Posts Tagged ‘econsultancy’

Sam Decker Econsultancy’s take on social commerce trends

July 10th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This blog post is guest-written by Jacob Salamon, Bazaarvoice’s European Marketing Manager. lieb_rebecca_2008

This is the final post in our three-part blog series with Rebecca Lieb, Econsultancy’s Vice President of North America. Econsultancy, the UK’s leading source of insight on digital marketing and e-commerce, has been a partner and resource to Bazaarvoice in the UK for over two years and is now launching its US office in New York City. Here, Rebecca shares her thoughts on research and e-commerce trends. Read the first post on growing the new US office and the second post on monetizing Twitter and social media.

Q: What are some of the smartest retailers doing right now to stave off effects of the economy?

A: First and foremost, they’re selling online. E-commerce is suffering as a channel along with the rest of the economy, but it’s not suffering to the extent that offline retail is. They’re getting smarter about search, both SEO and SEM, as well as vertical and local search, and many are having great success with online coupons, which have really taken off in tough times. They’re also building social media components into their efforts, both on-site and off. We’re talking customer reviews, of course, but also using tools like Twitter, blogs, photo-sharing and more to encourage users to do no small part of the online marketing lifting for them.

Q: What are some trends you’ve identified, specifically with regard to social commerce?  As customer reviews are now commonplace, what is Econsultancy’s view on the future of social commerce?

A: People are social by nature, and commerce is an everyday activity. Wikipedia defines social commerce as a type of e-commerce in which “active participation of customers and their personal relationships are at the forefront.” This is nothing new — commerce and social interaction have commingled since the days of the agora. Recommendations, reviews, lists, and other forms of sharing and participating in shopping and commerce are utterly inherent to human nature. Online tools enable extending these very natural impulses and proclivities into the realm of e-commerce. People have always gone shopping, at least in part, to be social.

Q: We advocate embracing customer conversations on your site – to drive social interactions within the purchase path.  How else do you see brands engaging in social initiatives to drive measurable sales?

A: Twitter is the channel most in the news these days. Dell recently attributed over $3 million in sales — $3 million! — to Twitter-generated sales. Certainly tech companies have jumped on that bandwagon, but so have United Airlines, which is offering Twitter-only deals, and Starbucks, which is giving away gift cards in the channel.

I’m also seeing companies use Facebook to generate contests and user-generated content, not to mention bases of fans and loyal supporters. Certainly this drives sales and affinity at least indirectly.

PR is another important tool in social channels. Grasshopper recently sent 5,000 chocolate-covered grasshoppers to influential bloggers, generating mountains of social media coverage. Automotive companies are doing the same, offering loaner vehicles to influentials in exchange for coverage. These initiatives, when properly executed, can generate sales, if not at least consideration — and have the potential of going really viral.

Really, ways to increase sales in social channels are limited only by imagination and proper execution — neither of which is to be taken lightly. This stuff can be hard. But the rewards can make the effort worthwhile, as can the minimal impact on marketing budgets.

Sam Decker Econsultancy’s take on monetizing Twitter and social media

July 3rd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This blog post is guest-written by Jacob Salamon, Bazaarvoice’s European Marketing Manager. lieb_rebecca_2008

This is the second post in our three-part blog series with Rebecca Lieb, Econsultancy’s Vice President of North America. Econsultancy, the UK’s leading source of insight on digital marketing and e-commerce, has been a partner and resource to Bazaarvoice in the UK for over two years and is now launching its US office in New York City. Here, Rebecca shares her thoughts on monetizing Twitter and social media. Read the first post on growing the new US office, and keep an eye out for the next post in this series.

Q: What has been the biggest surprise in covering digital marketing this year?

A: I don’t know how surprising this is, but it’s been very gratifying to see digital marketing more or less hold its own in a very difficult financial climate. Sure, we’re no longer expecting those previously forecasted double-digit growth numbers for online advertising as we were last year. But it’s heartening to see web-based marketing to more or less maintain through these difficult economic times. Obviously, this is due to economies in the channel that just don’t exist in traditional marketing media. But it’s also due in no small part to the just-in-time rise of social media. More and more, marketers are relying on building their own communications channels, and encouraging users to do so as well, rather than buying ads and plunking them inside someone else’s media. This flexibility and adaptability is what really makes interactive “interactive.” So it’s been surprising, as well as delightful, to see more, not less, innovation in troubled times.

Q: Econsultancy conducts plenty of research throughout the year.  What were some of the most unexpected results you discovered?

A: The extent of Twitter’s exponential growth over the last few months has taken us by surprise. A recent report we published found that 49% of companies are now incorporating Twitter into their marketing efforts, up from a meager 3 percent at the start of 2008.

