Posts Tagged ‘customer-ratings’

Brett Hurt Another Major Win in Client Services: Heather Brunner

August 30th, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

In our Software as a Service (SaaS), or Application Service Provider (ASP), business model, nothing is more important to me than stressing the “S” (for “Service”).  And our services are quite complex.  While our entire company is very focused on client services, the front-line is covered by a wide range of teams on a global basis.  These teams are: Engineering Operations, Content Operations, Implementation, Support, Community Management, Analytics, and Consulting.  Engineering Operations rolls up under Engineering, obviously.  And that team has done an incredible job of having virtually impeccable up-time since we launched our initial solution, Ratings & Reviews, in beta three years ago.  Today, this isn’t easy with six (soon to be seven) solutions (three core solutions coupled with three amplifiers) live in twenty international languages.  Our clients often tell us that we are the best vendor they work with in this area, and we are very proud of that.  The other six teams roll up under Client Services.

Heather Brunner headshotIt takes a very talented and experienced person to manage a global team of such complexity to the level that our clients, our executive team, and I expect.  But we found her.  I am incredibly proud to announce that Heather Brunner has joined us as our Senior Vice President of Worldwide Client Services.  Her first day was Monday, and we put out the press release on Wednesday.  Her ability to rapidly ramp has impressed our entire team, and I have already had several important client-facing meetings with her during week one.

I have known Heather for many years, first working with her when she was a Regional Vice President for Concero while I was the CEO of Coremetrics.  I was impressed with her back then, and Concero did a great job for Coremetrics during a very important, foundational period.  But Heather has grown her career so much since then.  Most recently, she served as the CEO of Nuvo, a wholly owned subsidary of Trilogy.  Prior to Nuvo, Heather was the COO of B-Side.  In past jobs, she has served as a the VP of Client Services at Coremetrics, the VP of Client Delivery and Operations at Trilogy, a Practice Director at Oracle, and a Senior Manager at Accenture (where I also began my career).

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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

Brant Barton 5 Ideas to Help Your Shoppers Find What They Are Looking For

March 4th, 2008 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

By Luke Iseman, Partnerships Director 

U2 is a great band, but far too many ecommerce experiences make me recall their 1987 chart-topper, "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For." Even at leading online retailers, it’s often way too hard for me to find the information I need to move from browsing to buying.

At Bazaarvoice, we’re doing our best to change that by integrating the voice of the customer throughout the shopping experience, including how shoppers search, navigate, and discover the products that best match their needs. Listed below are 5 unique examples of how we’re helping shoppers worldwide find what they’re looking for:

1. Top Rated Product categories: Merchandising categories that highlight the highest-rated items drive increased conversion, higher average order values, and greater sales per visitor.

2. Sort By Customer Ratings: Shoppers that sort product search results by customer rating bought 34% more than other searchers at Golfsmith.

3. Multi-focal Navigation: Enabling your shoppers to use customer ratings and reviews data along with other criteria to sort through hundreds of products makes online shopping more like reality: you wouldn’t walk into a Wal-Mart and just sort through everything by price alone!

4. Review-Enabled Landing Pages For Brands: This is new, but early results look promising. Also enticing is the possibility of retailers offering a unique branding opportunity to their top suppliers, perhaps for a fee!

5. Smarter Recommendations: Featuring customer ratings data in product recommendation windows helps recommendation engines deliver more relevant recommendations.

We’re excited about what we’ve accomplished with our customers and partners so far, but we’re even more excited about what they will do next. Have an idea for leveraging social commerce data to enhance the shopping experience? Please take a minute to include it in the comments below. Any day a customer brings us an idea for a new integration is indeed a beautiful day.

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).

Brett Hurt The Emotional Difference in Reviewing People vs. Products

June 15th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Avvo logoRecently, one of our clients, Avvo, launched ratings and reviews.  You can now rate and review lawyers online.  I know because I was emailed by one of ours, Clay Arendes, as soon as Avvo went live.  I gladly wrote a review on the wonderful service we have received from him for almost two years now.  Although I marinate in Web 2.0 daily, the act of writing a review on Clay made me realize something: I write more reviews on people than I do on products.

It is always dangerous to make any conclusions based on only your own behavior.  You need to look no further than the failure of Webvan, which raised $1 billion based on the premise that everyone in the U.S. was like San Franciscans.  But I still find it fascinating that I am more compelled to write about people than products.  Perhaps it is the nature of my job or personality type.  Or perhaps most of us talk more about people (i.e., generating more word of mouth) than products in everyday life.  Let’s not forget how many Americans voted on the last American Idol (74 million in the last round).

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