Archive for October, 2007

Brant Barton Partner Interview: Paul Martino, Founder & CEO, Aggregate Knowledge

October 30th, 2007 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

In this second installment of the Bazaarblog partner interview series, I am excited to share some insightful Q&A with Paul Martino, Founder and CEO of Aggregate Knowledge, on innovations in the field of product and content discovery.  Bazaarvoice and Aggregate Knowledge are currently working to integrate our offerings for a number of shared customers, including Delightful Deliveries, who is mentioned below.  Enjoy the read!

1. Many in our industry can remember NetPerceptions and their early contributions to the personalization and recommendations space. But that was over 10 years ago!  In a nutshell, what big changes have occurred since then to alter the landscape of this space, now called “Discovery”?

The single biggest contributor to making the Discovery category happen was the shift in focus from the algorithm to the experience. Discovery is all about driving relevant experience in context to what people are reading, viewing and buying. It doesn’t matter what algorithm you use if the consumer doesn’t like what they see.  This requires an almost algorithm agnostic approach to placing the right content and products in front of customers. Pick the best approach to drive the best result.

The second big shift happened in the ability to cost effectively manage massive volumes of information. The volume of data required to do discovery is staggering. You have to literally process billions of pieces of data, predict exactly the right content that people want to see based on what millions of others have done – and deliver it in milliseconds on a web page, through emails or into other channels like advertising.

The third big difference is ease of deployment. Ten years ago it was all enterprise software and compatibility questions about your content management system. Web 2.0 principles eliminate this huge drag on the sales and deployment time.

We have definitely learned a lot of great insights on how the space evolved, what worked, what didn’t from the founders of companies like Net Perceptions and Firefly. We took that all into account when we were building out our discovery network.

2. Aggregate Knowledge’s offering is unique in that it creates content-centric relationships between merchants (who want your solution to drive greater conversion on their sites) and publishers (who want to monetize their content and traffic through high-performing advertising).  Why is this relationship so essential to your business model?

If you really want to pique somebody’s interest to buy or view something, you need to show them content relevant to their interests. People want to read articles, view videos, and buy products based on what they are interested in at that moment in time, and that is relevant to what is happening in the world right now. And “right now” is very important for relevance. We provide Discovery on some of the world’s largest newspaper websites. You can’t wait until the weekend to figure out the matching stories. You only have a few seconds and that’s what Aggregate Knowledge delivers.

In so doing, we connect the merchants, retailers and publishers in our network. We understand the patterns and connections between the products, articles, blogs, videos, photos, etc. between retailers and publishers in our network sites. By understanding these connections, we can place highly relevant and targeted products and content to consumers visiting sites in our network. When people see something that is relevant to them, they buy more, read more and come back for more. This is the foundation to our business model.

3. Successful online brands are increasingly savvy about prioritizing their technology investments based on conversion impact, ROI, payback, etc.  What can companies expect from their investment in a solution like Aggregate Knowledge’s?

One of the best things about web services is that there is very little upfront time required to get started and no upfront license fees. This immediately focuses the conversation on providing the most engaging experience for our customer’s consumers. Once you drive a more engaging and relevant discovery experience on your site and through your marketing and sales channels, you can see substantial lift in sales, click through rates, click to purchase conversion, time on site, etc. We know it starts with creating a great experience. There is nothing more powerful than reading an article on a site about wine collecting and then seeing all of the related products that have been purchased by people who read that same article. That experience alone can drive sales, longer time on site, and return visits to both sites. This leads to a two fold win: driving the business metrics of our customers as well as delighting their consumers with a satisfying experience.

4. Can you share a few examples of brands/sites that are really delivering on the promise of personalized content, products, and offers along with great user experience of those things?

