Posts Tagged ‘Best-Buy’

Brett Hurt The “hidden” impact of 100 billion: the new textbook

February 28th, 2010 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

100 billion impressions servedThis week, you will see a series of Bazaarblog posts by our executive team about the achievement of our biggest milestone to date. As of late last week (the week that CNN profiled us!), we passed 100 billion impressions of user-generated content, including customer Reviews, Answers, and Stories! As of this writing, the real-time counter on our homepage is over 100.3 billion and climbing rapidly. Why count impressions? Well, in a world where 80% of consumers seek user-generated content while shopping, impressions of user-generated content are “the new advertising.” Actually, what is “new” is old – “the voice of the marketplace” (read the story behind our name) has always been with us, but this is the first time in human history that word of mouth is digital, and that’s more transformational than all of us can imagine today.

As we celebrate this milestone, we are also close to celebrating our 5-year anniversary (Brant and I founded Bazaarvoice on May 2, 2005). With 80% of consumers now looking for customer reviews, it is hard to appreciate now just how few U.S. retailers offered customer reviews on their websites in May of 2005. Would you believe only four? Today we serve more than 50 of the top 100 U.S. retailers, more than 25 of the top 50 U.K. retailers, and similar numbers in Australia, France, and Germany. And we serve many clients outside of retail, from health care to manufacturing to financial services. We have rapidly grown into a company of 750 clients and 515 employees globally, operating across 25 international languages. I do not take our success for granted one bit and I’m very proud of and thankful for our partnerships with our clients. I’m also proud of the culture we have created here. We spend the majority of our waking time at work, and we strive to make that time as fun and meaningful as possible. Our passionate culture impacts the way we serve our clients and also give back to the community.

Bazaarvoice School of C2C MarketingAs I look back to my first Bazaarblog post, I think back to my analytical roots, spending seven years building Coremetrics, and reflect on how much we have achieved on the analytical front at Bazaarvoice. The “hidden” impact of 100 billion impressions is how we are writing the new marketing and merchandising textbook together with our clients. In a world of increasingly fragmented media, a dramatic shift to time spent in the online channel vs. other channels, and a rise in the prominence of the voice of the customer, the “hidden” impact is felt in how marketers and merchandisers adopt new practices based on user-generated content. And, to be totally frank, I underestimated the impact in how Bazaarvoice would change the world in this way. The Bazaarvoice School of C2C Marketing Seal to the left is from our first Social Commerce Summit in 2008, which quickly sold-out and was a magical event, full of clients speaking about writing the new textbook together (our fifth Summit is coming up in Austin April 19-21 and is almost sold-out already).

So this blog is dedicated to some of the most dramatic changes I have seen on the path to 100 billion. Here is a look back on just a few of them:

It has been an amazing 4 years, 10 months, and I want to take this opportunity to sincerely thank all of our clients, employees, partners, investors, and advisors. We promise not to take our success for granted, and we are ramping up R&D and Client Services like never before. This quarter alone, we are attempting to hire at least 80 people, but our very high bar makes this difficult indeed (we have 14 full-time recruiters working in our office at Bazaarvoice today and there is nothing more important for our culture than its foundation: our people). If you know of someone that may be interested in joining us, see the many jobs available here and note our referral incentives.

The next 100 billion impression milestone will no doubt be achieved much faster than the first, but I expect our impact to be no less profound than with the first (see our many case studies, webinars, or whitepapers for more). Thank you, thank you, and thank you again for your support. And stay tuned to this blog as we continue this exciting journey. As I said in my first-ever blog post on Feb. 3rd, 2006 (and remains just as true today):

Welcome to the age of customer empowerment in our hyper-connected global village! We look forward to being your tour guide in this wild, wild ride.

Heather Brunner HO-HO-Whole lotta Holiday Promotions

January 16th, 2009 by Heather Brunner Chief Operations Officer

This holiday season, several Bazaarvoice clients featured Ratings & Reviews and Bazaarvoice Stories in their holiday promotions – we saw more than 15 clients use UGC as the center of their holiday promotional activities. Many Bazaarvoice clients offered suggestions for top-rated gifts and others merchandised top-rated products in their gift guides. Here are some of the most notable campaigns featuring customer-generated content.

Click on each image to see it full-size.

Williams-Sonoma has quickly realized the value of UGC. This holiday season they used customer reviews in several emails to promote holiday foods and merchandise top-rated cookware.

 

Beauty products purveyor philosophy re-styled the look and feel of Ratings & Reviews for the holidays. They also used top-rated gifts as one way to merchandise products in their holiday shop and promoted this on their homepage.

