Archive for May, 2009

Brant Barton Brett Hurt, Our CEO, Founder & Friend, Named Austin’s Entrepreneur of the Year

May 31st, 2009 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

It’s been an exciting couple of weeks at Bazaarvoice. First, on May 21st, Bazaarvoice was named the #1 Best Place to Work in Austin. We got a great photo of our entire team, including international team members who were in town for our quarterly company offsite at the Alamo Drafthouse, in front of our massive 52-inch Sabian Chinese gong in the Austin Business Journal.

Second, just one week later, our very own Brett Hurt was named Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year in Austin – one of four regional winners. The E&Y Entrepreneur of the Year awards recognize entrepreneurs who demonstrate extraordinary success in the areas of innovation, financial performance, and personal commitment to their businesses and communities.

Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt named Austin Entrepreneur of the Year

I can’t think of anyone who deserves this honor more than Brett. In the description above, the word that I would emphasize most in describing Brett’s motivation as an entrepreneur is community. An Austin native, Brett is very mindful of the positive, profound, and multi-generational impact that a single entrepreneur and business can have on the prosperity of a community. He sees Bazaarvoice’s success and his own as a win for all of Austin, and he sincerely hopes that Bazaarvoice’s success will bring prosperity to our community not just in terms of job and wealth creation but in the form of many future companies that our team members will one day start.

When I worked for Brett at Coremetrics, the company he founded prior to Bazaarvoice, he was expecting his first child and was in the process of shopping for a new stroller. Like many first-time parents (I recently went through this process myself), he did a ton of online research, finally landing at Amazon.com and finding an extremely long and detailed review contributed by an aerospace engineer who had methodically deconstructed and reconstructed the stroller in question, documenting the process and his observations on the stroller’s design, materials quality, and workmanship at every step. This experience had a profound effect on Brett, as he imagined the power of this content for every shopper and purchase decision if it were available for every product and website. The idea for Bazaarvoice was born a few months later. Fast forward four short years and here we are – we have served 50+ billion reviews for 525+ global brands in 36 countries and we continue to grow (and hire!) like wildfire.

Please join me in congratulating Brett for his many accomplishments as an entrepreneur (Bazaarvoice is his fifth start-up company!), for the positive impact he has had within the Austin business community, and for being a genuinely sincere and humble person. He never fails to show his appreciation for the team at Bazaarvoice, our customers and partners, and the many supporters that have helped the company and Brett personally along the way.

So far, 2009 has been a big year for us – and there’s still six months left to go!

Sam Decker Warning Signs of “Ghost Town” Brand Communities

May 31st, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

ghosttownHave you ever been exploring online and found yourself in a virtual community where crickets chirped and tumbleweeds drifted by? Message board tallies show the last comment was made in 2007 and any newer threads got a couple of views and zero responses. Welcome to the ghost town, a languishing community where there are few signs of life. Perhaps it was once a brand community launched with high hopes, a substantial budget and ambitious marketing objectives, but it was later abandoned, both by its inhabitants and its founders. The once-promising gold rush moved on.

Gartner reports that 50% of brand communities will fail. And by “fail,” I believe they mean “shut down.” That leaves the other 50% still live. But are they successful? How many “ghost town” communities are out there? Over the past couple years many progressive brands have explored social media and community marketing initiatives — Twitter, Facebook, blogs, viral videos, forums or fully-fledged online communities. With the comeback of the term “community” and the hype and buzz of Facebook, many other brands are likely contemplating everything from establishing a Twitter account to launching a Facebook-like community within their site. The promise is high customer engagement — which the CFO could care less about, but marketers often believe drives sales and loyalty.

I applaud exploration, experimentation and “fail fast” initiatives. But now we’re entering into a time where the key phrase is “show me the results.” The focus on measurability is leading many brands to take a hard look at what they launched, and step away from things that didn’t work. It’s a critical time for these brands, and for any others considering a move into social media. These failures don’t mean that online community-building is a waste of time, or that it can’t be done. But it’s complex, and the appropriate strategy could be markedly different from one brand to the next. Before beginning the virtual barn-raising in a new community initiative, tread carefully and consider what success means to you.

Jake McKee, chief strategy officer at Ant’s Eye View, likens the whole process to personal relationship building. “We date many more people than we marry — i.e. There’s bound to be plenty of failures in our question to create something grand,” he says.

