked (very cool, thank you), I have no unique messaging to you and I’m wearing out the ‘wait and hope’ strategy – a term I’m going to coin ‘Death of a Marketer’.

Suppose the whole goal of my site was to drive visitors to by my super-rad blog, which isn’t on my main page.  How would I accomplish this?  From a Death from a Marketer perspective, I’d sit and hope/wait for you to get there.

Death of a Marketer is an excuse for not being innovate

Death of a Marketer is an excuse for not being innovative!

Or I could do something really awesome and totally marketing-friendly.

First off, what’s unique about my traffic?   A/B testing messages that suit specific demographics is a good start.  And having that targeted content dynamically changing for those demographics dependent on behaviors and click-paths.  Now I can get into assessing the characteristics of my top segments.

If I’ve identified  two or three distinct places my traffic goes to, beyond the main page, I could divide each group into sub-groups and create tailored messaging strategies specific to each group.

Now that’s a cool start!  And that’s pretty personalized too.  We’re just getting started.  Imagine the visitor has converted in the past – I can do something different in that case.  Or what if that visitor is guilty of shopping cart abandonment?  Yeah.  I can do something there too.  I’ll stop here, before I get too ShamWow on you.  Still with me, camera guy?

The point is, let’s not let the illusion of everything eventually working out get in the way.  Death of a Marketer is very much reality versus illusion.  Controlling reality with dynamic messaging sounds pretty good, especially when one considers the alternatives.  Errr, I mean static messaging … or status quo.

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In the B2B side of internet marketing, web content management system (Web CMS) technologies have clearly advanced the management and maintenance of websites.  It has allowed a new generation of marketers and web designers to build SEO friendly web pages and improve management and control of their web sites that has had some credible productivity gains and ROI. As a subscriber to the “crossing the chasm” philosophy, compared to other emerging technologies like marketing automation or video spokesperson, Web CMS has hit main street, see below

Web CMS search trend compared to other B2B web technologies

Web CMS search trend compared to other B2B web technologies

Further, according to Forrester,  88% of online business have adopted some form of Web CMS that range from enterprise class products such as Content Server,  RhythmyxTeamSite, or open source options such as  Joomla! (formerly Mambo), drupal, or TYPO3 to solve usability and technical hurdles.

 

So where is the next step? What is going to give vendors an edge over the competition?

 

Over at CMS Watch, their speculation seems to be more of the same, maybe a little Web 2.0 thrown in to keep the masses happy but no great leaps forward.

I will argue that personalization, in both anonymous (segmented) and one to one forms, should be the next evolution of content management. For both types, content would be selected from a specific group or tagged repository and dynamically served the to visitor either by segmentation rules for anonymous types or user profile preferences for the other.

But personalization only works if the right message is delivered at the right time to the right person (or segment).  In order to accomplish this, the outcome must be measured and the message’s success or failure – be it text, picture, document, flash etc. – to persuade the visitor to the goal associated to the message.

Google AdWords optimized ad rotation

Google AdWords optimized ad rotation

So each message should carry a score, much like a lead score in marketing automation. Success-based systems would only give credit or increase the content score if the desired outcome is performed.  There are limited examples of this in place today: Google AdWords has a option to selectively show better performing ads based upon their click through rate.

By unburdening message rotation and outcome-based selection, marketers can focus on what they do best: create relevant and engaging messaging to entice their web visitors into the desired actions.  But success-based content management need not stop there, the final piece in the puzzle would be to integrate into partners such as eCommerce merchandise engines or marketing automation system.

Now that would be game changing.

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It’s been some time good reader, so happy end of January. We’re one month closer to summer.

I realize times are tough right now – budgets are cut shorter than Barack Obama’s hair, company headcount is shrinking faster than Nortel’s stock and general uncertainty is causing big-time havoc on anyone looking at long term planning. See, I’ve caught up with my news and current events (see my last blog to fully understand…).

In e-Commerce, we talk a lot about first time visitors – the big unknown. There’s a huge focus on this segment and while no one has completely cracked the code, there are dozens of best practices out there with proven and repeatable results. Jim Cain, Sitebrand’s resident super analyst wrote a great whitepaper on this very subject last year.

So, cool. First time visitors are the elusive catch, the big seg (sounded cooler than segment). And so it should be – generally it makes up about 70 per cent of total traffic or more. But today, I wanted to look a little closer at return visitors. That’s approximately the other 30 per cent of your traffic and while significantly smaller than first time visitors, it’s still an important segment and could act as a more profitable one long term. All repeat visitors were once first time visitors, right? I know what you’re thinking: “How profound of you, Kevin”. Thanks for the feedback.