 

 

 Throughout the holiday shopping season Best Buy featured three different homepage banner ads with pop-up URLs to direct the consumers to various shopping categories. One of their favored merchandising categories was top-rated products.

 

 

 

Levenger featured top-rated products as “Customer Favorites” in their holiday gift guide and highlighted this in an email.

 

 

 

Land of Nod gave away a $1,000 gift card in return for reviews…just in time for customers to do some holiday shopping and for the Land of Nod to collect some great content to help indecisive shoppers.

 

 

This holiday season saw a huge reflection of the customer voice in retail. We’ll keep you posted on other unique holiday promotions this year!

Chad Bockius BrandVoice helps open the dialogue between brands, consumers, and retailers

January 15th, 2009 by Chad Bockius Former Director of Product Marketing

Last week, the Bazaarvoice manufacturing sales team headed to Las Vegas for the annual Consumer Electronics Show. It is the largest convention of the year with 2,700 exhibitors, 110,000 attendees and over 1.7 million square feet of exhibit space.

It was a great opportunity to meet with our consumer electronic clients and hear about how they are using the voice of the customer to drive their business. One of the most exciting conversations was with Patrick Beck, a Marketing Manager for Altec Lansing. Altec Lansing is an industry leader in the design, manufacture, marketing, and support of advanced audio solutions for PCs and related technologies.

Altec Lansing recently launched the Bazaarvoice Ratings & Reviews service and most importantly are breathing customer oxygen (as Sam Decker would say) into the organization. This was prominently displayed as part of the Altec Lansing future product exhibit room where they bring buyers and partners in to show them the next generation technology coming out of the company. Here are a few pictures from the room (our lips are sealed on what great new things will be coming to market).
 
 
We talked to Patrick about their program and the genesis behind these display ads. He said that at Altec it is “important for us to a have an open dialogue with the marketplace.” This type of conversation is supported from all parts of the organization. One group that is already benefitting is Product Development. Recently they had a product that was being rated very highly; however, when they analyzed the review content they found some great insight. Customers loved everything about the product except for the fact that it attracted fingerprints. The 24×7 focus group created by Ratings & Reviews enables Altec and other companies to learn from their customers in real time.

We also discussed feedback from outside the organization. Customers are clearly supportive of the idea judging by the content already shared. Patrick said their “retailers are really behind the idea as well.” Not only will it help Altec learn about the needs of their customers it also provides them invaluable content to share with their online retail counterparts.

Here is an example where Altec is sharing review content on Best Buy. This type of content syndication helps retailers fill gaps in their review base and most importantly provides a complete picture for customers so they can make an informed product decision.

Brett Hurt An Incredibly Transformational Time in History (Part 2)

April 19th, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Part 1 of this post hit a nerve.  I received many emails from long-time industry friends as well as employees in our company.  It makes me happy to know that a lot of you are thinking about the same profound issues that I am.

As I promised, Part 2 is more focused on the forces shaping global commerce that we directly see in our business, working with our clients and partners.

5.    Digitally archived word-of-mouth: Blogs are here to stay (see BusinessWeek for a recap).  Word-of-mouth online is not a phase.  It’s a permanent shift.  Word-of-mouth has always been with us (that’s why I named our company Bazaarvoice).  More than 70 of the top 100 retailers in the U.S. have, or are launching, customer reviews today.  When Brant and I launched Bazaarvoice three years ago, only five retailers in the U.S. offered customer reviews, including Amazon.com.  Over the past three years, we have served 10 billion reviews to shoppers (see our recent celebration of this and real-time counter) and are on a current run-rate to serve another 20 billion over just the next year of our business.  Customer reviews are word-of-mouth.  People speak the same way about products online as they do offline.  We are literally seeing word-of-mouth for the first time in human history.

        Luxury retailers are still vigorously debating this – not wanting to give up control and open up their brand.  Like I do almost every week (it seems), I spent time on Wednesday in NYC debating this with the head of online marketing and merchandising of a luxury apparel retailer.  Meanwhile, Best Buy and Wal-Mart have been launching incredible multichannel campaigns (see them here and here), leveraging the power of customer reviews to drive sales online and offline.  Wal-Mart and QVC have all of their online merchandisers plugged into our reports.  They are having intense conversations with their suppliers to reduce returns, increase customer satisfaction, and ultimately evolve their offerings.  The end-game?  Better products and services for all of us.  I knew we were on to something big when we started Bazaarvoice.  But I had no idea it would affect this much change, this quickly.  The fact that Wal-Mart launched customer-review-focused, in-store nationwide campaigns only six months after they launched with us online has staggering implications for the retail industry.