The Community Concept Isn’t to Blame

You should know I’m not anti-community. I’ve been involved in “community” my entire career. In 1995 wrote a book on marketing with computer user groups (the analog to today’s online communities). In 1997 I launched and managed the ThirdAge.com community (chat and forums for baby boomers), I led product management for Dell Support Forums, and I’ve been a participant in Compuserve, eWorld, AOL, blogs, Facebook, Twitter, etc. From these experiences I’ve concluded that communities succeed if they solve a need, share an interest/passion and/or connect me with people I care about. Facebook works because most of your and my friends are there — it solves the need to connect and stay up to date, thus carrying more weight as a “social resume.” Dell support forums work because they allow asynchronous conversations to solve a technical problem for a frustrated computer user. The ThirdAge community (chat and forums) worked in certain topics where there was passion and birds of a feather could discuss that passion.

From a marketer’s perspective, the idea of a brand community sounds great. The expectation is that it will be a petri dish which will virally grow customer engagement, and this type of engagement will lead to sales. The problem is, few customers jump into that petri dish, fewer still will stick around, and the community interaction usually has no contextual bridge to purchasing. That’s three strikes. Most brand communities serve a very, very small set of customers (in relation to their customer base or market size) with either a lot of passion or a lot of time on their hands. And let’s face it, not every brand has the potential to inspire lasting passion and sustain a Facebook-type community. Exceptions are cult brands that have passion and community built into their product ethos, such as Harley Davidson or Apple. But you can’t create that by putting up a community. That starts way upstream, with the product and the brand.

What’s a Community For?

Brand communities are configured to create social interactions between customers, allowing them to share opinions and interact via blogs, wikis, polls, forums and private messages. There are a lot of technological bells and whistles that the product manager can get excited about, but let’s look at it from the customer’s point of view. I’ll repeat what I wrote earlier…the reason people participate in communities is to:

  1. Solve a problem / need (or help others do so)
  2. Share an interest or passion
  3. Connect with people of interest (develop social capital)

#1 is the reason support forums exist, and these reduce support costs, but don’t drive sales. #2 and #3 are usually what Brands are looking for, expecting community to drive engagement and sales. But when visitors are not passionate about the topic, they are less likely to jump in. If the community audience is small and unfamiliar with one another, a prospective visitor’s motivation to build social capital or help others dissolves. In both cases, the vibrance and participation in the community are next to go. This causes the next visitor not to join, which in turn decreases the passion and audience size of the community. This domino effect leads most brand communities to turn into a ghost town.

A study from Deloitte reports that two of the top three obstacles to making communities work have to do with getting people to engage or visit — and the remaining issue doesn’t help solve this problem:

  1. Getting people to engage
  2. Finding enough time to manage
  3. Attracting people to the community

The solution may lie in reframing the objective. A fully-developed Facebook-like community with thousands of regular participants is probably an unachievable — and in some cases undesirable — goal for many brands. I say undesirable because the resources required to build and maintain such a community may not be in line with the returns that they produce. Something smaller scale may not be as glamorous or provide as many opportunities to brag to your digirati friends on Twitter, but it may be just right for your brand and your customer base.

There are a few potential ways to go small. Ask yourself some questions. If you have a million customers and there are 100 community members posting occasionally, is that success? Or is it a ghost town? Gartner may be reporting that the community sticks around, but how much impact can those 100 people, or the few thousand that “watch” the interactions, have on your business? And even if those few thousand are more engaged, is the conversation related to your product or service leading to sales influence? Or is it unrelated?

Research from Communities

There’s nothing wrong with creating a community with the purpose of interacting with the few. A hundred or a thousand participants in a community may not make a sizeable impact on your sales, but they can provide valuable insight. If your objectives are for research or product co-creation, then a community that facilitates that interaction between your brand team and your customers can be very successful. Customers are much more engaged when they know the purpose of the community is for the company to listen to their ideas. A very focused version of this is Dell IdeaStorm or MyStarbuckIdea.com, where customers post an idea and others vote it up or down. Simple. The measures of success there are insights gathered in a much more scaleable and frequent way than traditional market research.

Communities like this have their place, but they don’t necessarily have a direct impact on sales. At least until that product co-creation happens — and most marketers probably have a shorter time-horizon to show ROI, especially in the current economy.