But think about it. You’ve already invested in driving these visitors to your site once. Maybe they bought something. Maybe they saved their cart. Maybe they looked around on your site for twice the regular average. Who knows, but for some reason, they are back. Which brings the question: what are you doing for these visitors and how do your marketing strategies look for returning visitors?

From a search marketing standpoint, you’ve done your job. They are back and on your site – again! Are you messaging targeted content to return visitors? Are you segmenting your return visitors based on if they purchased anything during their last visit? Are you A/Bing content to this segment? Do you want to create a unique customer experience? Are you able to create real-time campaigns based on click-path navigations and behaviors during that specific session?

You could be.

Enter plug: This Wednesday afternoon, I’ll be hosting a webinar geared towards this exact topic with 5 best practices to boot. Here’s the skinny: 29 minute webinar with me (rad Sitebrand Sales Engineer), on return visitors and how you could be improving conversions. And it’s free. Register now.

I can plug my own webinar on our official blog, right? Like, that’s not a faux pas, is it? I hope not. But more so, I hope to see you there – 2pm EST sharp.

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With the holidays upon us, and the results being less than expected, there are a lot of scared people out there in digital commerce world.  Consumers aren’t sure if they should spend, retailers aren’t sure if they will spend, and vendors aren’t sure if their services will be required.  Place vicious cycle here.

Online retail is still growing, just not at the breakneck speed of the last few years.  Internet Retailer reported that in October, online sales grew by only 1 percent.  Newsflash:  it still grew.  Every other type of retail shrank.  This doesn’t mean that times will not get leaner, it just means that digital sales are better positioned to ride out (and potentially thrive) in a time of uncertainly.

So here is my recession proof marketing tip, and it only really applies to websites that have deployed an analytics tool on their website.  To be honest, if you haven’t deployed analytics on your website by now, you might have missed the window of opportunity to be successful online.

TIP: Put some effort into taking advantage of what your analytics are trying to tell you, and not only will you be able to do more with less, you will be able to grow your business while others fail.

Using and profiting from your web analytics data involves a little bit of elbow grease, not an MBA.  (Note:  I have a degree in Comparative Politics and am no math whiz)  Many of the people we talk to feel that analytics is a purely bookish discipline that they will not be able to get into because they think of themselves as designers/catalogers/developers etc.

Not an excuse.

The tools you have deployed to monitor your web visitors are easy enough to use, they are just hard to take advantage of without some work and a good plan.  Without wanting to get into the ‘web analytics is easy or hard’ debate, I am of the opinion that getting web analytics to work is pretty easy, and getting web analytics to work for you is hard.

I try to write these blogs in such a way that there are always a few tactical takeaways.  So without further ado, here are a few steps that anyone with analytics and a website can take to better weather this economic storm.  I have also embedded a ton of links to relevant info to make following

1) Make sure your analytics is set up properly:  Validate your data to make sure it is accurate.  Run WASP against your deployment to make sure your tagging is done properly.  Compare your revenue results in analytics against your shopping cart.  This exercise will not only increase your confidence in your analytics, it will make it much easier and intuitive to use the tool.

2) Make a ‘top 5 list’ of the questions that keep you up at night.  Every online marketer has these questions.  How is my paid search strategy really doing.  Do visitors from outside the United States ever buy anything?  Do our blogs and forums help visitors convert?  What is the return on investment for my website technology spends? ( I could go on at length).

3) Open up your analytics and try to answer the questions.  I would guess that with a little bit of work you will at least see roughly how to get your answers.  Reading a few blogs and books will put you well on the way to getting the definitive answers you want.

4) Action on what your have learned to either streamline or grow your business.  Did you find out that you generate a bunch of European traffic but no conversions?  Try building a European shipping page.  Do you have areas of your search marketing spend that don’t make you much money?  Stop paying for it.

5) Repeat.  Questioning, answering and optimizing is a continuous process.  Plan on spending even one day a month on this process and you will learn a ton about your business as you are strengthening it.

This whole process is going to be a lot easier than you think it is.  The analytics community is very open and helpful, there are a ton of great free resources, and YOU ALREADY HAVE ALL THE DATA.

Have fun, happy optimizing, and feel free to drop me a line if you have any questions.  With a little hard work and the right questions about your business, we’ll see you on the other side of the recession.