Delightful Deliveries is a great example of how discovery works. Delightful Deliveries is the leading site for gourmet gifts and gift baskets. People go to their site for gifts of all occasions including birthdays, baby gifts, back to school, holidays, and seasonal gifts. They are using our discovery offerings to literally emulate how people naturally shop for gifts. With every click on one of their gifts, their customers see related gift options based on what others have viewed or purchased. This is important because many times you don’t know what you are looking for when buying that perfect gift. Now their customers are leading each other to their great gift finds. This is also a great example of the power of user-driven merchandizing. What really determines if the ‘beer of the month’ club is relevant to Father’s day or summer time? In this case, Delightful Deliveries customers’ help determine what the most relevant gifts are for different occasions, seasons, and holidays.

In addition to our customers, there are certainly other companies doing this well. For example Facebook. As you may know, prior to starting Aggregate Knowledge I was a founder of Tribe.net, one of the first social networks. Many lessons learned from social networking are being applied at Aggregate Knowledge. Facebook is a company that is winning by driving a highly relevant experience for their members. They give you all the things you need to run your online life on Facebook. Every tool and application on Facebook helps make it easier to connect and communicate with friends and your network. We are excited to see how this translates to their new advertising service, as we are doing very similar things with content.

5. Follow-on question: For many years, Amazon.com has been the industry model for both community functionality (ratings & reviews) and personalization.  Do they still hold that distinction?

They certainly helped validate the business value of user-driven reviews and cross-selling through recommendations. I would say that this still is very important, but the new opportunity lies in driving this beyond your website and through all sales and marketing channels.

Doing this as web service for all retailers is also a big distinction. It’s certainly one of the reasons Aggregate Knowledge and Bazaarvoice partnered. By providing reviews, recommendations, discovery, and user generated content our joint customers get the best of all worlds.

6. Your solution has very clear multi-channel value and utility.  Can you share any thoughts on your multi-channel strategy and future offerings targeted to the offline world?  What requirements should multi-channel retailers have of an online discovery solution that could be leveraged cross-channel?

It’s only discovery if you are driving relevant product and content to consumers through all marketing, sales and communication channels. Basically touch the consumer in all the places they touch your business. We consider this the ticket to the dance to work with retailers, as they are all working to drive the same experiences on their site, through their emails, in their advertising and affiliate promotions. In fact, many of our conversations start with companies wanting to automatically deliver product and content placements into their emails. We are initially focused on priority channels such as our customer’s web sites, emails and affiliate promotions and ads. We are also working on some big plans for RSS, mobile, and point of sale. We call this strategy “Discovery Everywhere” and you will be hearing a great deal more about it in 2008.

7. Aggregate Knowledge and Bazaarvoice are partners and share several successful clients.  How do you think customer generated content, such as ratings & reviews, and other social media complements your offering?

Customer generated rating and reviews are all part of the discovery experience and fit hand and glove with our services. Ratings and reviews are instrumental to helping customers reach a decision about what products they want to buy. Our goal is to deliver the most relevant products in front of customers based on what others are doing. Bazaarvoice tells them what they are saying!

Sam Decker Ask & Answer Shows Promising User Involvement

October 30th, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Andrew ChenBy Andrew Chen, Ask & Answer Product Manager

Bazaarvoice Ask & Answer

When we were first envisioning Ask & Answer, we knew there was a need for a structured, moderated, community-driven question and answer service that could be accessible directly in the shopper’s buying path. However, clients questioned the level of user involvement and whether significant answer volume could really be generated. We asked ourselves how often questions would remain unanswered.

I’m glad to see our concerns turned out to be nothing more than concerns.

 Hindsight is 20/20, but it turns out that blended deployments of Ratings & Reviews and Ask & Answer have exceeded expectations.  Our preliminary analysis shows, in aggregate, answer volume is 87% of question volume. It’s expected that answer volume will lag behind questions, but that gap is smaller than we thought. Through proper promotion and placement of the feature, our clients have been driving user awareness and participation in a tangible way.

As more and more questions come in, we’re discovering many types of questions that retailers may never have been able to predict – questions like how an article of clothing fits or compatibility with other products. More importantly, we’re seeing customers helping one another and saving each other from potentially expensive mistakes.  We expect this altruistic behavior to continue for all the same reasons people write reviews.

