Posts Tagged ‘ratings-reviews’

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.

Sam Decker Bazaarvoice #1 for Ratings & Reviews Among Internet Retailer 500

August 3rd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

guideWe’re always excited to see the Internet Retailer Top 500 Guide, and the 2009 edition just came out. Not only does it list the top online retailers based on annual online revenue, but it also gives a breakdown of the top eCommerce vendors these top retailers use.

The intent of the vendor ranking is to help retailers make decisions about suppliers. Internet Retailer is a great organization and we’re happy to be listed as one of the top providers of customer reviews; however, we noticed that the numbers can be a bit deceiving. The breakdown cited Bazaarvoice as serving  40 of the Internet Retailer 500. In fact, we are proud that we partner with over 100 of the Internet Retailer 500, making Bazaarvoice #1 for ratings and reviews, not to mention for social commerce solutions.

Why did they cite only 40? In the case of the Internet Retailer Guide, the methodology is for retailers to self report about which eCommerce providers they used. It’s the prerogative of the one person who fills out the survey to choose or know who their provider is for each function of their ecommerce ecosystem. It’s possible larger clients are less inclined to divulge all their providers, or perhaps the person filling out the survey doesn’t know all of their providers. Either way, according to our actual client records, Bazaarvoice was vastly underreported in this year’s Guide. We noticed other large eCommerce providers, such as IBM and ATG, were also underrepresented in the survey.

You could also look at market leadership in terms of size of clients or business size. In the Internet Retailer Guide, no additional weight was given to the largest retailers – the #1 retailer is ranked the same as #500. While smaller retailers may serve niche markets, the huge mass retailers amass tons of internal knowledge and expertise to become the largest in the United States, and more of the larger retailers choose Bazaarvoice. Among the Top 50 retailers, Bazaarvoice outranks the closest competition by a ratio of nearly 7:1 with clients like Best Buy, Dell, QVC, Macy’s, Costco, Overstock.com, and more. And in the Top 100, we outserve our nearest competitor by a ratio of 4:1.  See our partial client list here (not all clients give permission to display their logos).clients
When you factor in retailers who don’t have reviews or host them in-house, Bazaarvoice’s leadership is even more pronounced, with more than 80% of the Top 100 retailers choosing Bazaarvoice. And we are just talking about our Ratings & Reviews product, not to mention our other social commerce solutions, such as Ask & Answer and Stories.

This is an important point because as a hosted provider, part of our value to each client is learning from the whole. We help shape and share best practices from innovative, smaller clients (such as Vintage Tub and Bath or Fair Indigo) to large multi-channel retailers, such as Best Buy, Dell, and Costco. We truly believe we are inventing the future with our clients, and with a cross-vertical client list across small and large clients, we are able to innovate products rapidly (every seven weeks) and share best practices that help all clients grow ROI from social commerce.

Today over 525 brands, including over 100 of the Internet Retailer 500, turn to Bazaarvoice because we are the leader in ratings and reviews…and moreover the leader in social commerce.  We’d rather not beat our chest about these things, but we are proud of the company we keep, proud of what we’ve accomplished, and believe it’s important that our clients know the facts.

Sam Decker Top online cycling retailer Wiggle launches Ratings & Reviews

July 13th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Wiggle launces Bazaarvoice Ratings & ReviewsThe UK’s most visited online bike shop launched Bazaarvoice social commerce technology today. Wiggle.co.uk has employed Ratings & Reviews in an effort to drive sales and improve natural search rankings.

“Customers already share their experiences around the web, so sharing reviews, photos and videos on our site is a fantastic opportunity to build our own community,” said Steve Mills, Web Manager of Wiggle.co.uk. “We want this service to be integral to our site.”

Monthly promotional emails will encourage cycling enthusiasts to share their experiences of over 250,000 products available on the website. This month’s promotion is a competition offering reviewers the chance to win a Focus bike worth £750.

Read more about the launch in our press release.