Cheers (and happy holidays),

Jim

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Ox equals personalization

Posted by Kevin Butler January 5, 2009

Hello and happy 2009 to all Sitebrand frequenters. Thanks for kicking off the new year by reading our blogs – we appreciate it and love all the comments that come with blogging. According to Chinese calendars, 2009 is the year of the Ox. So just how are oxen relevant to anything e-Commerce you ask? Keep reading to find out…

So apparently the United States is in a recession and has been for some time. Lately, I’ve been so immersed in various other things and may have missed out on such news. However, as sad as that may sound, I am up to date in things like Twitter (totally the new RSS of 2009, don’t you know), Amazon’s massive holiday sales spike, Chinese new year’s, terrible year end lists and of course, personalization. I swear my introductions are getting longer, but this is all going somewhere, I promise.

A recession, eh? Is that the thing that makes companies shrink budgets – more specifically, shrink marketing budgets? From talking to some peers, it seems a big trend for 2009 will see marketers finding cheap, inexpensive or free (the best kind) ways to promote and grow. I’m no genius, especially since I didn’t even know about this ‘recession thing’, but how does a company grow with limited/reduced budgets? While the aggressive side of me thinks there’s no time better than now to increase marketing budgets, I also understand the other side here – the responsible side of me, that is. And that could be why social media has and will continue to climb to the top of many marketers “definitely need to do/try that in 2009 lists”. I know, more lists at the beginning of a new year, but I digress.

You might be thinking: “social media is the buzz, but it’s not a proven revenue generator”. True and like all things, I’m sure social media will quickly evolve with that in mind over the next few years. Something to bare in mind here – social media is still very new and I don’t feel social media should be providing mass sales at this point. Mashable.com has a great survey about this, too. That’s where I see social media differently at this point – does it have to provide unassisted new sales, right now? I look at the Twitters, Facebooks, (etc…) as a part of the marketing mix, not an independent one. They will help the conversational aspect – a critical piece – with your customers and potential ones, but won’t act as the first and last points of contact to drive the sale.

Looking at this from an outside perspective, you can pay agencies, firms, specialists, etc… to run integrated social media campaigns, but it seems many companies are keeping it in-house. Whether financial reasoning or otherwise, marketers are taking notice of varying methods from big time companies like Southwest Airlines, Starbucks, Dell, all the way down to the mom and pop shops that are still around. And why not? They’ve done a great job reaching out to customers and speaking to them. Those familiar with my views from previous writings probably see this part coming: you’ve developed interest. You’ve cut through the mass and now they want to know more, so they return to your website, only to find generic messaging and content. Maverick and Iceman just called: they said mission failed – failed like the Detroit Lions historic no-win season. Back to my point, use social media to cut through the clutter, use personalization to get relevant. That’s a better 1-2 punch than Brady/Moss (from 2007, of course – sorry Lions fans). While you can have one without the other, the combined efforts are far greater than one on its own. Also, personalization is a better and more proven ROI effort than social media, as of writing this. Like all things internet these days, that could change in a hurry.

For a quick recap, I’ll leave you with an equation that should help demonstrate why personalization should be on your radar, why it makes sense in today’s economy and how it will help even the newest social media-ist get the message heard loud and clear, at the right time. Its not scientific, but I’m fairly sure it checks out…

1.    2009 = the year of the ox
2.    Oxen = methodical and detail oriented, yet have difficulty connecting with others (I swear I looked this up)
3.    Sitebrand = easily connects with specific audiences, sending relevance/targeted marketing campaigns
4.    Social media = easy way to speak directly to customers and is quickly becoming an integral part of all marketing plans (big and small)
5.    Year of personalization = 2009 (according to many, including me)

Therefore: 2009 is the year marketers/e-Commerce professionals must integrate social media efforts with Sitebrand’s personalization in order to deliver that 1-2 combo that your customers deserve.

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Personalization with social media

Posted by Kevin Butler December 12, 2008

A colleague of mine – who we’ll refer to as “naD” for anonymity sake – recently told me my blogs are verbose. I’ve never considered myself to be loquacious before, but I suppose there’s a first for everything. Am I really of the garrulous kind?