Ask & Answer Widget on The Home Depot Canada

As we continue to evolve our Ask & Answer offering, I predict the keys to success are enhancing ways to drive answer volume in general, but more specifically, creating incentives to drive the most relevant and accurate answers.  More insights to come!

Sam Decker Deadline Friday to Enter Webby Awards

October 29th, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

If you'are a Bazaarvoice client, you realize user-generated content sets your website apart – you have seen the results yourself in your conversions and increased traffic. Now your UGC could help you win an award!

Nominations for the Webby Awards are due this Friday, Nov. 2. Quoting from their website, “The Webby Awards is the leading international award honoring excellence on the Internet. Established in 1996 during the Web's infancy, the Webbys are presented by The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, a 550-member body of leading Web experts, business figures, luminaries, visionaries and creative celebrities.”

Time to show off how you have used UGC to engage customers, received stellar results and made your website better. To nominate your Websites, Interactive Advertising, Online Film & Video or Mobile Web campaigns, simply click here for all the details. Good luck!

Brett Hurt Everything Is Miscellaneous (As Told by Video)

October 28th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

In April, I blogged about the video, "Web 2.0 – The Machine Is Us/ing Us".  Now the same professor that created that video, Michael Wesch at Kansas State University, has created a new one called "Information R/evolution" that summarizes some of the key points of the book, "Everything Is Miscellaneous", which I blogged about in May.  The author of the book, David Weinberger, was the keynote speaker at this year's Shop.org Annual Summit.  

For those that missed David's presentation, I recommend watching this video.  Or even for those that saw him speak, you may want to watch this and forward it to some folks in your company.  Tagging, and other user-generated content trends, will have a profound impact on eCommerce over the "long-term" (i.e., the next 1-3 years – remember this is an "Internet Speed" age we live in). 

I highly recommend reading his book as well.

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Wayne Stribling Ask & Answer Increases Sales Conversion 22%

October 23rd, 2007 by Wayne Stribling Former VP of Client Services

Ask & Answer

Bazaarvoice recently released Ask & Answer, a new product that allows consumers to ask questions and get answers directly from other consumers (or from the company itself) on the product detail and product category pages. It’s an innovative idea intended to address a significant problem: 67% of online consumers leave a website due to a lack of product information. Giving consumers the information they need to make an informed purchasing decision makes it more likely they will buy on your site rather than look, and perhaps buy, elsewhere.

Imagine being able to quickly find the answer to a critical question you want to know before buying a new digital camera. “Does the Canon EOS 400D Digital Rebel XTi camera perform better in low-light conditions than the Nikon D80?"

With Ask & Answer, consumers who have experience using these cameras can share their opinions by answering questions and helping the purchaser make a more informed decision about which camera best meets their needs. Think of it as a new way to create an online “community knowledgebase” containing rich consumer-generated content, augmented by detailed product reviews. It has significant benefits over forums or online chat because all questions and answers are fully moderated for appropriateness by Bazaarvoice before being posted to your site and archived at the point of purchase.

We recently conducted a client case study for Shoes.com to measure the business impact of Ask & Answer on their site and found that in just the first two months after launching…

Products with just one question and one answer had an 18.26% higher browse-to-buy conversion than they did previously

and…

Products with at least two questions and answers had a 22.00% higher browse-to-buy conversion rate.

In addition to these strong sales conversion results, there are other key benefits that drive ROI for Ask & Answer:

  1. SEO benefits –
    Ask & Answer provides a new way to capture user-generated content that can then be leveraged for better SEO. Bazaarvoice helps clients maximize their SEO benefits by providing SearchVoice landing pages with dedicated Ask & Answer content fully optimized for search engine spiders. We also provide promotional best practices to help increase participation from your online community and integrate it with product reviews promotions. Better yet, your customers use terms that other customers are more likely to use in their own searches, further increasing potential SEO results.
  2. New online audience –
    In our case study for Shoes.com, we also found that only 4% of the Shoes.com online community that uses Ask & Answer have previously written reviews and that 29% of contributors answer more than one question. This is a strong indication that Ask & Answer attracts an entirely new audience of consumers, in addition to people who write reviews that come back to the site to participate.
  3. Reduced customer support costs –
    Customers generate the majority of the Q&A content, creating a new self-help resource on your site that reduces customer questions to your support center. We’ve seen that deploying Ratings and Reviews with Ask & Answer is reducing call volumes to our client’s customer support centers.
  4. Competitive differentiation –
    Implementing Ask & Answer is a great way to differentiate your site from your competition and to inspire your online community to participate in this new archived Q&A tool. Clients like Home Depot Canada have even branded it “The Answer Depot” and experienced a high level of community participation on their site.

Sam Decker Retailers & Manufacturers “Share” with Social Networks

October 18th, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This week I returned from speaking on a panel at Forrester Consumer Forum. 700 executives from manufacturers and retailers attended the conference in Chicago, which was entirely focused on Social Technologies. Our advisor, Ze Frank, also spoke on a keynote panel to discuss the future of media (hint: it’s ‘bottoms up’). Yesterday I returned from Silicon Valley, meeting with several Web 2.0 companies and partners. These meetings are helpful for me to bridge the Web world of social networking to the needs of online retailers, and vision new capabilities into our roadmap. Where do social networking and retailing mix? How do manufacturers and metrics-driven online retailers drive measurable results and relevancy in these new spaces?

We started answering that question today with the launch of our newest feature, called ShareThis(tm). It is a FREE feature for our clients allowing their shoppers and customers to share a review, profile or product to their favorite social networking or bookmarking site. And because we’re already hosted in their site, we can turn this live within days without IT involvement.

Dow Jones covered the launch, including commentary from Dell. Here’s a snippet from the article:

The feature enables a person who is, say, excited about the Dell monitor he just bought to share the news by posting on his Facebook profile a link to a review that he or someone else wrote. The post, which can also include an image of the monitor or the Dell logo and brief comment from him, will show up on his profile mini feed and in the news feed his Facebook friends see. Bazaarvoice says no money will change hands; shoppers won't be paid for posting reviews and Facebook won't get fees.

"It's making (consumers) an advocate" for brands on sites where the audiences are highly desirable to marketers, yet tend to be skeptical of online marketing, says Greg Sterling, of Oakland, Calif., consulting firm Sterling Market Intelligence. "It's trying to leverage a more trusted environment" and a form of marketing — word-of-mouth — that is particularly trusted by consumers.

It is also an effort to engage people who online-marketers have come to call "influencers" — people who through their expertise and efforts to share that expertise in online forums have gained outsized influence over other consumers. Sites like Facebook, del.icio.us and Digg are places where these people, and other less-active Web users, love to express themselves and have access to large numbers of other people.

"Now, for the first time ever, whenever (consumers) see a product they like, they can post it as a representation of who they are and what they like," says Sam Decker, chief marketing officer at Bazaarvoice.

I couldn’t have said it better myself! :-)

You can see it live on these sample product pages from Dell, Toshiba and Jewelry Television.

We have future plans for this functionality, plus other ideas on social network integration with user generated content. Drop me a note if you’re interested in discussing them (sam at bazaarvoice.com).

If you’re a client interested in adding this to your site, it just takes a call or email to your Community Manager…otherwise you’ll be hearing from them! :-) Remember, it's free! I mean FREE!

Brant Barton Consumer Recommendations Are Most Trusted Form of Advertising

October 11th, 2007 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

Yesterday, eMarketer reported on a Nielsen study that found that consumer recommendations are the most trusted form of advertising, not just among US consumers but worldwide.  Over three-quarters of those surveyed – in 47 markets across the globe – rated recommendations from consumers as a trusted form of advertising vs. just 63% for newspapers, 56% for TV and magazines, and 34% and 26% for search engine ads and banner ads, respectively.  The chart below shows how consumer opinions and recommendations stack up against several other forms of advertising, and the difference isn't slight. 

