Posts Tagged ‘Bryan-Eisenberg’

Sam Decker Bazaarvoice Summit Cliffnotes #4: Bryan Eisenberg: Persona-lization through UGC Merchandising and Marketing

July 25th, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This is the fourth in our series of key takeaways from some of the presentations and panel discussions offered at the Social Commerce Summit in May 2008.

Bryan Eisenberg, Co-founder of FutureNow and author of bestselling books Call to Action and Waiting for Your Cat to Bark, challenged summit attendees to design sites that meet the needs of different types of visitors.

As an example, Bryan discussed how your different shopper modalities (or Personas) would prefer to shop for movies.

  1. Spontaneous (hip, stylish customers) – would be drawn by new and popular titles
  2. Humanistic (relationship-oriented) – most responsive to customer reviews and top-rated products
  3. Methodical (categorical and detail-oriented) – would likely shop by genre and read full descriptions
  4. Competitive (those who know what they want) – shop directly by actor, title, director, etc.

With customer profiles, you can help reviewers establish credibility amongst other members in the community and can further employ ratings and reviews to help your shoppers find the products that will most appeal to people like them.

Read more from Bryan about personas here.

Brett Hurt Andy Sernovitz’s Video Interviews from Our Social Commerce Summit

July 6th, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Andy Sernovitz is a Bazaarvoice Advisory Board member and the founder of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA)*. Andy is also a fellow Wharton grad, the author of Word of Mouth Marketing, a serial entrepreneur, and a prominent keynote speaker at many conferences, including our own Social Commerce Summit.

I was happy to see Andy leverage the valuable community we assembled at our first-ever and sold-out Summit in May by recording five video interviews. It was truly an amazing group of individuals, charged with word of mouth marketing at many of the largest companies in the world, from Bank of America to Wal-Mart. It was humbling to be in the presence of so many smart industry leaders, sharing best practices with each other in our rapidly emerging field. Because of them (as well as the hard work by our team), we have set a very high bar for our Summit next year.

Andy recently published his interview of me. We discussed how user-generated content is changing the merchandising culture at companies, helping them become more customer-centric and successful as a result.

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Read on to see more interviews by Andy.

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Sam Decker Social Commerce Summit Agenda Now Live!

February 2nd, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

117 days and counting to the opening night of the first annual Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Summit. Questions you have will get answered: Where is Social Commerce going. How do I maximize return. What am I missing that others have discovered? What are the pitfalls. How to I evolve my strategy? There will be la lot of learning, networking and fun (and yes, free stuff and the best BBQ in Central Texas!). We're capping attendance at a max of 200 spots, and we're already starting to fill up! Strategic sponsors are signed up, including Cheetahmail, Endeca, ATG, Omniture, Aggregate Knowledge, Coremetrics, and others.

And the agenda is now posted at www.socialcommercesummit.com. Below are some of our topics and speakers for our 2.5 day summit in Austin TX, May 28-30…

  • How to Grow Your Social Commerce Strategy
  • Strategies for Opening Your Brand
  • Word of Mouth Marketing:  Increase Visitors and Buyers By Creating Conversations
  • 10 "Must Do" User-Generated Tactics (How Do You Score?)
  • Is Your Ecommerce System Anti-Social?
  • Case Study: Customer-to-Customer Answers with Answer Depot
  • Turning Negative and Rejected Reviews into Assets
  • Research & Strategy: Unleashing the Power of Influencers
  • Insights for Driving the Highest ROI from User Content
  • Feeding the Voice: How to Increase Participation
  • Dell UGC Case Study: Culture, Organization & Metrics
  • Social Commerce Analytics: How to Measure ROI and More
  • How to Scale Up Search Visits with UGC
  • Turning the Social Technology Groundswell to Your Advantage
  • Ze Frank Q&A: How Do We Interact?
  • Bazaarvoice Product Roadmap Lightning Round
  • Real-World Tips to Evolve into a Customer-Centric Culture
  • 10 Ideas for Online Advertising "2.0" 
  • Beyond the Web: UGC Goes Multi-Channel
  • Social Networking and Web 2.0: Practical Ideas that Work for Retailers
  • The "Just Ask" Session
  • and more…

Speakers include:

  • Andy Sernovitz, author, Word of Mouth Marketing
  • Bryan Eisenberg, Co-founder, FutureNow and author, Call to Action and Waiting for Your Cat to Bark
  • Ed Keller, CEO, The Keller Fay Group and author, The Influentials
  • Ethan Holland, E-marketing Manager, Jewelry Television
  • Jim Osborne, VP eCommerce & Online Marketing for Loblaw
  • Josh Bernoff, Vice President and Principal Analyst, Forrester Research
  • Kelly Mooney, President, Resource Interactive and author, The Open Brand
  • Matt Corey, VP Marketing for Golfsmith
  • Paul Miller, SVP Direct Commerce for Sears
  • Sean McDonald, Director, Communities and Conversations, Dell Inc.
  • Seth Greenberg, Director, Online Advertising and Internet Media for Intuit
  • Simon Rodrigue, Sr. Manager eCommerce, The Home Depot Canada
  • Stuart Wallock, Sr. Mgr, Global Consumer Online Marketing, Dell Inc.
  • Ze Frank of zefrank.com (Video Blogger)
  • and more…

Online registration is available now for clients and invited prospects. If you do not know your registration code, email summit@bazaarvoice.com. The cap is 200 registrants and we're getting signups every day, so register now!