Heather Brunner Urban Outfitters features Top Reviewers in email campaign

June 16th, 2009 by Heather Brunner Chief Operations Officer

This blog post is guest-written by Lisa Tu, Bazaarvoice Community Manager.

Urban Outfitters, one of the world’s more innovative apparel retailers, is known for creating a unique connection between their product and customer. They build this connection by providing artistic and distinctive messaging that captures the customer’s attention and leaves them wanting more. Urban Outfitters has always been an innovative client that pushes our best practices to the next level. Instead of sending a Top Rated email that features reviews, they decided to create buzz around their Top Reviewers, ultimately fostering a sense of community engagement.Urban Outfitters' Top Reviewers email

The email featured six of their Top Reviewers, ranging from the Top 25 to Top 1,000. Each reviewer is represented by a photo linking to their Reviewer Profile, and the email also features a few Customer Favorites. The campaign received a fantastic response, encouraging more customers to write reviews for a chance to get noticed as a true brand advocate.

In a recent interview with the Marketing Team at Urban Outfitters Direct, they were able to shed some light on the inspirations and outcomes of this campaign:

How effective has Ratings & Reviews been for your business? What do Top Reviewers mean to you?

Megan Goldberg (Marketing Manager): Ratings & Reviews effectively give us the opinions of our customer. Our Top Reviewers are the people who are not only purchasing our merchandise, but care enough to comment on it for the rest of our customer base to see. They are our biggest supporters as well as our biggest critics. Even negative reviews allow us the opportunity to make product quality adjustments, change the way items are shown on the site, update product descriptions, and enhance the overall brand experience.
What was the inspiration behind this campaign?

Megan: During the holiday season we delivered a “Top Rated” email that showcased nine of our highest rated items on the site, and it performed extremely well. This time around, we were looking for a unique way of highlighting the R&R functionality on our site. Instead of focusing on the merchandise, we looked toward our top contributors for inspiration. Turns out, our customers take ratings & reviews very seriously and luckily, it comes across in the photos they upload to our site.

All of the reviewers featured in this email have a unique sense of style. How did you select these reviewers?

Megan: I personally went through all photos submitted by our top contributors. I was pleasantly surprised to see how cool our contributors were – they are consistent with our aspirational customer. They are trendy, smart, creative – everything we expect out of our customers and more.

Did this campaign perform to your expectations?

Mya Gupta (Marketing Coordinator): After the campaign launch, we initially saw a 139% increase in reviews per day (86-203 reviews per day). To this day, we still have not seen the amount of daily reviews drop below 130 reviews per day. In reference to photos uploaded, we saw an increase of 239% in photos submitted per week (18-61 photos) since the email delivered. The amount of photos submitted within a week has not dropped below 35, which is double the amount we were used to seeing before the email.

You’re currently preparing to launch Ask & Answer; how do you plan to use A&A to expand your social strategy?Urban Outfitters' "The Way They Wore It" campaign

Mike Isabella (Marketing & Business Development Manager): We see Ask & Answer as a compliment to Ratings & Reviews. We plan to incorporate it into our product detail page and encourage customers to enter into a conversation with each other. It’s already happening naturally at the R&R level, and with a little encouragement, we see A&A possibly growing larger than R&R. Given the positive response to R&R and our other “show us how you wore it” campaigns, A&A seems like a natural forum for our fashion forward and advice seeking crowds.

Urban Outfitters will always push the envelope with marketing user-generated content to build a strong community base. You can stay up to speed with them by checking out on their Blog, becoming a fan on Facebook, or following them on Twitter. Stay tuned for what’s to come next.UrbanOutfitters.com

Brant Barton Brett Hurt, Our CEO, Founder & Friend, Named Austin’s Entrepreneur of the Year

May 31st, 2009 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

It’s been an exciting couple of weeks at Bazaarvoice. First, on May 21st, Bazaarvoice was named the #1 Best Place to Work in Austin. We got a great photo of our entire team, including international team members who were in town for our quarterly company offsite at the Alamo Drafthouse, in front of our massive 52-inch Sabian Chinese gong in the Austin Business Journal.