Sales from Social Commerce

commerceTo build a boom town — community features with a direct impact on sales — marketers need to pursue a strategy that creates interactions and contributions around the product or service they’re trying to sell. This Social Commerce model fosters opportunities for the creation of content that helps others make purchasing decisions, driving more sales and resulting in a quicker ROI. This type of strategy needn’t require a person to register or become a full-fledged member — they should be able to write a product review, ask or answer a question, or write a story without feeling like they have to make a commitment. Whether that contributor feels like they’ve joined a community by participating is not the point. Their contribution is useful for the visitors to the site, who came to learn more about the brand and get their questions answered — not to “friend” people or help others. And yet, once a critical mass of content is shared, a community of shared interest will start to form. People will write the 101st review because there’s a community around a product! This “accidental community” starts to form, which amplifies the engagement to the content and profiles.

It’s a challenging time in the social media world. Marketer interest — fueled by hype over Facebook and Twitter — in community-building is rising, just as consumers begin to tire of joining yet another social network. Rather than spending time and energy developing something that’s destined to be the next brand ghost town, consider smaller ways to use social media techniques on behalf of your brand. Perhaps you want to build a community of brand loyalists to act as a focus group for product development. If you’re looking to drive immediate sales, incorporating a user contribution system — reviews, Q&As, and storytelling – around products on your own Web site is the path to success (especially in the eyes of your CFO!). The trendy Facebook-clone route, however initially exciting and attention-getting, may lead to crickets and tumbleweeds, while a more measured approach may result in a thriving little settlement.

Sam Decker Customer voice drives business purchase decisions

May 29th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

BtoB: The Magazine for Marketing StrategistsThe customer voice doesn’t just drive consumer behavior; it drives business purchase decisions as well. Just ask Bob Johnson, VP-principal analyst with the Content Optimization Practice at IDG Connect. In a recent interview with BtoB, Johnson highlighted IDG’s survey of 150 buyers involved in a major IT investment decision in the past 18 months. The survey revealed that social platforms – defined in the survey as blogs, social networks, and discussion boards – have a huge impact on businesses’ IT purchasing decisions.

As Johnson told BtoB, “social media, in terms of importance weight, has a greater weight than either editorial or vendor content alternatives” in IT investment decisions. Survey participants attributed 37% of their purchasing decision to social content, while vendor and editorial content were credited with 32% and 27%, respectively.

Before participating in public social media platforms, vendors must first make certain that their internally managed social platforms efficiently meet the needs of their target audience, Johnson says. Once their internal social platforms are in order, vendors “can and should participate” in public forums. 47% of survey respondents indicated that vendor-provided links to educational content would not negatively affect their perceptions of the peer-generated content’s legitimacy.

The key in social media is for marketers to ease off the traditional promotional angle and let their customers do the marketing for them.

Sam Decker 2009 Summit Cliffnotes #3: How the New York Times is Using WOM Insights to Build ROI

May 28th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This series of blogs summarizes key takeaways from some of the presentations and panel discussions offered at the jeffreygraham2009 Social Commerce Summit.

“How the New York Times is using WOM to drive ROI” was the keynote given by Jeffrey Graham, Executive Director of Customer Insight for the New York Times, on April  29, 2009.

Readers tell the New York Times that they buy the paper or visit NYTimes.com because the content fuels their conversations. They like to be “in the know.” They want to be where the dialogue begins.

All media is social media – including newspapers, which are a forum for communicating issues of interest to the public. But the scope of media presentation has changed drastically within the past decade. The New York Times has pursued different ways to bring its content to a global audience.

Women Multipliers
Marketers have come to realize that women play a large role in decision-making, especially in non-traditionally female-targeted categories such as technology and automobiles. Further, there is a set of “multipliers” who spur and rely on word of mouth to extend trends.

In 2008, the Times conducted an online study of more than 3,000 affluent women with in-depth interviews in NYC and LA. The survey covered investments, fashion, travel, consumer electronics and automobiles and filtered for word of mouth factors:

  • Means of influence – personal communication with at least five people per day
  • Past recommendation behavior – looking for a history of word of mouth influence
  • Personality traits – a love for learning new things, sharing ideas, and offering advice

The results revealed that 92 percent of women multipliers mentioned preferred products or services in conversations, in contrast to 79 percent of average affluent women.