Anyways, this all came full circle as some co-workers, naD and I were caught up in a rousing game of lunchtime Scrabble via Facebook. Without divulging any further information about my lunchtime habits, I got thinking, with so much emphasis on social media, what web 2.0 medium is most effective for e-commerce companies? I had an interesting conversation with another co-worker recently regarding social media and despite the emphasis placed here in the last few years, it’s very uncontrollable. I’ll get to that shortly…

Full disclosure: I realize it will differ for each company and that this blog is probably one of 2,000 blogs that will touch on social media today. And while there are numbers of books and blogs from experts like Dave Evans (Social Media Marketing: An Hour a Day, and Dave, if you are reading this, I don’t own this book yet and December 25th is right around the corner), this is a take that directly affects Sitebrand users or those further looking into web 2.0 strategies with personalization, targeted content and other marketing strategies. It’s a look at segmentation, how to work with open environments (users are free to say what they want, when they want – regardless of validity or truth) and avoiding the “boil the ocean” mentality.

Hypothetical example here… let’s assume you are an online electronics retailer selling everything from alarm clocks to MP3 players.

You are up to date with all the Facebook’s, Linked In’s, Twitter’s (this itself can be daunting, I know) and a specific intent is established for your internet marketing plan. You know you want to use Facebook and Twitter for different promotions. Those could be two vastly different kinds of visitors, right? Going back to a comment I made earlier, you can’t control what’s being said about you and any preconceived notions that go along with it, so how do you deal with this, without having a face-to-face conversation with every visitor? Since my example has us selling the coolest widgets and gadgets, understanding your visitors based on where they are coming from is just as important as anything else on your site and the need to segment your audience and dynamically message them truly begins.

The traffic coming from your hourly/daily tweets trust your promotions or the source it came from (and let’s suppose your analytics tell you nearly 12% of your traffic is from mobile browsers). Your landing page could offer minimal images and focus on messaging/links that load quickly and since I’m in ultra-merchandising mode, focus on the latest in smart phones and Bluetooth headsets. Since that trust is there (or at least higher than most first time visitors), you can focus on what the visitor should buy, not why. And that’s just for first time visitors. When they come back, you can target these same visitors to help increase brand awareness and drive home non-financial conversions/goals. Ultimately, ensuring they’ve seen your great promotions, seen why you are a great company and changing any preconceived notions they may have had about you before. This is your chance to get into your visitors mind and represent your company the way you want. The power of targeted messaging, eh?

For traffic coming from Facebook, you know this is either from paid ads or a link from a user profile. Either way, they aren’t as connected to you and your company as the Twitter crowd. Seems like a good opportunity to segment, right? One way or another, you’ve paid for this customer to be on your site, so it needs to count and needs to capture the visitors attention/trust. At this point, having a banner run through the entire session for these visitors (clickable or not), telling them the site is secure, potential refund info, shipping info based on geography/location might be worthwhile. Maybe the message changes and talks to the visitor based on their click patterns or the fact they came from Facebook, who knows – the sky is the limit here. Since it’s a more general crowd, you could opt to show an array of your different products and special sales. Or perhaps you want to focus on company branding more than particular promotions and quick conversions. Personalization and visitor segmentation give marketers a window to brand like never before. You can drive home your message in a conversational way. Imagine having your customers line up to have a face-to-face conversation with you. I’m sure you can make them a believer in your company (at least you could for me… I know how convincing our Sitebrand blog readers are) and isn’t that the whole point of a webpage in the first place?

If all this sounds cooler than a $4 sweater on Christmas, then hold onto your hat: I’ll be running a product demonstration webinar this coming Wednesday, December 17th @ 2pm EST (BTW, they are only 29 minutes long!). In the new year, I’ll be running these webinars bi-weekly, so this Wednesday’s presentation will be the neonate demo. I’ll be talking about web 2.0 integration with Sitebrand,  showing its ease of use and effectiveness. If your conversion rate is lower than 4% and you want to get more out of your existing traffic, I’d love to meet you. Remember: the tools your company uses to tap into your visitors represent the kind of company you are and the kind of customers you are after.

To everyone who can’t make it, happy holidays and see on you on the other side (2009).

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The future of online marketing

Posted by Kevin Butler December 2, 2008

Good Tuesday morning to all Sitebrand blog readers. To our US friends, happy late Thanksgiving and to our Canadian friends…well… Thanksgiving was more than a month ago. I think that’s around the last time our Ottawa Senators won, too.

With Black Friday/Cyber Monday unofficially marking the beginning of website lockdown from now, through to the New Year, we’ll continue to see the efforts of online marketing at its finest, from months of planning and upgrades in various internet marketing tools.

So with that kind of build up, I was curious to see some of the marketing strategies of e-tailers over the long weekend. Unfortunately, nothing stood out … kind of like those new NHL 3rd jerseys.