We’ve benefited ourselves from the Twitter explosion and now have 8,000-plus followers for our @econsultancy account. This sends us a very significant amount of traffic and enables us to communicate and engage with our community in an unprecedented way.

Twitter is a big reason why companies are waking up to the importance of social media. Our recently published Online Measurement and Strategy Report found 40 percent of companies are now measuring online reputation and social media metrics compared to only 21 percent a year ago.

Another pleasant surprise has been the big jump in companies that are effectively measuring return on investment from both paid search and search engine optimization.

The proportion of company respondents who say that they are tracking PPC ROI effectively has increased from 33 percent last year to 45 percent in 2009. For SEO, there has been an even bigger increase (in those tracking ROI effectively), from 20 percent to 35 percent.

The recession has obviously focused minds on measurement and optimization, but even so, this was a really big jump. But having said that, there are still far too few companies out there that are measuring and optimizing properly.

Q: Your founder & CEO, Ashley Friedlein, has recently mentioned that Twitter has become the fourth-largest referrer of traffic to the Econsultancy site.  How are you leveraging Twitter, and how would you recommend other brands make use of it?

A: Amazing, isn’t it, that something as new as Twitter could have this much of an impact on site traffic so quickly? As publishers, we’re naturally pushing our RSS feed headlines into Twitter, and everyone associated with the company tweets as well. We were also the first company I’m aware of — certainly weeks before Skittles’ experiment — to feature a live, unfiltered Twitter feed on our homepage for all mentions of “Econsultancy.” And to encourage tweets about our content, we’ve added a prominent “tweet this” chicklet on our content pages. It’s much more visible than our other social media links for Digg, StumbleUpon or Delicious because Twitter simply confers that much more value.

While it’s difficult to make a blanket recommendation as to how all businesses might leverage Twitter, because there is never a one-size-fits-all solution for all businesses and all business goals, it does make sense to consider how Twitter can help, and then work to leverage that benefit. In our case, as publishers, we’re capitalizing on traffic. Other businesses have used Twitter to support customer service, e.g. @comcastcares, or sales. Check out @Zappos_Service for a good example of that latter category.

Sam Decker Econsultancy conquers America

June 29th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This blog post is guest-written by Jacob Salamon, Bazaarvoice’s European Marketing Manager.
lieb_rebecca_2008
Econsultancy, the UK’s leading source of insight on digital marketing and e-commerce, has been a partner and resource to Bazaarvoice in the UK for over two years and is now launching its US office in New York City, so we sat down with Rebecca Lieb, Econsultancy’s Vice President of North America. Look for more insights in the coming weeks in this three-part blog series.

Q: I understand Econsultancy has recently opened a New York office to service e-commerce professionals in the United States.  Tell us more about your plans for the US market, and about any upcoming events or opportunities our readers should know about.

A: In the US, Econsultancy is oxymoronic: a 10 year-old start-up. In the UK, we’re by far the leading source of information on digital marketing and e-commerce, but as a brand on this side of the pond, we’re much less well-known. Nevertheless, without any effort, a significant and growing number of users and subscribers began coming to us from the US, logical, given our content is in English and our search rankings are good. The goal of having a US presence is to expand everything into North America: our publications, research, events, training and membership.

Already we’ve had strong success with expanding our coverage of the US market, content-wise. We’ve just run our first training course on social media, and we’re planning some smaller, informal roundtable events in the coming week. In October, we’re really ratcheting things up with our Peer Summit,  a larger and very networking-focused event in New York. I’ve been producing conferences for years and am personally very excited about the format of this event, which focuses much more on interaction and knowledge exchange, and much less on PowerPoint.

Q: Tell us about your recent rebranding, the success you’ve had with it, and some of the learning you’ve uncovered along the way.

A: The redesigned Econsultancy website soft-launched just as I joined the company early this year, so I wasn’t part of the rather onerous 18 or so month slog toward its completion. Basically, a 10-year-old site couldn’t keep up with our growth, or with the new products and services we offer — and plan to offer — our members. We needed new technological underpinnings, a better taxonomy, APIs and a whole host of functionalities that just weren’t possible with the old site. So, as an exception to the rule, the cobbler’s children actually got new shoes.

It was certainly a process, considering everything from URL structure to metadata and international functionality. Very fortunately, we have seen an increase in conversions. We don’t just function as a publisher, of course, but also as an e-commerce play in terms of sales of memberships, conferences and training — all important metrics that we track. The most difficult part of the rebranding – at least, the one I experienced, was the precipitous, if temporary, drop in our search rankings once the new site went live. We expected that to happen, of course, but we didn’t know how severely or for how long we’d be affected. Fortunately, after a month or so, we fully recovered. During that period, it was critical to get the 301 redirects right, not just to ensure users landed on the desired pages, but also to maintain the authority of our inbound links.

