DecisionStep

Posts Tagged ‘social marketing’

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Avoid the Sea of Sameness

Lora Cecere’s welcome talk at Altimeter’s “Rise of Social Commerce” conference last week gave a example-rich state of the union for e-commerce and more specifically social commerce.  She described the end game that we are all working towards as “frictionless commerce” — exceedingly easy to buy.  “E-commerce is about the efficiency of the transaction, purchasing what I want easily; m-commerce is about anywhere or anytime purchasing, and s-commerce is about making the shopping experience social,” she added.

The social movement in retail has four stages.  Most retailers are still at stage 1.  A few are demonstrating that they have graduated and are moving towards “frictionless commerce”.  And those that invest now will create unique social experiences with their customers.

Stage 1: Social For The Sake Of Social. The goal here is to try and promote awareness of the brand.  Retailers in this phase (about 60% of those with a social effort underway).  You can find them because they are exceedingly interested in the ROI of the tools they are employing.  They are very tactical and just beginning to understand other metrics and how social impacts their business.

Stage 2: Enlightened Engagement. This includes a social effort with an emphasis on listening to the customer and having dialog with them.  It could be through video, syndicated reviews, real-time communication with experts, etc.

Stage 3: Store of The Community. The community gives input into what products and promotions should look like for the brand or store. For instance, Dell lets customers have input on new features they feel should included in their products.  It could also include merchandising strategy among other shopper insights.  “Companies realize that they can use new technologies - mobile applications, geo-location shopping and social couponing - coupled with emerging social technologies, loyalty programs and point of sale data to redesign the shopping experience,” said Cecere.

Stage 4: Frictionless Commerce. The overall shopping experience is redesigned with a focus on building customer intimacy and an extraordinary experience.  Customers are delighted and will want to share their experience with their friends. Push-based marketing will begin to give way to the momentum of community pull. Friends can buy with friends, new services can be delivered, checkout becomes more automated, and channels become more seamless.  Cecere’s further explained, “this is not just about putting your shopping cart on Facebook, but taking social connections and truly ehance this experience of shopping.  It has always been very transactional and impersonal. Let’s make it personal and better”.

So, the big take away for me is that the majority of retailers are early in the process (stage 1).  Many of them are waiting to see how things work for their competitors or others—but that is exactly the wrong thing to do!  Cecere warned that the problem with socially dipping your toe in the water and waiting for the other guy to figure it out is that it emphasizes the “sea of sameness”.  It means that you aren’t going to differentiate and attract customers.  You will likely implement something similar to your competitor—making it even harder to get your unique message across!

Instead, we should try new technologies and build efforts that you think will support and grow your brand.  And do it FAST. Try, learn, make mistakes.  Be first and learn what works for your company and your brand.

We (at DecisionStep) agree wholeheartedly.  Our best clients are using our collaboration platform, measuring what works, talking with their customers about the experience.  Then they refined the interface, challenged us with additional feature requests and ideas and streamlined the experience.  They are independently leveraging ShopTogether in different ways to connect their consumers to each other and to their companies.  This is the kind of extraordinary experience that will get you noticed and get you out of the “sea of sameness”.

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Social Media Marketing Spend on the Rise

A new survey just released from Duke University and the American Marketing Association shows what we’ve been seeing anecdotally with our marketing colleagues in companies both here and abroad: spending on social media marketing is going up. (more…)

Friday, November 13th, 2009

New Study Underscores the Growing Importance of Social Marketing for e-Tailers

A new study from Internet Retailer and the Vovici Corp illustrates that—even in a tight economy—retailers plan to spend more on their e-commerce environment in the coming year with a strong focus on social marketing applications. The study reflects what DecisionStep is also seeing in the marketplace.

As a possible indication that more retailers understand the necessity of building a superior e-commerce experience to remain competitive, more than seven out of 10 respondents to the survey said they planned to spend more on advanced e-commerce applications, such as video, blogs and advanced search. Among those advanced applications, by far the largest percentage (49 percent) of respondents said they planned to spend more on social marketing technologies (e.g., ShopTogether). (more…)