Multiplier word of mouth is more valuable because the multipliers consume in greater quantities, and speak up more often. Auto non-multipliers speak to two people, for instance; multipliers speak to 14 ppl. If you reach 40 percent of the multipliers within your media plan, you double the number of recommendations made. Media planners don’t analyze multiplier data yet, but they will.

Global Multipliers
Does this trend exist only in the US and Europe? Or is it a global phenomenon?

A 2008 Reuters study analyzed similar trends amongst 4300 affluent consumers from major global nations. Multipliers were recognized based on product engagement, purchasing power, and social influence in the areas of advocacy, finance, luxury, technology, and travel.

While affluent multipliers constitute only one percent of the population, they influence 20 percent of all travel expenditure – 241 million flights – as well as 26 percent of global technology and 18 percent of global luxury purchases.

The study found a shared group of traits that is consistent around the world. Seventy-two percent of multipliers stressed the importance of being the first to try something new. Early adopters drive profitability because they rapidly adopt new products and spread the word about them. Eighty-nine percent of multipliers feel a responsibility to share their experience, offering 2.5 times the number of average consumer recommendations. Technology multipliers are asked for product recommendations a whopping average of 8 times per week.

Hidden Business Decision Influencers (B2B)
In 2008, the Times spoke with several dozen B2B individuals from various fields about the people they influence, and the ones who influence them. An average of five other voices influence business decisions, with influence overlapping industries. Businesses are influenced by a wide network of people, with many chief decision makers heavily dependent upon multiple sources of information and early adaptation of new technology. Alumni networks are among the top second-degree influencers.

What Multipliers Represent
The return on investing in multipliers was Bazaarvoice clients’ success. The Times’s metrics showed that word of mouth is the new measure of effective advertising. The NYTimes.com has seen the following results:

  • #1 newspaper site on the Web
  • 20 million monthly unique users
  • Most blogged site on the internet – extends the NYT’s mission to inform people across the world
  • Numerous industry awards

How to Utilize the Multiplier Effect

  1. Multipliers like to spread the word – enable them to spread YOUR message
  2. Multipliers are info mavens – be their source for news and trends
  3. Multipliers like to be experts – target your media to bring them YOUR news
  4. Multipliers want to talk back – use online media to cultivate a dialogue
  5. Multipliers are very environmentally conscious – increasing sustainability is key
  6. Multipliers tend to be trendsetters for things to come

womroi

Mike Svatek Technology to fuel social search

May 26th, 2009 by Mike Svatek Chief Product Officer

This blog post is guest-written by Scott Koester, Product Manager for Bazaarvoice Search.

While social search involves much more than search engine optimization, it’s important to have technology in place that attracts searchers at every level of the purchase path. The Bazaarvoice social search framework is designed to help customers find the right information at the right time for their needs, at every stage of the purchase path.

searchtechnology

While in the “awareness” mode of the purchase funnel for a new camera, a shopper might search for “top-rated cameras,” to help narrow down choices. The SearchVoice Microsite combines all user-generated content complete with category, subcategory and product level navigation, creating a great source for researchers looking for consumer recommendations. This site automatically creates fresh lists such as “top rated” or “most popular” for each category on the site, and it’s a first stop for online researchers looking for products other consumers like the most.

Once a shopper narrows down choices to select the Sony CyberShot, he may search for reviews, and their search will lead them to a search-optimized Review Landing Page. SearchVoice Landing Pages create a search engine-optimized page separate from – but linked to – the product page. This page also gets indexed by search engines and is targeted to broad, product- or service-related searches.  As more and more people turn to other consumers for recommendations, this search grows in popularity.

Finally, as a shopper is ready to buy their new Sony T900, they can again call on customer reviews to help with their purchases. SearchVoice Inline allows clients to index content directly on the product page, creating a source of fresh content that is continuously changing – Google prefers pages that get refreshed often. SearchVoice Inline gets to the heart of the searcher’s need, where the search is most specific and they’re ready to buy – when they land here, they are one click away from a purchase.

These combined technologies maximize search results for Google, creating a competitive advantage for our clients in the battle for search.
When looking to optimize your user-generated content, technology is important, but Bazaarvoice believes that technology alone doesn’t win the search battle. Bazaarvoice combines technology with Social Amplification, Dynamic Merchandising, and customized strategies based on our Social Search Playbook that help your site deliver the right content to the right person at the right time.