Walmart was offering changing specials as the weekend progressed (something a shiny new Segment&Serve from Sitebrand could do) and Starbucks was tweeting or twitting… or twittering or whatever it is we do on Twitter (look me up: kevin_butler).

This got me wondering; what will the internet be like in the future and how will it differ from 2008? From Eric Schmidt (super cool Google dude) to me (super cool Sitebrand guy with a rad blog), everyone has suggested personalization is the future of internet. But how personal are we talking? Will e-Commerce be so optimized that sites will be able to know accurate age ranges, eye colors and favorite Britney Spears songs? Or will all sites be issuing targeted messaging via content spaces? Actually, that’s not very futuristic at all. I happen to know a Canadian e-Commerce SaaS company that could have this integrated within hours, set for your electronic holiday rush.

But the point is, what do we expect online shopping to transform into? I agree with the notion that intelligent recommendations and relevant personalization will become the norm. But will shoppers be so bombarded with recommendations, new products or cross-sell efforts that conversion rates still suffer? I’ve always believed in the KISS principle and that less is more. Perhaps shopping cart optimization will become the new rage. But instead of peering into the future with flying cars and web4.0 causing problems, let’s focus on the now: 2009 and the year of personalization – don’t let me down, internet. If you are interested in personalization and want to know more or don’t see its value, send me a quick note. I’d love to hear more.

Let me know if you saw any cool/unique/totally wicked promotions or efforts that caught your eye this weekend. I’d love to hear some innovative strategies.

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So here we are. It’s “Cyber Monday”, a fairly recent term that was coined by the National Retail Federation trade group back in 2005. It’s the Monday after the US Thanksgiving holiday and also thought of as the unofficial kickoff for what’s always hoped to be a busy online retail season. Just check out cybermonday.com and you’ll see the stuff I’m talking about!

Now I realize the term was coined in the US and kudos for that, but to keep it a US only “thing” seems limiting especially since we’re talking online retail. Last time I looked, “online retail” lives on the “World Wide Web” and as the name implies, there’s world-wide reach. Just looking at North America, the one continent where the US sits, US eTailers seem to be forgetting a whole country called Canada and the whole segment of Canadian consumers that go with it.

On the flip side and to be fair, Canadian eTailers are forgetting they need to be competitive with US websites who always seem to be leap years ahead in terms of innovation. After all, everyone surfs the web looking for the perfect buy, and since we’re bouncing in and out of both CDN and US sites, why isn’t there more Cyber Monday hype here in the north? Why not take advantage of an increasingly well known shopping blitz?

So just why does it make sense to think about Canadians (not to mention other geo-areas) as an additional market segment for Cyber Monday penetration? Let’s consider the following:
 
1. Are Canadians online? Yes, big time.
2. Are Canadians browsing websites for online deals and special offers? Yes, .com’s and .ca’s.
3. Are Canadians feeling angst and urgency around holiday shopping lists right now? Yes. Even though our Thanksgiving was in October, a lot of us are gearing up for the big red guy on Dec. 25.

Given the above, what I’m seeing is a half-baked online marketing strategy that completely ignores the full power of the web and all its glorious technological wonders…with technologies like Segment&Serve – Sitebrand’s web personalization platform – it’s really crazy that Cyber Monday is being so limited to the US.

All this said, I’m seeing US retailers coming up with all kinds of great Cyber Monday deals, rebates and discounts. Just look at these 2 examples: 

Cyber Monday Promo

Cyber Monday Promo

The deals are endless, but considering holiday sales (both in-store and online) are expected to be crappy this year, is further discounting to US consumers really going to save the day? Considering it gouges an already thin margin that’s typical in the eTail space, it’s a tough one. BTW, this is why Sitebrand encourages our online marketing customers to promote the service side of their business too. 

And this brings me right back to a Cyber Monday strategy that taps into geo-targeting. It’s a strategy that should apply to both US and CDN eTailers…at a minimum. Baby steps I’m suggesting…

As for popular Canadian sites or anyone selling online, why aren’t they piggy-backing Cyber Monday urgency? Not one of the following major .ca Canadian eTail sites say anything about Cyber Monday: Zellers, Canadian Tire, Best Buy, Wal-Mart and Sears. Considering the rate we pop in and out of sites comparing prices etc, it’s another missed opportunity. 

Online stores are global regardless of where they’re based, so why not market accordingly – geo-targeting being a good start, emphasis on service versus discounts being a second smart move – “we ship to Canada” being an effective message.