        And it’s not just limited to retail.  Any market where word-of-mouth plays a significant role in driving the transaction are good markets for the type of transformation we offer.  We are, or soon will be (due to signed agreements), powering customer reviews for some of the largest manufacturers of consumer products, banks, credit unions, insurance companies, portals, travel sites, and healthcare companies.  We are doing this globally, in 20 international languages.  We have four offices now – Austin, London, Paris, and now Singapore.  This is a global movement.  As an entrepreneur, it is impossible for me to not be passionate about helping clients lead this transformation.  Word-of-mouth online is an incredibly disruptive force, and I mean this in a positive way if harnessed correctly.  Why did I start this company after seven years at Coremetrics?  Because I knew it worked – but I didn't realize that it worked as well as I know it does now. 

        Seven years ago, Michael Porter wrote about the Web’s incredibly disruptive impact on the five forces (standard material for any MBA program).  When I read this article in 2001, I thought, "Porter is late to the game".  Now when I re-read it in the context of the social media movement, I think he was incredibly visionary.  Smart companies are reaping the rewards of that disruption, while others have been too slow to change and are going out of business.

6.    Six degrees of separation (tip of the hat to my brilliant and passionate friend, Mitch): Millennials are growing up connected to social networks, namely Facebook.  Their network of friends is intact for as long as they’ve been in “the system”.  They will be able to track their friends’ progress throughout life’s many stages – forever.  I’ve been a programmer since I was 7 and have communicated online (via BBSs) since I was 8 (launching my own when I was 10).  So I can relate.  But I can’t imagine all of the implications of all of this connectedness.  What does it mean, as a human being, to be able to so easily track your friends evolution in life as they go from preteen to teen to college to career to marriage to parenthood and, ultimately, to death?  A typical Millennial is connected to hundreds of friends on Facebook.  By comparison, I personally keep in close touch with only one of my early childhood friends (a few more are reconnecting via Facebook, but I have missed decades of their life and its hard to relate to them anymore). 

        How will these Millennials be shaped by this as shoppers?  As people?  Obviously, social media everywhere will be an expectation.  Ubiquitous Web access, via mobile, is rapidly coming.  How will companies adapt?  Typical Facebook banner-ads are getting .005% click-thru rates, as reported on the Web 2.0 panel at Shop.org last week by those helping their clients experiment with them.  That’s pathetic performance!  Millennials don’t want the disruption by brands when they are in the modality of friending – unless they actually help them enhance that experience.  Being on Google, Yahoo!, or Live.com and clicking on a paid-search link when they are in a shopping modality is a whole different story, and obviously that works – ridiculously well.  Facebook applications, however, are performing when they give unique value to these consumers.  On that same Shop.org panel, the Victoria’s Secret PINK Facebook application was pointed as one good example. 

        What are the long-term implications of this connectedness?  I don’t know, but we’re determined to help figure this out by working with all of our clients.

Thank you again for an amazing three years in business.  It is a true honor to work with such smart clients, and I look forward to seeing you soon at our Social Commerce Summit

Brett Hurt How User-Generated Content Could Radically Transform Governments

March 2nd, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

User-generated content is radically transforming retail.  Wal-Mart launching walmart.com/ratings as the new method of shopping, and promoting it via their in-store receipts and shelf fact tags is radically customer-centric.  Best Buy launching bestbuy.com/topratedcameras as the new call to action in their circulars, along with featured customer review excerpts, is just as radical.  Why "radical"?  Because if you are a supplier to Best Buy or Wal-Mart, you have to be accessible within these new shopping paths.  If you aren't?  You will be studying customer reviews to craft more top-rated products.  What Best Buy and Wal-Mart are doing will, undoubtedly, be the most popular methods of shopping in the future. 

Wikileaks.org logoMy co-founder, Brant Barton, told me about Wikileaks.org a year ago.  At the time, we discussed that it could be the new user-generated "Watergate".  I didn't write about it then because, frankly, I wanted to see if it had staying power.  And then I read an article today, one year later, about how they were shut down by a federal judge, only to quickly reopen under massive protest.  If you haven't checked out this NY Times article, or their site yet, it is worth doing so.  User-generated content, via a connected global experience (i.e., the Internet/Web), will radically transform governments, corporations, and journalism, just like it is already doing for retail and travel.  There is no way it won't.  Information can't be confined to small geographic spaces anymore.  And accountability will be enforced throughout the system.  Operating with ethics and integrity is the only way.  And don't get me started with what happens when all voting in elections is truly done via the Internet, instead of today's outdated and cumbersome method.  The cat is already out of the bag.