Q: What’s next for Econsultancy?

A: Why, we conquer America of course! At least our target slice of America, which are this country’s interactive marketers and online retailers. Our short-term goal is to deliver both the quality and quantity of great content to our readers and members here as we do in the UK. But it’s also to help build community and forums, both online and off, where people can share ideas and best practices that will help them to succeed with their businesses online.

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!

Sam Decker Key Insights for UK Retailing — Interview with Ashley Friedlein, E-consultancy CEO

March 18th, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

I've been 'social network' connected to Ashley Friedlein, CEO for Econsultancy, for years. We've exchanged emails as ecommerce professionals when I was managing Dell.com. Now, as Bazaarvoice accelerates our growth in the UK, it was great to get to know Ashley and his firm better on a recent visit to the UK. It's amazing what his firm has accomplished over the years.

E-consultancy is the UK's leading online publisher of best practice internet marketing reports, research and how-to guides.  We recently did a study together on Social Commerce in the UK, which he references below (ask us for a copy). If there's anyone who knows UK retailing, and has enough context between UK and US best practices, it's Ashley.

He was kind enough to lend his time to a few questions that are useful for us and all of our readers…

How did E-consultancy start?

The name really came about because I owned the domain name so it was the easiest thing to do at the time – back in 1998. Like many people I bought a load of domain names which I thought would make me rich. Then came the dot com crash and I let them lapse. Now I wish I’d held on to them!

The idea was to provide a community, supported by content, that helped those professionally involved with digital marketing and e-commerce. Essentially, to help people find out ‘what works, what doesn’t, and why’. In the early days most of this help came from others in our community rather than from us direct. We were doing what is now called ‘social media’ in the last millennium.  

Matthew O’Riordan, my co-founder, and I launched E-consultancy.com in 1999 as a hobby. In 2002 I wrote the business plan, and secured the funding, to relaunch it as a proper publishing business. We started with selling subscriptions to our guides and research and have since added events and training.

Where is it headed?

In many ways I’m glad we launched the business during the dot com crash. It meant the business had to be built profitably; it meant we had little competition at the time; it means we had time to build a brand and we still have a very loyal core user base who have ‘been with us from the start’ when things were tough for everyone.

Now we have over 70,000 registered users, over 30 employees and should do around $2m in profit this year. This gives us the stability, and resources, to invest and grow.

Apart from continued strong organic growth (particularly in training, both online and offline), we’re currently completely rebuilding our web platform to allow for three main areas of possible expansion:

  1. Completely customisable ‘white label’ versions of E-consultancy.com which we can offer to our enterprise training customers who increasingly want ‘their own E-consultancy’.
  2. International expansion – currently more than 50% of our subscribers are non-UK already. However, we see a lot of interesting opportunities globally, particularly in the area of e-learning.
  3. Sector expansion – perhaps we can take our platform and our business model and apply it to a completely different sector…?Currently I’m most excited about the challenge of creating a world-class online presence which shows that we are really practising what we preach when it comes to digital marketing best practice.

Do you find conversion rates for UK ecommerce site going up, down, or staying the same…and why?

I’m not a huge fan of “conversion rates” when talked about in broad terms to be honest. As a ratio, rather than an absolute metric, it can mask all the important detail. Conversion rates differ by so many different things: seasonality, what your competition is up to, the source of the customer, whether the customer is repeat or not, how fast the site is that day, the product category etc. etc.

Conversion rates often go down just when sales values are going up. Think of the long queues in shops around Christmas. Conversion rates might well be lower (customers can’t be bothered to queue, products out of stock etc.) , the customer experience can be painful at best, and yet sales are at their highest.
 
And do you include conversions that happen in other channels? Multi-channel marketing, and retailing, is an important and fascinating area. Obsessing over online conversion rates may risk obscuring what is really going on across all the channels.

But, if you’re pushing me, and all things being equal, on average I would say that online conversion rates are generally getting slightly better. Not much better, but slightly.

It is a no-brainer that retailers must continue to obsess about improving their online customer proposition and experience: best-in-class search and navigation, engaging and relevant content, high quality product information, clear stock availability and delivery details, flexible and fast fulfilment etc. The unfortunate truth is, however, that customers are demanding creatures – particularly online where they have a world of choice. So as fast as you improve your site, the customers’ expectations are rising even faster.


What aspects of UK e-commerce are evolving most rapidly and that are the next big steps in driving conversion?

In an increasingly competitive online marketplace, retailers are recognising that they need to provide the type of intuitive and interactive experience which consumers are familiar with from social network sites.  