Second, just one week later, our very own Brett Hurt was named Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year in Austin – one of four regional winners. The E&Y Entrepreneur of the Year awards recognize entrepreneurs who demonstrate extraordinary success in the areas of innovation, financial performance, and personal commitment to their businesses and communities.

Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt named Austin Entrepreneur of the Year

I can’t think of anyone who deserves this honor more than Brett. In the description above, the word that I would emphasize most in describing Brett’s motivation as an entrepreneur is community. An Austin native, Brett is very mindful of the positive, profound, and multi-generational impact that a single entrepreneur and business can have on the prosperity of a community. He sees Bazaarvoice’s success and his own as a win for all of Austin, and he sincerely hopes that Bazaarvoice’s success will bring prosperity to our community not just in terms of job and wealth creation but in the form of many future companies that our team members will one day start.

When I worked for Brett at Coremetrics, the company he founded prior to Bazaarvoice, he was expecting his first child and was in the process of shopping for a new stroller. Like many first-time parents (I recently went through this process myself), he did a ton of online research, finally landing at Amazon.com and finding an extremely long and detailed review contributed by an aerospace engineer who had methodically deconstructed and reconstructed the stroller in question, documenting the process and his observations on the stroller’s design, materials quality, and workmanship at every step. This experience had a profound effect on Brett, as he imagined the power of this content for every shopper and purchase decision if it were available for every product and website. The idea for Bazaarvoice was born a few months later. Fast forward four short years and here we are – we have served 50+ billion reviews for 525+ global brands in 36 countries and we continue to grow (and hire!) like wildfire.

Please join me in congratulating Brett for his many accomplishments as an entrepreneur (Bazaarvoice is his fifth start-up company!), for the positive impact he has had within the Austin business community, and for being a genuinely sincere and humble person. He never fails to show his appreciation for the team at Bazaarvoice, our customers and partners, and the many supporters that have helped the company and Brett personally along the way.

So far, 2009 has been a big year for us – and there’s still six months left to go!

Michael Osborne Bazaarvoice Talks Multi-Channel Marketing Over Lunch

March 5th, 2009 by Michael Osborne Chief Revenue Officer

Bazaarvoice not only has the best solutions in the social commerce industry – it presents them in style.

A couple of weeks ago, Bazaarvoice hosted a business luncheon for 40 attendees from companies such as M and M DirectHamleys, and Lands’ End at the Century Club, an exclusive central London media club in the Soho district. Opening speaker Justin Crandall, Managing Director of Bazaarvoice, emphasized the importance of optimizing user-generated content through four phases of maturity:

  • Content Generation
  • Online Amplification
  • Multi-Channel Diversification
  • Business Transformation

Ashley Friedlein, CEO and co-founder of Econsultancy, elaborated further on multi-channel marketing and business structure transformation in his keynote presentation. 

“The battle [for credibility] has already been won,” Friedlein said. Consumer feedback has become the norm, not a novelty. Seventy-eight percent of consumers believe that customer recommendations – whether in review, Q&A, or story form – are the most credible form of advertising, according to a 2007 study conducted by Nielsen Media Research. Products with 20+ reviews lead to nearly 84 percent higher conversion rates, on average. Bazaarvoice Ask & Answer clients saw a 22 percent increase in conversion for products with more than two answered questions, as well as a 28-81 percent decrease in call center volume. 

Yet with 92 percent of the UK’s Top 25 online retailers implementing ratings and reviews for their products, forward-thinking companies must set their content apart by innovative means. 

“Most interactions with your brand online aren’t on your main site,” Friedlein said. “Can you take your shop to them?” After retailers have maximized their online usage of their consumers’ feedback, the next step is to take that content offline and into stores to deliver further value. The implications for marketing, positioning, and packaging are endless. Friedlein cited Sephora’s sales spikes in its most reviewed beauty products as an example; other companies are using reviews in direct advertising, call centers, public relations, catalogues, in-store displays and mobile media. 