Learn about our holistic view of search in our blog that introduces our Social Search Framework, and watch Bazaarblog for more information about how we look at search – which goes far beyond search engines.

Brant Barton “H” is for Humor

May 25th, 2009 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

In addition to tagging reviews, questions, answers, stories and other customer-generated content with descriptive codes like “CR” for references to competitors and “CS” for customer service issues, I am starting to think that our content moderators should apply “H” to content that could dramatically boost a product’s conversion rate (because after a fit of uncontrollable laughter and the delirium that follows you simply cannot resist the urge to buy the product that is the subject of the “H”). That’s some actionable business insight for merchandising teams.

The inspiration for this post is the now infamous “Three Wolf Moon T-Shirt”, currently the #1 selling Apparel product on Amazon.com. No, that’s not a typo. I could efficiently end this post by just telling you to read a few of the reviews for this product. That would more than accomplish my goal of demonstrating the value of not taking yourself (or your brand) too seriously. But I have a minimum length requirement to meet, so I’ll go on . . .

Our good friends at Econsultancy in the UK beat me to the punch with an entertaining blog post on the t-shirt. The Washington Post published an article on the same day. No matter who you trust, that’s one damn funny t-shirt. If you trust me and took my advice above to read a few of the reviews, I bet you are now making your way through the checkout process while you finish reading this nailbiter of a post. That’s impressive multi-tasking.

We see our share of humorous reviews and many of those are just too inappropriate to post, but as reviews of the Three Wolf Moon T-Shirt aptly demonstrate, there is a very fine line between inappropriate humor and pure genius, not to mention a word of mouth marketing bonanza. I won’t speak for my colleagues at Bazaarvoice (you know who you are), but this t-shirt is responsible for a major drop in productivity last Friday because I was personally contributing to the millions of word of mouth “impressions” that the product received. While it may be difficult to put a dollar value on each of those impressions, you can most definitely put a dollar value on lost productivity.

In closing, if you offer customer reviews of your products and services, whether you are a Bazaarvoice client or not, I urge you to evaluate whether your definition of inappropriate is too strict and your tolerance of humor too low. Millions of dollars and an immeasurable wealth of customer word of mouth could be at stake!

Brett Hurt Bazaarvoice Named #1 Place to Work

May 22nd, 2009 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO
The entire team at our quarterly All Hands meeting at the Alamo Draft House.

I’m thrilled and humbled to announce that we were named Austin’s Best Place to Work!  The full article in the Austin Business Journal (ABJ) is here (and you can watch my acceptance speech here).  It’s our third year on the list of best medium-sized companies to work for, and this year we are finally #1 (up from #2 last year).

When we started Bazaarvoice, Brant and I knew culture was important. Sam and Andy quickly came on board and embodied that same focus. We knew that we needed the smartest people available, with entrepreneurial spirit and tons of passion, and in four years, through massive growth, we have not let go of our high standards, and we have never taken our eye off culture.

Each year, companies are invited to enter this competition, where employees anonymously fill out a survey asking about things like their trust in management, the level of appreciation they feel, and if they feel they are making a real contribution to their organization. What’s unique about our company is that we, in essence, ask these questions every quarter. Our employees have comprehensive performance evaluations with their managers each quarter, and we use MBOs (Management By Objectives) that we build together with employees to ensure they always know how what they do fits into the “bigger picture” at Bazaarvoice. Managers have regular one-on-one meetings with each employee, with the goal being no surprises at that quarterly evaluation.

Bazaarvoice was voted Austin's Best Place to Work.

What’s more, every employee evaluates managers (including the executives and me) each quarter through an online survey where they rate us on whether or not we are living our culture. I’ve had managers tell me how much they appreciate this – it really uncovers blind spots for them (me too), plus it gives employees a great way to give feedback to their boss. There is no fear of repercussion and we regularly emphasize the lessons learned in the great business book, Fierce Conversations (required reading at Bazaarvoice).

I’m proud to say we got an amazing 96.81 out of 100 possible points on the employee satisfaction survey. It helps me know that the open communication and culture we’ve created at Bazaarvoice is working for our employees. But we never rest on our laurels here. As a matter of fact, we just concluded our two-day executive team quarterly strategy off-site meeting where we had an impassioned discussion (like usual) about how to take our culture to the next level. We have never missed our quarterly meeting and culture has always been a key focus of our agenda.

