Posts Tagged ‘Google’

Mike Svatek Google announces “Rich Snippets”

June 2nd, 2009 by Mike Svatek Chief Product Officer

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

Reviews now have an even bigger impact on search results.

On Tuesday, May 12, Google introduced Rich Snippets, a new feature that allows Google to display product rating, review count, and actual review text direct in Google search results.

We already know reviews have a positive impact on search, and this further underscores the need for reviews on any and all websites that want to attract people researching or buying products or services. Organizations without reviews will be left even further behind in the search game.

And it’s great news for Bazaarvoice clients – this free feature will automatically be turned on for all 525+ brand sites Bazaarvoice powers, driving traffic to more than 2 million pages.

We already know that reviews on sites enhance the customer experience and drive sales. Now, Rich Snippets amps up the impact reviews will have on natural search results. Searchers – especially those who are ready to buy – won’t be able to ignore these review snapshots.

Google’s own experiments have shown that users find the new data valuable — if they see useful and relevant information from the page, they are more likely to click through. And we already know customers are looking specifically for product reviews – December 2008 Nielson research found that 81% of shoppers seek reviews.

Maximizing results with Rich Snippets

Review volume matters. Google’s Rich Snippets will show a summary of review information, and pages with more reviews will appear more favorable. In short, it’s important that all products are reviewed – and reviewed a lot.  Bazaarvoice Community Managers, who act as an extension of their clients’ marketing teams, constantly gather and share best practices for driving new volume and engagement, so our clients’ sites rank well.

Syndicate manufacturer reviews to retailers to boost traffic. Retailers need more reviews, and today manufacturers can help build this volume through content syndication. BrandVoice – Bazaarvoice’s product that enables manufacturers to capture reviews on their own sites, then syndicate them to retailer sites – allows the manufacturer to directly, positively impact search results for its key retailers.

Grab the long tail of search. Searchers are getting more specific: according to Avinash Kaushik, Google’s Analytics Evangelist, the average search string has increased 25% since 2008. And the more specific the search, the closer the searcher is to buying. For example, a search for “Nissan Sedan,” may be a search for generic information; however, a search for “2009 Blue Nissan Sentra SE Austin,” is an indication that the searcher knows what he wants and is looking to buy.

More and more, user-generated content drives the way shoppers search, and Rich Snippets is one more way Bazaarvoice clients can benefit from reviews on their site. Here is an example of how content powered by Rich Snippets could be displayed.

Google Rich Snippets

Sam Decker New Book by Bryan Eisenberg: Always Be Testing

August 31st, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Bryan Eisenberg (Bazaarvoice advisor) just released his latest book, Always Be Testing, The Complete Guide to Google Website Optimizer. The book is only 25% on  Google Optimizer and 75% how to test, what you should test, and insights into customer buying behavior. In other words, regardless of what optimizer solution you have, this book will be useful. In fact, if you or your employees are responsible for web site performance and results, this book should sit on their desk and will be referenced often. Bryan covers topics such as readability, use of color and images, terminology, statistical significance, headlines, calls to action, persuasive copywriting, navigation, up-sell, cross-sell, trust and credibility, security and privacy,  and several case studies.

And on page 240 he dedicates four pages to “Using Reviews”.  In that section, Bryan highlights the following useful questions to ask about reviews on your site:

  1. Do you offer credible, quality reviews?
  2. Are they fresh? Specific?
  3. Are there sufficient numbers of reviews?
  4. How do the negative reviews compare to the positive reviews?
  5. Are you encouraging reviews that transcend the “nice,” “worked fin,” and “great product” responses that really don’t contribute to elaborating on your product descriptions?
  6. Do you offer multiple or appropriate ways for customers to provide review information?
  7. Do you screen your reviews or have a procedure for removing blatantly inappropriate reviews?
  8. Do you manipulate your reviews to skew feedback in a way that could backfire on you?
  9. Do you make the effort to communicate intelligent reviews to product manufacturers so they might work to improve their product?