Some brands have gone one step further to collaborate with other companies for user-generated designs. H&M allowed Sims 2 players to design their own H&M-inspired outfits; the winner’s creation was made available for purchase in nearly 1,000 H&M retail locations for $14.90. Other retail sites have implemented federated commerce, linking up products to social networks, allowing customers access to their products from anywhere – Facebook to Paypal, eBay to widgets customizable for different Web sites, Dell to Twitter. 

The key to the final phase of social commerce lies in brands utilizing their content for business insight —what’s known as “operationalizing user-generated content.” Smart companies use their product feedback not only to drive sales, but also to make merchandising decisions, improve product functionality, and drive business intelligence. 

Sam Decker Learnings From Belkin Review Fraud

January 22nd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

By now there are several articles and blog posts about the Belkin “fraudulent reviews” situation. If you haven’t read, here’s the original article. In short, a Belkin business development rep (Mark Bayard) posted a Mechanical Turk request to pay people to post positive reviews on Amazon.

Many people have been emailing this article to us asking for our thoughts, as Bazaarvoice has built a reputation for over three years of hosting and managing authentic user generated content for major online retailers and manufacturers.

Here are my thoughts on this situation…

99.9% Authenticity

In this incident, neither Belkin nor Amazon were our client. We can’t speak to their policies, technology and practices to prevent this from happening. Here at Bazaarvoice, we take authenticity very seriously and employ a wide variety of ways to check for fraud and discourage cheating. Account verification, purchase verification (optional), IP address, time/date stamp data, text analysis (human + technology) and a reach of reviews across many retailers give us a variety of methods to catch this stuff.

The danger is that some people (mostly industry people…as consumers may not internalize this story) may conclude from the Belkin incident that product reviews are not authentic. End of story. As serious as this is, that’s an unrealistic and “chicken little” perspective on the situation. Instead, here is the data that we’re finding:

For over three years, we’ve managed user generated content for nearly 300 major retailers and manufacturers. We’ve moderated (meaning read by humans) millions of reviews. Through the human moderation, technology, and data analysis testing for fraud we’ve found that there is a fraction (less than .1%) of reviews that appear fraudulent.

You may ask, “What kind of fraud do you see from this small fraction?” We mostly see someone post the same review multiple times for the same product or different products. Sometimes this is an attempt to win a contest. Those reviews are easy to catch, and they don’t get published. Typically the account and/or IP are blacklisted from the site, and the retailer or manufacturer pursues further investigation.

Some have asked about about our moderation. At Bazaarvoice we DO NOT moderate for negative reviews. And we won’t take on a client who asks us to do that. All valid product reviews are posted. Those that are rejected — also a small fraction — are usually because the reviewer is writing about customer service, not the product. And these are often sent to our clients’ customer service departments. I believe we have the most rigorous process in the business. This is what we do, and we’ve got the best technology and moderators in the business. In fact, we have a 40+ page presentation JUST going over on our moderation process. We don’t rest on our laurels, and shouldn’t with situations like this. We continue to add process and technology to fight the <1%. With every 7-week release of technology, with a growing analyst team, and with collaboration from some of the largest retailers in the business we continue to get better.

Regardless of everything we do, there is always a way to fake, hack, steal, and manipulate systems on the Internet. Ecommerce coupon codes are manipulated. I’ve been in the online industry for a long time. I know that software keys are distributed. People download copyrighted music and movies. Contests are gamed. Viruses are spread. Computers are hacked. And, yes, a few people even post fraudulent reviews. But those few “dingys” who post fraudulent reviews are drowned out by a sea of tens of millions of authentic reviews. And with each public instance of outrage, such as this Belkin case, we are reminded of the need to raise our game to eradicate potential issues for clients.