To celebrate this cultural milestone, I’m taking the entire Austin team to celebrate at the movies – in our own theater to see Terminator Salvation.  And at a theater equipped with motion seats, no less.  We’ll see if it is worth talking about (the pre-buzz has been “interesting” and we are the 4th city in the US to get these).

The ABJ photo above was taken at our quarterly All Hands meeting at the Alamo Drafthouse, and it really exemplifies the fun atmosphere of these meetings. That’s our CMO, Sam, about to hit our huge, 52” gong – another fun Bazaarvoice tradition (and supposedly this 52″ was only one of two left in China that was available for purchase). We gong for big announcements, like when we recently hit 50 billion pieces of  user-generated content served up for our clients. As CEO, I see myself as the Chief Culture Officer (if the CEO doesn’t set the tone, you could have a real cultural breakdown). But we all own culture at Bazaarvoice, and I’m so proud of what we have built together – as a team.

Bazaarvoice is hiring – big time. If you know an incredibly smart, passionate person that wants to join a company built to win, please send him or her our way!

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Sam Decker 2009 Summit Cliffnotes #2: Getting Shoppers to Talk – Unearthing the Voice of the Customer

May 22nd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This series of blogs summarizes key takeaways from some of the presentations and panel discussions offered at the 2009 Social Commerce Summit.

“Getting Shoppers to Talk: Unearthing the Voice of the Customer” was a breakout session hosted by Sean O’Driscoll, CEO of Ant’s Eye View, and Jon Nordmark, founder and CEO of eBags, on April 28, 2009.

Insights from Sean O’Driscoll, former General Manager of Community Support and the MVP program at Microsoft:

microsoftguy

During his 15 years at Microsoft, Sean learned a lot about customers, and the power of influencers – why they matter and how to make the most of them.

While he was at Microsoft, things got more complicated as the company built new products and sold to new audiences. Sean and his team had to figure out how to drive value for everyone, from the CIO to his own mom – all over the world. The scale was enormous.

Eventually, Microsoft became a utility. The public felt that instead of choosing Microsoft, consumers merely inherited the brand. Apple, in contrast, has a lot of emotion with its customers.

Meanwhile, over in Usenet, Microsoft users began creating online conversations. Creators, critics, collectors, joiners, and spectators discussed Microsoft products via online forums.

Microsoft started paying attention to all of these conversations. They realized that “answer people” offered a lot of information on their experience with various products, on their own time. Instead of reaching every single client, the company needed to connect with an elite set of influencers who, once recruited, would battle for the brand. And so Microsoft’s Most Valuable Professional program was born. The group encompasses over 4,000 non-Microsoft employees who provide product insights to other users for them, simply because they want to.

Advice Sean gives for creating impactful customer interactions:

  • Segment. Connectors, critics, creators, and collectors all respond differently. Organize the information they offer, and make it discoverable.
  • Measure. How loyal are your customers? How do they rate your quality of service?
  • Monitor behavior. If your goal is feedback, critics are your most important demographic. The goal is to develop rapport with your supporters, and understand connectors. Start with one main goal and follow that through – you don’t have to do it all at once.
  • Enable. Different types of contributors want different things. Critics want feedback and change.

Remember the One Big Thing:

If you walk up to your customers talk to them, they will talk back. They’ll give you amazing insight. It’s up to you to close the loop. That’s how you reinvent brand activism around what you do.

Insights from Jon Nordmark, founder and CEO of eBags:

eBags.com has enjoyed a tremendous rate of growth, reaching profitability just two scant years after its launch in 1998. As a start-up company in a start-up industry, eBags stood out from its competitors for several innovative online retail techniques, including its thriving system for product ratings and reviews.

eBags was one of the first of a handful of retailers offering product reviews at the time, a planned component of the company’s marketing strategy from day one.

So how does eBags do it? And what can product reviews do for you?

Here are a few things we’ve learned along the way.