If you’re interested in how Bazaarvoice answers some of these questions with our solution, check out our Ratings and Reviews page and Service page.

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 Facebook Approaches $10 Billion While Google Surpasses Wal-Mart

September 25th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Facebook's logoWow – do we ever live in the digital age!  You have probably already heard the buzz about Facebook having a rumored $10 billion valuation.  Microsoft is thinking about investing to own 5% of this incredibly valuable and young (as in the age of the company) social network.  Two years ago when Brant and I were in Silicon Valley on our initial Bazaarvoice fundraising tour, there was a ton of buzz about Facebook taking $10 million in funding at a $100 million valuation.  Accel Partners, one of my investors in Coremetrics (the company I founded prior to Bazaarvoice), had led the round and taken a 10% stake.  Now Accel's stake in Facebook is worth $1 billion, for a 10,000% return so far.

Google's logoBut you probably haven't heard about this: today, Google's valuation surpassed Wal-Mart's for the first time.  Wal-Mart is the largest company in the world as the Fortune and Global 1.  As of today's market close, Google is worth $177.6 billion while Wal-Mart is worth $175.58 billion.  Wal-Mart has a P/E ratio of 14.46 while Google's is 46.24.  The high relative P/E is a reflection of Google's insane growth (and projected growth) and margins since their founding (that may seem like a high P/E overall but note that Yahoo!'s is 51.75 and the only explanation is that the market must value a more diversified and theoretically more stable revenue stream).

And talk about a young company.  While Facebook was founded in 2004, Google was founded in 1998 (that's around $20 billion of value created every year since their founding).  It's amazing to think that only around 10% of all advertising is spent online today.  The revenue shift from offline to online advertising is mindboggling.  We are witnessing the creation of the most valuable company in the history of the world.

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Sam Decker SEO Webinar — Boosting Natural Search with User Generated Content (Wednesday, August 29)

August 24th, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Often we host webinars for clients and key prospects and send private announcements via email. However, due to the high interest and complexity of user-generated /customer-created content and search engine optimization, we decided to open this to a wider audience. Today we issued a release on this upcoming webinar, which will be given by Jeff Watts, our search expert and search/syndication product manager.

Bazaarvoice clients learn a lot from Jeff, and through the SyndicateVoice and SearchVoice program they have also gained a lot of revenue impact. Jeff will share key findings across many large multi-channel retailers as well as strategies (such as segmented content and avoiding duplicate content) that is critical to making user generated content effective for boosting natural search traffic. There will be time for questions at the end as well. Click on the link below to register — there is a limited number of 'seats'!

 

Boosting Natural Search Traffic Through Consumer-Generated Content

Join us for a live webinar on August 29th to hear Jeff Watts, a veteran search engine optimization strategist and product manager for Bazaarvoice, explain how you can employ consumer-generated content to help drive down your acquisition costs and improve the efficacy of your search engine marketing.

This webinar will cover:
* Why user-generated content indexes well with search engines
* Performance of review content in the long tail of search
* The Bazaarvoice approach to search engine optimization
* Sample case studies and best practices

Date:       
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
       
Time:       
1:00 PM – 2:00 PM CDT

System Requirements
PC-based attendees
Required: Windows® 2000, XP Home, XP Pro, 2003 Server, Vista

Macintosh®-based attendees
Required: Mac OS® X 10.3.9 (Panther®) or newer

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www.gotomeeting.com/register/513013753

Brett Hurt How Advertising Will Evolve Using Word of Mouth

July 3rd, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

“Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half..”
-John Wanamaker, advertising pioneer and famous merchant

YouTube Preview ImageWe had the pleasure of hosting Andy Sernovitz, the founder of WOMMA and a Bazaarvoice Advisory Board member, at our office a few weeks ago. Andy gave a lunch presentation to our team, and something he said really struck me: “Advertising is the tax companies pay to sell poor products”. Google, Starbucks, and many other brave companies decided to buck the formula and invest in the product instead of “brand imagery” (i.e., advertising). Andy has countless examples, and wrote a fantastic book on the subject that has been endorsed by the likes of Seth Godin and Guy Kawasaki, two of my favorite authors.