Sam Decker Bryan Eisenberg FREE Webinar: Optimizing Product Reviews for Conversion

September 20th, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Bryan Eisenberg of FutureNow and GrokDotCom — and Author of Call to Action and Waiting for Your Cat to Bark — recently created a 15 minute webcast showing best- and worst-practice examples of ratings and reviews implementation. He highlights several points and considerations for an optimal conversion and persuasion:

  • Placement for Visibility
    • Above the fold
    • Size
    • Stars or other graphic
    • Near point of attention or action
  • Review Interaction
    • Ease of reading
    • Sorting
    • Rating Distribution
    • Use across the site
  • Single Dimension versus Multi Dimension Reviews
    • What are the key attributes across different categories
    • Can review content influence purchase decision
  • Credibility Factors
    • Negative and Positive reviews
    • Review Approval policy
    • Reviewer Characteristics
  • What does a review mean
    • Number of Reviews
    • What questions are you asking
    • Qualitative versus quantitative

The Bazaarvoice implementation is very customizable, so while we are at the direction of our clients, our implementation team and community managers recommend many of these best practices to our clients to get the most out of the deployment of ratings and reviews. Further, he highlights several policy best practices that are already part of our solution. If you'd like a consultative meeting with our implementation team about ratings and reviews best practices, email info@bazaarvoice.com. Or, you can contact Bryan at www.futurenowinc.com

Sam Decker Shop.org Summit — An Inflection Point for Online Retailers

October 18th, 2006 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Last week was Shop.org's Annual Summit in New York. It was a great show…2,200 attendees vs. 1,500 last year. Many new attendees. eCommerce is booming.

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I led a panel at the Web 2.0 Boot Camp the first day of the show where we shared new technologies to help online retailers reach a market who are ignoring advertising and marketing. From Meebo that provides instant messaging within a web site to Dotomi that customizes ads based on their last visit to your site to Allurent that presents product content in an ‘alluring’ way! The one day “boot camp” for Web 2.0 was a showcase of strategies, tactics and technologies to reach the increasingly connected, informed and over-advertised market.

I will go on record to say this Shop.org event was an inflection point for retailers…or perhaps better put, a wake-up-call. Over the past year there have been topics at other shows related to consumer generated content, social media, Web 2.0 and word of mouth. However, at the event last week I think we've reached an apex. This is the largest event of the year for Shop.org. The event started with an entire day focused on Web 2.0, followed by the regular agenda with four of the top speakers Shop.org invited (not including Brett or myself) who talked about word of mouth and how the market is different now.

  • Seth Godin (author of Purple Cow, Small is the New Big) – Advertising and spamming don’t work. What’s left? Getting referenced by others by doing something unique.
  • Barry Schwartz (author of Paradox of Choice) – There are too many choices. Help customers filter and reduce choice.
  • Kelly Mooney (President of Resource Interactive) – Millenials are multi-tasking, short-attention-span, trust-one-another shoppers
  • Bryan Eisenberg (author of Waiting for Your Cat to Bark) – Customers are in control. No longer like Dog’s responding to our commands of advertising…they are like finicky cats.

Kelly Mooney had a fantastic presentation featuring video diaries of Millenials who are the new bulge of spending power. In the words of one young shopper, “I’m trained now to ignore ads”. Eyetracking heatmaps confirm this. Interestingly, these young buyers want to ‘fit in’. They won’t buy without looking for justification, whether that be from their friends or from people like them. This is consistent with the Edelman study that found “Trust in someone like me”  has tripled in the last 2 years.

I believe the behavior to turn to others for shopping advice is a common theme for all shoppers today. We recently released the results on a joint study with iPerceptions and CompUSA that uncovered 81% of CompUSA visitors believed ratings and reviews were important when they are researching or planning a purchase.

These are exciting times. We (and our clients) are learning, experiencing, evolving, growing and optimize C2C (customer to customer) marketing. And at some level, the new strategies for this new market are not just relevant for retailers, but all B2C, B2B, manufacturers, and service companies.

Sam Decker Bazaarvoice Secrets for Shop.org Annual Summit (NYC, Oct. 10-12)

October 4th, 2006 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

If you're going to Shop.org Annual Summit next week in NY (Oct. 10-12) come see meet the team at booth #120. We have several announcements, case studies and demos to show you.

You can also come to a panel or roundtable we are hosting at the Web 2.0 Bootcamp (pre-show event) and during the summit. Here's our schedule if you want to print this.

 

And, for a select few people who read this (you can tell your closest colleagues) we are going to perform a unique display of ecommerce wizardry. Come by our booth and we will guess your conversion rate. If we get it wrong, we have a special 'under-the-table' giveaway for you (limited supply)!