  • Review requests need to be one-on-one. Personalize emails at the top and the bottom. Customers must feel their input is valuable to the company,
  • The most effective responses come from reviewers who understand the product they are supposed to review. eBags adds a picture of the product in the solicitation email, and waits 21 days in order to give the customer time to test their new purchase.
  • Encourage your reviewers with an incentive. Promotions are a great way to drive reviews as well as traffic. But you don’t have to over-reward people for contributing – a “thank you” goes a long way.
  • Think through the cadence of your request. Ask twice, then let it go. Then try again six months later, and then a year later. Find out how they’re doing and how well the product is still holding up.
  • Make reviews a visual on your Web site. Spread the comments through your site as far as it will go. This encourages others to write reviews.

Mike Svatek The New Social Search Game: A Holistic View of “Search”

May 19th, 2009 by Mike Svatek Chief Product Officer

This blog post is guest-written by Scott Koester, Product Manager for Bazaarvoice Search

When you look at search in the new social economy, it’s a whole new ballgame. In 2010, 70 percent of all online content will be user-generated, so optimizing this information – in addition to traditional content – is key to winning new traffic. MySpace and Facebook alone have more than 450 million users – this is where people are congregating. And consumers are getting smarter in the way they search. There’s huge growth in specific search terms – those that use five or more words are growing, while those using one or two words are declining.

When considering the search problem in this social economy, you need to optimize all the user-generated content (UGC) that customers contribute, find ways to work with popular online destinations rather than compete against them, and deliver information in the ways that searchers want to find it. At Bazaarvoice, we’re helping clients fulfill all these opportunities.

It’s obvious that product or brand content won’t capture all these searchers. It’s too generic, and it’s full of “marketing speak.” UGC speaks the same language as these searchers, even going so far as making common spelling errors users make. And retailers may find that their product copy is identical – or very similar – to that on competing sites. In this case, retailers would have to focus on expensive search engine marketing campaigns to simply stand apart and capture search traffic.

UGC also excels at fueling long-tail search, which has been shown to indicate that a searcher is closer to making a purchase. For example, if you are searching for “Nissan Sedan,” you may just be looking for generic information. However, if you search for “2009 Blue Nissan Sentra SE Austin,” it’s an indication that you know what you want, and you’re looking to buy it.

From the contributor’s angle, posting a review is often just the beginning of their contribution – they often want to share their recommendations with friends and family, which opens up a whole other area of search optimization. For example, when a user reviews a product or answers a question, they can share it on their Facebook page, so the members of their social network can read it. Now that content can be found by their friends and colleagues, and it’s linked back to the product page.

Searchers also rely on experts in certain categories. Experts build credibility by the content they create and recommendations they make, and such experts often make themselves known via profiles on sites that offer UGC. Searchers go to their favorite sites that have UGC, find profiles of people like them or experts, and uncover new products those contributors recommend. All the cross-linking within the page also creates new opportunities for search engines to find this content, again bumping up the search quotient.

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In short, Bazaarvoice is creating a new way of thinking about search, and a new framework to help our clients optimize all the search possibilities. Our current SearchVoice Platform, which includes inline search, search-enabled landing pages, and cross-linked microsites, provides the technology that increases search across the entire purchase funnel. Social Amplification enables our clients to share their content beyond their site – via Facebook and other social networks, in shopping portals, and on other sites. Dynamic Merchandising lets UGC fuel successful search engine marketing programs to maximize results.

We help optimize search as soon as a client starts the implementation process, then each client’s Bazaarvoice Community Manager assesses their search performance using our Search Playbook and helps them advance across the search maturity model. We continuously innovate in search to help our clients win the battle for more search traffic via UGC.

Look for more about search on this blog in the coming weeks, and request our white paper, “Boosting Natural Search Traffic using Ratings and Reviews.

Sam Decker Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt interviewed on “The Businessmakers” radio show

May 18th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

businessmakers-logoListen in as Brett Hurt describes the original idea for Bazaarvoice, early customers, and how Bazaarvoice’s success continues to surprise him.

You’ll hear…

  • What Bazaarvoice does
  • A brief definition of Social Commerce
  • Why Brett founded Bazaarvoice and where our name came from
  • Dealing with the fear of customer reviews and how Bazaarvoice educated its original clients
  • Bazaarvoice branched out from retail to now serve financial services, manufacturers — and even facial tissues!
  • Bazaarvoice’s transparent feedback internally for managers
  • Challenges during our start-up
  • Advice for aspiring entrepreneurs

Tune in for Esther Steinfeld’s chat with Brett, originally broadcast on May 16, 2009 — listen here.