And then I met with a large apparel company a week later that is afraid of reviews. Prospect: “We tell the consumer how they should think about our products”. Prospect: “A hip woman in NYC may be turned off by a woman in Topeka, Kansas writing a review on a trendy fashion”. I’ll save you my lengthy and impassioned response.

As I write this, I’m on my flight back from London after spending a week in our UK office, speaking at the e-consultancy conference and meeting with prospects, partners, and press. And tomorrow is the 4th, so I’m feeling kind of revolutionary. So, here is my take on how advertising will evolve.

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Brett Hurt The Web Browser Gets Social

April 7th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

It was just a matter of time.  Just like shopping is often a social activity, Web browsing/shopping should be too.  So it came as no surprise to me that Mozilla recently launched "The Coop", which includes social networking features directly in the browser.  BusinessWeek covered the news.  I have been using Flock for awhile, which is based on Mozilla/Firefox, but The Coop seems more "socially connected" to me.  The surprising thing is that Microsoft hasn't already released similar features (perhaps you are slower to innovate when you own almost 80% of the Web browser market).  With their resources and the lead that Google and Yahoo! have on social networking, it seems like Microsoft would be gunning to catch up.  Sure, they have Windows Live Spaces, but it is no MySpace or Facebook (or YouTube or Yahoo! Answers).  And it is strange that Apple is behind too.

In any case, I view the Mozilla news as very significant.  Just like del.icio.us and StumbleUpon have Web browser plug-ins that drive high adoption of their services, so will "The Coop".  Instead of visiting Facebook as a Web destination, The Coop integrates it directly into your Web browser.  Kelly Mooney of Resource Interactive showed a great demo of "social shopping" at the Shop.org Annual Summit last year.  Resource Interactive had created the demo for Victoria's Secret Pink.  Via mobile and the Web, they made it appear easy for an in-store shopper to share an outfit that she was thinking of buying with her friends online.  Everyone benefited from the resulting feedback and shopping list it created for all.  Millennials have been shown to follow each other more than the more "independent" generations of the past, so the Resource demo seemed like a natural evolution.  And it is no mistake that The Coop chose Facebook as their embedded partner, as Facebook is most heavily used by Millennials.

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Brett Hurt Word-of-Mouth Wisdom #5: Josh Kopelman, First Round Capital

March 17th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

For the fifth installment of my Word-of-Mouth Wisdom interview series, I decided to tap our investor base.  At Bazaarvoice, we are fortunate to count six serial entrepreneurs as investors in our company.  One of them is Josh Kopelman, the founder of Half.com and a prominent figure in the Web 2.0 scene.  Josh calls himself a "coastally challenged VC" on his blog "Redeye VC" because he is based in Philadelphia.  But you wouldn't know it because his investments are in some of the most prominent early-stage companies that I know of.  His portfolio includes companies like 1-800-FREE411 (currently owns 6% of the 411 market out of nowhere), Aggregate Knowledge (a recent Bazaarvoice partner), Krugle, Riya, Root Markets, StumbleUpon, VideoEgg, Wikia, and YackPack.  I can tell you from personal experience that Josh is an extraordinarily helpful investor.  His connections are extraordinary and his entrepreneurial experience is incredibly impressive.

Word-of-Mouth Wisdom Interview Series

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Brett Hurt Word-of-Mouth Wisdom #2: Joan Broughton of Shop.org

December 31st, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

In my second interview for the Word-of-Mouth Wisdom Interview Series (and the last of 2006), I was fortunate enough to get some of Joan Broughton's time.  Joan is a good friend and a former fellow Shop.org Board of Directors member.  I have worked with Joan for many years while at Coremetrics as REI was (and still is) a Coremetrics' client.  While at Coremetrics, Joan and I worked on a project that tracked the success of Google paid search campaigns (SEM) to offline (in-store and call center) sales, and the results were very enlightening.  When I was contemplating launching Bazaarvoice in May of 2005, I asked Joan for her wisdom on the matter.  In short, I have always respected Joan's intelligence, accomplishments, and true partnership. 