Similarly, expectations have also been raised in terms of the content and information on Web sites. People shouldn’t need to struggle to justify a potential purchase decision, and this is why there is so much value in areas such as customer ratings and reviews, audio and video based product guides and information, multi-channel pick up and return options, improved customer service and so on.

I think there needs to be continued focus at both the macro level of customer proposition and brand as well as at the micro level of data-driven intelligence that can incrementally tweak conversion rates upwards.

I believe the internet is driving a polarisation, or crystallisation, of what any particular brand is ‘about’, which tends to favour either the very big and broad, or the niche. Being something in between, like some middle-tier department stores that used to be able to survive based on location alone, is a very challenging place to be online.

I’ve never believed that all customers online are only interested in price. However, you do need to know what value you are offering, and absolutely nail the delivery of that, to succeed and survive. As I heard one Amazon executive say you should ‘under-promise and over-deliver’. If you can, then the internet is a fantastic, and free, enabler of customer advocacy (which, happily, also tends to drive up your natural search rankings which are also critical).

On the micro-level – I still think we’re a way off figuring out much of the art and science of selling online. You know how supermarkets pump fresh bread, or coffee, smells through their shops to make you buy more? What is the equivalent online? What are the ‘scent trails’ of online buying psychology?

How would you contrast the differences between US and UK commerce companies. What are the first things that come to mind?

In terms of ecommerce the US is ahead of the UK. High levels of broadband penetration happened in the US before the UK.  Adoption of ‘new’ areas like more sophisticated online merchandising, personalisation, behavioural targeting, ratings and reviews, happens in the US first.

The UK, and Europe, appears to have a different design aesthetic. This is clear when you watch the TV ads in the US versus the UK. US ecommerce sites, to a UK audience, often appear to be very similar and quite ‘in your face’ – a cultural distinction often made. It’s still very early days to see many “mom and pop” businesses doing anything much online in the UK.

It seems that in the US it can often be the companies outside the top tier who have been the early adopters of cutting edge technology and Web 2.0-type features, with the biggest brands following suit at a later stage.

In the UK it is more usually the best known companies who have been the first to innovate with features such as ratings, reviews and online video.


Do you think customer participation / contribution (for user generated content) is much different in the UK than other countries? If so, how?

I think that user-generated content has a huge role to play in all markets though the extent of consumer participation will vary. There is not as much blogging in the UK as there is in the US but I see no obvious reason for any less participation in ratings and reviews this side of the pond.  

Do you think social commerce is a growing priority for UK commerce, and if so, why?

Social commerce is definitely getting on the radar for internet retailers although there isn’t as much UK adoption yet as there is in the United States.

According to the E-consultancy / Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Report published last year, 28% of companies who sell online are using ratings and reviews, with a further 52% considering this.

We believe that the percentage for adoption has gone up significantly since the research was carried out in 2007, but the proportion still isn’t as high in the US where around half of blue chips are said to have implemented ratings and reviews.


What are the biggest obstacles UK retailers have to overcome in order to embrace user generated content?

For some retailers, there is still a big challenge getting boardroom-level buy-in for user generated content. Some companies are still not convinced about the need to embrace UGC. These tend to be organisations which haven’t yet grasped the importance of a customer-centric approach.

For other companies, there are concerns about the time and effort required to ensure that something like ratings and reviews gets critical mass and makes a real difference to their traffic and conversion rates. E-commerce teams are typically under-staffed and they have to decide which areas to prioritise.

What are hot topics of interest for UK retailers – what research, events, speakers pique their interest right now?

Integrated multi-channel marketing is now a much more important area as companies realise the importance of joining up different touch points effectively.

The concept of customer engagement is something which is much more widely talked about, because companies understand that they will lose out to competitors if they don’t connect with consumers in a way which is intuitive, appropriate and seamless.

The great thing about the digital environment is that it allows companies to interact with customers repeatedly while also being able to measure that interaction.

The rise of social networks, blogs and user-generated content have brought into focus the tremendous opportunities available to those who listen and interact effectively, and also the dangers of not doing so.

Multivariate and A/B Web site testing is something which is gaining traction in the UK as companies look for ways of improving their conversion rates. A 1% percentage change in session conversion rates can make a huge difference for large e-tailers and it’s now often about making small adjustments and then measuring this.

There isn’t so much low-hanging fruit for online retailers. They are looking more at relatively subtle changes to areas such as search, navigation, and the shopping checkout.

Another key trend is the idea of atomization whereby content on Web sites is increasingly being broken down into smaller units and then distributed via feeds, links and widgets. Consumers are increasingly using personalized homepages and so retailers need to think about how they can bring their brands and products to the attention of consumers, for example on their Google homepage or on social networks. Retailers need to stop thinking about their digital presence as a destination Web site.