Downside (and Upside) To This Situation

The downside of this situation is it can scare companies into inaction. It will be terrible for us — as consumers and marketers — if executives pull back from social media and user generated content initiatives because of this press. The momentum on corporate transparency and customer participation could be slowed or reversed. Executives may return to their “control the message” doctrine for PR and marketing. But we know consumers are seeking authenticity. Backing away from UGC and market conversations is the wrong direction for companies.

How could there be good from a situation like this? Because situations like this can also scare companies into action. I’m going to postulate that Belkin managers and executives never proactively set forth policies of creating or managing user generated content for their employees or agencies to follow. As a result, I’m guessing Mark Bayard, incentivized to improve Amazon sales performance, combined initiative with poor judgment to write his own reviews and pay for more. I’ll postulate that -– given the backlash against the brand — that Belkin executives learned a valuable lesson. I would imagine there are proactive measures being handed down right now to try to prevent this from happening again. I hope Amazon also takes proactive measures.

Belkin and its predecessors who have fumbled user generated content initiatives teach the industry a strong lesson. With each story like this, more marketers are spurred into taking proactive steps to prevent fraudulent UGC.  They see the kind of press and social media coverage fraudulent action has on their brand. Any executive thinking about condoning activity like this will think twice. Employees and executives don’t want to lose their jobs. Executives will put forth proactive policies to employees and agencies with regards to social media. They should also join WOMMA and agree to its ethics guidelines.

Do you think Walmart, Whole Foods, and now Belkin learned a lot from their situations of fake user generated content? Did they take action? I’ll bet they did. And I’ll bet each of these public mistakes teaches the rest of us to do the same.

A Wake Up Call for Brands

This is an unfortunate incident. But as I said, there positives from this. It’s a wake-up call for brands to take their user generated content policies and strategy seriously. The demand for UGC from consumers is increasing. 8 out of 10 consumers read reviews this holiday before purchasing (Nielsen, 1/09). And more and more UGC is coming up as search results. The answer is not to turn away from UGC; it’s to bring forth new solutions to improve the authenticity. This is an opportunity to evolve, to improve and make customer-to-customer even more effective. And that is to say, as a company and as an industry, we will continue to work to maintain its authenticity.

Sam Decker Ratings & Reviews Boost Sales for Europe’s Top Retailers

October 6th, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This blog post was guest-written by Matt Hawkins, Senior Marketing Analyst.

This January, we were thrilled to launch Ratings & Reviews for our first client in The Netherlands, huge retailer Wehkamp.nl. Wehkamp serves a significant amount of reviews content, averaging well over 900,000 reviews viewed daily…and this number is growing! Even more exciting? This doesn’t even include content seen on their top-rated email campaigns, post-purchase emails, and more (all driving incremental ROI).

Not long after launching, Wehkamp saw a lift in conversion, average order value, time on site, and lower bounce rates. Seeing these results only increased our excitement about having a leading European retailer experience significant ROI from Ratings & Reviews (albeit not surprising!.. see our other case studies).

And Wehkamp makes strategic decisions based on their customers’ input. Read more in our interview with Alexander Van Slooten, Manager of Internet Strategy at Wehkamp about what they’ve done with Ratings & Reviews.

Not long after Wehkamps’ launch, huge French retailer Mistergooddeal launched Ratings & Reviews and experienced a 40% lift in conversion for top rated products (see Mistergooddeals’ Reviews splash page). For us at Bazaarvoice, this was fantastic news – but again, no surprise, considering how many clients are successful with best practice of using customer content in “Top Rated” or “Customer Favorite” promotional collateral (see our case studies).

These two leading European retailers continue to follow our strategic best practices, build their online community, engage customers, and boost sales!

Sam Decker Customer reviews improve intent-to-buy metrics for Cars.com

September 30th, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This blog entry was guest written by Ashley Moreno, Marketing Analyst.