I guess this leaves us open to debate the big question – why can’t Cyber Monday become a global kick-off to online shopping? Thinking outside the border. It’s quite a thought.

PS – a big thanks to my fellow Sitebranders for all their forwarded websites and emails = they helped a lot!

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Narrow profit margins are a reality for most online merchants…add to that a recession and it’s easy to understand why there’s increasing interest and demand for discounting alternatives. Marketing teams are also increasingly lean (I can speak from this personally), so it’s no surprise we’re also seeing more interest in marketing sophistication and automation. So what it really comes down to is finding a solution that is both appealing to consumers who are feeling the pain of the recession and profitable to merchants (and their marketing teams) who are also feeling the pain of the recession.

With Segment&Serve™, Sitebrand’s personalization platform and our team of pros who make it their passion to help clients be successful, I’m proud to say we’re able to tackle these above-noted requirements. While many best practice campaigns do involve hard incentives like discounts and free shipping, we’re really pushing for web personalization campaigns that leverage softer incentives that tie into service, social marketing and Web 2.0. And overarching everything is the added benefit of measurable results and return on investment. After all, if you can prove ROI, what’s the point?

So just today, Sitebrand issued a news release re: several client success stories (e-commerce case studies) that reference the use of non-traditional “soft incentives” or “comfort-style campaigns” if you will.  Essentially we’re talking about personalized web campaigns that offer helpful product suggestions (like you would get in-store), links to customer testimonials or product reviews (“word of web”), and wish list/gift card reminders (‘Tis the season now more than ever). These “soft incentives” truly counter the classic ”hard incentives” mentioned earlier – things like urgent discounts and free shipping. So what’s the result? Well, we’re helping many clients like ElectricShopping.com and Discount Dance see incredible results (that don’t compromise their narrow margins)…

John Miller, IT Director at Discount Dance says, “Depending on the type of visitor, and the campaign we’re triggering, we are seeing between a 5% and 20% lift on revenue.” Commenting on the measured statistics for multiple soft-incentive campaigns over a 30 day period, Miller adds: “On average, we’ve experienced a 5% conversion lift. Plus, our average order value has gone up about 2%.”

Gift Card Promo

Gift Card Promo

For ElectricShopping.com, Rob Levy, Managing Director, attributes a 17% conversion lift to web personalization campaigns primarily comprised of “soft incentives” that promote the service (caring) side of their business. “I would attribute at least a 5-fold return on our Sitebrand investment, at least that,” says Levy on the ROI generated by Sitebrand. Messaging a concern for the environment is also proving successful.

We care about the environment...

We care about the environment...

With the help of Sitebrand’s comprehensive web personalization solution, innovative online merchants like ElectricShopping.com and Discount Dance are helping to reset the definition of what constitutes a sufficient incentive to motivate visitors – especially soft incentives that don’t involve any financial reward to the buyer or financial loss to the merchant.

What are you doing to be part of this recession marketing shift?

For more inspiration, you should check out these case two case studies and more in Sitebrand’s Resource Center at: http://www.sitebrand.com/resources/case-studies

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MasterCard gift card

MasterCard gift card

I was out doing errands on the weekend at my local Shopper’s Drug Mart and was waiting for the family to finish when I noticed a new product from MasterCard: gift cards in 50, 100 and 200 dollar denominations.  It grabbed me, finally a universal one-time use protected payment system that could be used by online retailers that conveniently accessible.  Not to be left out, both Visa and American Express have their versions as well.

I know there are other products in this space that can fill this need including refillable cards such as rePower and individual retailer gift cards as well as online alternate payment services such as PayPal and eBillme but the accessibly, convenience and financial isolation the major credit card vendors provide may become game changers in terms of getting the stubborn majority of the population over the hump and make that first  online purchase.

The problem with the retailer gift cards is their terms of use policies are all over the map.  Chapters/Inigo you must transfer the balance from your gift card to your online account first. Future Shop has taken a more consumer friendly approach where up to three cards can be used at one time be it credit or gift. One of the biggest benefits I am jazzed about is the remaining balance can be use elsewhere, be it brick and mortar or online, is finally moving the pendulum back to the consumer after a number of years of harsh gift card policies including the most hated expiry dates.

It also could change the alternate payments industry.  Why do I need these services, when I have a brand I trust; no setup and no tie to my financial information or institution?  Don’t get me wrong, PayPal and eBillme are strong and interesting companies but if I were them, I would be worried about the long term viability of the alternate payment marketplace.

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