Joan is Shop.org's VP of ContJoan Broughton, Shop.org's VP of Content and Educationent and Education.  I remember how excited I was on the day Joan told me she was joining Shop.org's executive team, and she has already had an enormous impact on the quality of the events, new hires (such as Larry Joseloff), and new initiatives (such as the recent blog launch).  Joan couldn't have brought a better background to the Shop.org team.  As I mentioned, she previously worked for REI as their VP of Multi-Channel Programs.  She managed two business units, encompassing over $100 million in annual revenue with a team of 200 people.  Joan was responsible for launching REI's "order online, pick up in store" option for customers, as well as many online services.  Prior to REI, Joan was Office Depot's Director of Web Publishing.  She has spent more than 12 years in the online industry, including working at O'Reilly & Associates and America Online.  In other words, Joan has more online experience than almost anyone I know.

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Brett Hurt JPG Magazine, Ego, and Photo Reviews

December 2nd, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Recently Brant wrote about the marriage of user-generated content (UGC) and print (Gannett and “citizen journalism”), and in a comment to his post I referenced the same movement with UGC and TV (CNN and iReport). So, I guess it was no shocker to me when I read TechCrunch this morning and learned about the relaunch of JPG Magazine. The new JPG Magazine is a little bit of Flickr, digg, and the old JPG Magazine rolled into one. Users upload their photos, the community votes, and the winner’s photos show up in the print edition and they win $100 and a one-year subscription to the magazine. I spent some time voting this morning, and it is actually quite addictive. Why?

JPG Magazine

Well, the answer to that question is something I have been thinking about ever since launching Bazaarvoice with Brant. Why do people take the time to write reviews? [We will announce next week that we served over 19 million reviews on Cyber Monday!] Why do people take the time (like I did this morning) to vote on community photos for JPG Magazine? Why do people take the time to label images Google has crawled? [Google's top contributor, "wordgirl", has labeled 1,335,500 images since they launched this only three months ago - that is a staggering 14,839 images per day since launch!]

The answer is actually more complex than you may think. It is a combination of ego, social connection, and good karma. Let me explain:

1. Ego – At Bazaarvoice, we know that a reviewer comes back to our client’s site three times, on average, after submitting a review to see if it has posted yet. When people take the time to share their opinion, they want to know the world heard it. This fact alone gives our clients three opportunities to resell a customer. In a recent report, Patti Freeman-Evans researched these reviewers.

2. Social connection – Why do you share your favorite movie with an acquaintance? Do you care if they watch it? Why do we talk about our favorite music? The answer is linked to human nature. We all care about connecting with each other as humans. This is what drives the creation of culture.

3. Good karma – A universal truth is that if you help someone, it makes you feel good. When reviewers help each other shop, it saves time. Saving time is one of the most important things we can help each other do, especially in the manic, multitasking world we live in today.

Now, if you apply these three elements to JPG Magazine, it all begins to make sense.

Obviously, we are thinking about the power of photos in customer-generated content at Bazaarvoice. A while back, we added Photo Reviews to our feature set. Wayne blogged about this recently. If you think about the three elements above, photos are a very strong component. Experts believe that the advent of the digital camera is one of the keys to why MySpace took off versus its predecessors (Geocities, etc).

How should you leverage photo reviews? With contests and multichannel recognition. Don’t just run a contest for a gift certificate give-away for customers that write a review and include a photo, post the winning photo on your home page! Use it in an email campaign. Use it in a circular. Use it in an in-store display. If your community of customers sees that all three elements – ego, social connection, and good karma – are maximized by you, then it will spark customer participation unlike anything you have seen before. Threadless’ entire business model is based on this, and I think it is a brilliant application of the three.

For fun, here is a photo we recently moderated that you won’t see on one of our client’s site because it came from a rejected review. Alas, it added no obvious value, there was no text review associated with it, and I think this person was just bored (they were thinking about element #1 above only – ego). But, it does grab your attention!

Attack Fish!