Oh, and one more thing (this is like the peeler in the ginsu knife commercial, but better!)…

This is not announced anywhere else. Bryan Eisenberg (speaking at the conference) will be signing and we will give you FREE copies of his new best-selling book, Waiting for Your Cat to Bark, at our booth (#120) on Thursday, Oct. 12 at 1pm and 4:15pm breaks. He may be guessing some conversion rates as well!

See you there!

Brett Hurt The Long Tail’s Impact on Word of Mouth and eCommerce

July 8th, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

"The hierarchy of attention has inverted – credibility now rises from below.  MTV and Tower Records no longer decide who win.  You do."  – from "The Rise and Fall of the Hit" by Chris Anderson, Wired magazine, July, 2006

"The Long Tail" book coverChris Anderson's book, "The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More", is finally out.  Anderson, the editor-in-chief of Wired (my favorite magazine), maintains a popular blog about the journey of researching the book.  The article cited above is based on it, and it's brilliant.  As I like to think about emerging trends in a historical context, here is my favorite excerpt:

  • "Before you shed too many tears for the declining hit, remember that the era of the blockbuster was an anomaly. Before the Industrial Revolution, culture was mostly local – niches were geographic. The economy was agrarian, which distributed populations as broadly as the land. Distance divided people, giving rise to such diversity as regional accents and folk music, and the lack of rapid transportation and communications limited the mixing of cultures and the propagation of ideas and trends."

When I came up with our company name, Bazaarvoice, I was inspired by The Cluetrain Manifesto and thinking about how word of mouth has always been the most powerful form of marketing.  Human nature hasn't changed; it isn't like we all woke up last year thinking, "We need to communicate with each other more".  What has changed is the ease of communicating in a globally-connected sense.  This has profound implications for word of mouth and is driving an explosion in consumer-generated content.  As Anderson writes, "the Internet's peer-to-peer architecture is optimized for a symmetrical traffic load, with as many senders as receivers and data transmissions spread out over geography and time".  For all of the wonder of the Internet, it may be the most wondrous medium of all due to its power to connect people like we used to be connected locally (before the advent of the one-way, controlled broadcast medium).

I would recommend that you read Anderson's article (I can't recommend his book yet as I haven't read it) and think about how it will change your business.  Here is how I think "the long tail" changes the world of retail and eCommerce:

  • More personalized products
  • More niche eCommerce opportunities with established and start-up businesses capitalizing on them
  • Faster product cycle times due to better and more accessible information from customers about what they like and don't like about the product
    • Product reviews will play a big role here; we are already seeing our clients make some pretty profound merchandising decisions based on our word of mouth analytics
  • Better customer service
    • Store reviews and customer reviews will also play a big role here
    • With more choice, tighter community, and a greater demand for niches, personalized service will become an even more important differentiator
  • Better multichannel integration
    • Buy online and pick up in store initiatives are just the beginning; REI is a good example (30% of all online purchases are picked up in their stores)
    • Retailers will have to leverage their use of channels to provide a better overall customer experience or risk losing them to niche businesses
    • Customer-centric, multichannel database and analytics opportunities will be a huge area of opportunity and frustration; RFID will only make this more complex
  • More private-label brands
    • JCPenney's ana line is a good recent example but there are many, many others
    • This bullet may be redundant with the second bullet as the reason these private labels are being launched is a combination of profit margin motives as well as focusing on attractive niches for revenue growth and differentiation
  • An entire discipline will evolve on creating products that drive word of mouth
    • I enjoyed Bryan Eisenberg's article on ClickZ this week and think that he and Roy Williams are on the right track here; Bryan cites three triggers – architectural, kinetic, and generous – and provides examples from our client's product reviews of these triggers driving five-star product satisfaction and word of mouth
    • This will lead to much tighter communication between retailers and their suppliers with product reviews being one of the most important sources of data for these conversations (obviously returns and sales being the two longest-adopted sources)
    • Members of the rapidly growing Word of Mouth Marketing Association will play a big role in this evolution

What am I missing from this list?  And how do you think it will change your business?

Two other important notes that are relevant to this post:

  1. In this same issue of Wired, I was happy to see "The Power of Peer Production" named as one of the six trends driving the global economy, by Chris Anderson no less.
  2. Speaking of hits, Bryan and Jeffrey Eisenberg's new book, "Waiting For Your Cat to Bark?", is out and has already been named to the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today bestsellers list.  Here is the praise I wrote for the book when Bryan was nice enough to give me a preview copy:

    "The Web is a democratizing force as the world's largest global brain.  It educates everyone on the pros and cons of every product, service, and even person.  An educated person doesn't react well to the traditional art of manipulation that some marketers attempt to employ in their campaigns.  As a matter of fact, it makes them angry and defensive … like a cat backed into a corner.  No one understands this new world of marketing better than the Eisenbergs.  Waiting For Your Cat to Bark? is the marketing manifesto of our generation.  Read it, weep, and then go do something about it."