We live in such an exciting period in history.  Humanity is being unleashed online, and it will only accelerate from here via word-of-mouth.

Additional materials: Look at this NY Times blog entry for the background on where Wikileaks.org originated from.  A globally-connected experience, indeed.

Brett Hurt Intuit Launched the Largest Online Promotion of Customer Reviews in History

January 27th, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Intuit's TurboTaxThis weekend, Intuit launched the largest online campaign to promote customer reviews in history (at least that I know of).  Over 500 million impressions were served on the home page of AOL, MSN, and Yahoo! to promote TurboTax.  In just the past five days of being live, Intuit has collected over 4,000 customer reviews across their TurboTax product line.

This marks a seachange in the financial software space.  Intuit is known as one of the best companies in the world to work for, and now they are known as one of the most "open" brands for embracing customer centricity through user-generated content.  Although the reviews are generally very positive, what makes them authentic to customers is that even a 5-star review will point out features that Intuit can improve in their next release of TurboTax.

I applaud Seth Greenberg, the leader of this initiative and a former Shop.org Board peer and CEO of eHobbies, and his team of remarkable people.

I encourage you to check it out for yourself by visiting TurboTax's home page to see the reviews.  And here are three of the campaign creatives that appeared this weekend.

AOL "Review Bubbles" (note the instant-messenger look):

 

Review quote:

 Yahoo!'s home page:

 

Note: these are online-only promotions.  If you have been missing the news on Bazaarblog, check out these great examples of multichannel promotions in 2008 from Best Buy (Bazaarblog link) and Wal-Mart (Bazaarblog link).

Wayne Stribling Best Buy Using Reviews in Advertising

January 23rd, 2008 by Wayne Stribling Former VP of Client Services

Research has proven that customer reviews drive sales conversion, reduce product returns, fuel online search, and significantly influence the purchasing decisions of online shoppers. And we know that consumers want to hear from people like them.

So why not take it a step further and utilize customer generated content in the form of product reviews in advertising?

Advertising has become so ubiquitous that it is mostly ignored and consumers don’t trust the messages that companies send them. But the customer’s voice is as powerful offline as it is online, so why not take advantage of it?

 Best Buy Sunday Circular

Best Buy recently featured their customers’ voices – actual snippets from online product reviews along with product ratings – in their nationwide Sunday newspaper circular. They utilized a clear call to action to drive consumers directly to their “Top Rated Cameras” page, giving shoppers quick and easy access to top rated cameras. This not only provides a great way for Best Buy to advertise their top cameras, but it allows them to easily measure the success of this advertisement by measuring traffic to this page and sales conversion of these products.

This is another example of a Bazaarvoice best practice developed by our team of Community Managers – use your customers’ words to fuel your entire marketing mix. We strongly encourage our clients to use their customer reviews (along with other valuable user generated content such as from our Ask & Answer, BrandVoice and Stories products) in all forms of advertising: email marketing, online ads, store signage, print ads, Facebook groups, etc.

There is no more effective way to get customers to listen than to let them hear from other customers just like them. This is the future of advertising or should I say “effective" advertising!
 

Sam Decker 63% Customers More Likely to Buy on Sites with Reviews

April 10th, 2006 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

eVOC Insights recently announced results of a syndicated study comparing Amazon and Circuit City to Walmart and BestBuy. One of the primary findings was purchase preference was much higher at Amazon and Circuit City.

One of the primary reasons:

Circuit City and Amazon have product ratings and reviews. Walmart and Best Buy do not.

From the study: 

In general, 63% of users indicate they are more likely to purchase from a site if it has ratings and reviews. If executed properly, ratings and reviews can boost the confidence in making purchases as well as foster a trusted relationship with site visitors.

 

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Competitive Online Report Reveals Amazon And Circuitcity Preferred Over Bestbuy And Walmart

eVOC Insights & RelevantView
4/5/2006 11:42:52 AM

SAN FRANCISCO, CA and WESTPORT, CT —April 5, 2006— eVOC Insights, a customer experience consulting firm and, RelevantView, a leading technology provider of Web-based research solutions, announce the release of a new syndicated retail report Ratings, Reviews and the Customer Decision Process: Amazon vs. BestBuy vs. CircuitCity vs. Walmart. This report takes a closer look at how consumers interact with four leading online retail Websites and provides insights into what drives purchase preference.
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