Conversion rates and other metrics help make measuring the effects of UGC on retail Web sites fairly intuitive. With our latest case study, we hoped to better understand the effects of Bazaarvoice Ratings & Reviews on non-retail sites, where proving ROI can seem more difficult. Specifically, we hoped to grasp how Ratings and Reviews affect consumer interest during the research phase of the buying cycle. Cars.com, a content-heavy site that provides easy to understand information to some 10 million car shoppers a month, served as a great test case.

While Cars.com does not sell anything on their site directly, they do provide consumers information to make well-informed buying decisions, and they display vehicle ads from dealers and private sellers across the country. To determine how the addition of Ratings and Reviews affected their consumer base, we looked at various intent-to-buy metrics, including:

  • Number of page views for lead-related “Thank You” pages
  • Click-through rates to dealer maps from inventory pages
  • Click rates to the “Finance and Loan” calculator from inventory pages

Inventory pages with reviews out-performed those without in each of these ready-to-purchase metrics:

  • Reviews improved lead conversion by 16%
  • Reviews doubled the click-through to dealer maps
  • Reviews increased visitors seeking financing options using the calculator by 45%

This illustrates that even businesses without sales on their site can examine other metrics to better understand how user-generated content affects later buying decisions, community, and consumer loyalty. Take a minute to read the full case study.

Brant Barton Ratings & Reviews blow SkyMall’s customer relationships sky high

August 15th, 2008 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

This blog was guest-written by Heather Lippincott, Bazaarvoice Online Community Manager.

SkyMall went live with Bazaarvoice Ratings & Reviews on July 8th, 2008 and has seen huge success! Their community has really embraced the opportunity to provide feedback to others about the product offerings of the company. Joey O’Donnell, Customer Experience Manager of SkyMall.com, shares how integrating with Bazaarvoice has impacted their relationships with their customers.

How has Ratings & Reviews enhanced the relationship between SkyMall and your customers?

Prior to the launch of Ratings & Reviews we communicated with our customers by sending e-mails, catalogs and mailings. The customer’s communicated back by placing an order (or not). If they were not satisfied with their purchase, they returned it. We’d then try to extrapolate the customer’s message from tables full of data defined by percentages. High return rates meant something was wrong and low return rates meant everything was great. Ratings & Reviews has changed all of that in a matter of moments. We can now see exactly what our customers are thinking. For the first time, we are truly communicating with our customers.

How have your customers responded?

The response to reviews has been incredible. Within our first week of “flipping the switch” on Ratings & Reviews, we received over 1,000 comments on various products. Customers were craving a company-sponsored channel for interaction with our brand and we’ve finally provided one.

What’s the most interesting example of the impact this new solution is having with your customers?

I believe that customers don’t change, companies do. Sure, consumer behaviors shift, but I believe those shifts are a result of companies responding (or not) to the needs of their customers. Ratings & Ratings may just be the agent that allows SkyMall to better hear and respond to those requests. It’s easy to argue with spreadsheets and summaries of information but it’s an entirely different beast to read actual customer comments.

Are you doing anything with your rejected review content?

First and foremost, we are reaching out to those customers. We want them to know that we hear what they are saying and will work to apply the information they have given us. We are addressing any issues they highlight and are asking that they adjust their review to fit the moderation guidelines (which we include in the response) and resubmit their review. For the first few weeks of our launch, I’ve personally been reaching out to the customers. Now that I’ve got a firm grasp on how customers respond, I’ve put a workflow in place for our Customer Care Center to contact the customers. These are customers who are giving us one last chance to keep them and we recognize that.

Overall, how has responding to rejected reviews affected your relationship with those customers?

Simply put, it has been amazing. A customer with a rejected review was contacted letting him know that his review was unable to be posted. The customer responded to the notification with a strongly worded e-mail letting me know of his supreme dissatisfaction with both our moderation process and my status as a human being. Instead of continuing an e-mail chain, I picked up the phone and called him.Several days after our conversation, I received an e-mail from the customer apologizing for his rush to judgment and his thanks for responding. In his e-mail, he included copies of blog postings he created sharing his positive experience with SkyMall. He has become an evangelist of our brand.