What's even more interesting to me is that "traditional" forms of advertising, like TV and radio, scored significantly higher than the predominant forms of online advertising – search and banner ads – in spite of the sophisticated targeting capabilities of search and display.  After all, isn't the goal of online ad targeting – behavioral, contextual, etc. – to provide a level of relevance and utility that excuses the intrusion of advertising?  Trust would seem to follow, but not so.  Consumers know the difference and they put their faith in each other first and foremost.      

These findings may explain the stellar case study results we've seen from several of our clients – higher conversion rates and significantly lower return rates on products that have customer reviews.  We are seeing similar results from our Ask & Answer solution, not to mention significant reduction in call center volume and costs!  In addition to selling each other, customers are also highly effective at servicing and supporting each other with product expertise and answers to tough "buy or bail" questions that arise when shopping online.  Can other forms of advertising do that?   

Sam Decker Get Your Reviews on Major Portals — FOR FREE!

October 2nd, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Live.com from Microsoft is another shopping comparison site partner that just launched with reviews from Bazaarvoice clients signed up for SyndicateVoice reviews syndication. To see this how this looks, go to Live.com and search for "digital cameras" When you click on one of the cameras (let’s say the PowerShot SD500), you’ll see a page that looks like this:

The first reviews shown are from Dell, a Bazaarvoice client. Because of the direct relationship with have with shopping sites such as Live.com, our clients are assured proper product matching, brand awareness, clicks, and natural search in-links from the Web's largest shopping sites. Our syndication partner network is the largest and most diverse customer reviews network, including portals and shopping comparison engines such as Live.com, Smarter.com, Google Product Search, and about 20 others.

Best of all, Bazaarvoice just announced syndication to these major portals is FREE through August 2008 to existing and future clients of Bazaarvoice Ratings and Reviews. Clients do nothing but sign a short agreement (after all, with Bazaarvoice the client owns their data). But as a service, we feed these reviews in different formats to our network of SyndicateVoice partners.

To learn more, or to sign up for free syndication to sites like Live.com, please talk to your Community Manager (if you are a client) or email us at info @ bazaarvoice.com or call 866-522-9227.  

Sam Decker Word of Mouth Marketing Summit Nov. 14/15. Join me (plus a discount…)!

October 2nd, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

As a Board Member for Word of Mouth Marketing Association I'm obviously going to spread word of mouth on our conference. But for good reason.

Every day that customers trust advertising less is a day word of mouth becomes more critical to business growth. Yet there is ambiguity on who should own WOM marketing, what strategies are effective, how it should be measured, who should be targeted, and how to execute the right offline and online tactics.

I personally don't believe companies can be competitive or market leaders without having a comprehensive and operational focus on how their product and service drives word of mouth, along with a clear understanding of how to amplify the customer voice with word of mouth marketing strategies.

If you agree, you'll join me at this years WOMMA Summit, November 14 and 15 in Las Vegas. And, I'll sweeten the deal!…

When you register online, enter the code 'guestofbazaarvoice' for $75 off. And when I see you there, I'll buy (drinks that is…not your bets!).

Sam Decker New Deloitte Study: 62% read reviews, 82% influenced

October 2nd, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Deloitte’s consumer group completed a study last month and found almost two-thirds (62%) of the respondents to an online poll said they now read online product reviews written by other consumers. More than eight in 10 (82%) of those who read reviews said that their purchasing decisions have been directly influenced by those reviews. People have used the reviews both to confirm initial buying decisions and to change them, the study found.

Let's do the math: .62 X .82 = 50% of all consumers will make a purchase based on reviews!

That means, for a retailer or manufacturer not to have re reviews on their product means that they are turning away 50% of the prospects looking at their products!

This matches the study by eVoc insights done a couple years ago that found 50% of consumers needed reviews when purchasing consumer electronics before purchasing.  

In addition, 69% of the respondents said they have shared online reviews with friends, family or colleagues, the report said. So, there’s a viral, word of mouth effect on the word of mouth itself! 

See other stats and studies related to reviews and social commerce here.