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Frederik Van Zande

The Power of Persona-lization | FutureNow's GrokDotCom / Marketing Optimization Blog - 0 views

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    Personalization, done effectively, is a lot more than making product recommendations or using technology to welcome a visitor by name. Smart personalization is the process of providing more relevant content and offers to your visitors based on their preferences and behavior.
Frederik Van Zande

Personalization: What Sort-By Reveals About a Customer | Get Elastic - 0 views

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    Many retailers allow site customers to sort site search, category and sub-category results by price, average customer review, top sellers, new arrivals to name a few. While this is great for usability, it's also an opportunity to glean information about your customer which you can apply to merchandising and personalization on home pages, product pages, promotional banners and even email campaigns.
Frederik Van Zande

Email Marketing to Personality Types | Get Elastic - 0 views

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    As email marketers, we never know what mindset email recipients will be in at any given time. So a good idea is to design your copy and creative to speak to all personality types/buying modalities: competitive, spontaneous, methodical and humanistic. If this makes you go "hmmm?" make sure you check out our explanation of the buying modes in our personas webinar and webinar recap.
Frederik Van Zande

Study Confirms: Personalization Can Backfire - ReadWriteWeb - 0 views

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    A new study from the University of Illinois confirms what many of us may have suspected privately: "personalized" marketing communication online can often make us actively dislike the message's sender.
Melody Heales Sanderson

Australian B2B Fax List by ListAustralia - 0 views

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    Australian Business Fax Marketing Lists are constructed keeping your needs and requirements in mind. Our Aussie Fax marketing lists can help you send your message across to your business prospects in a fast and efficient manner. This way you can ensure that your promotions have reached the right person in the right company in Australia.
Frederik Van Zande

Crutchfield Email Covers 4 Buyer Personalities | Get Elastic - 0 views

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    I've been a big fan of Crutchfield's marketing for a long time - I consider them to be one of the top retailers in that regard. Here's a perfect example of why: Crutchfield recently ran this email incorporating ratings and reviews (an effective and underused tactic for retail email), and includes content that speaks to various buying modes effectively.
Frederik Van Zande

Branding from Email to Customer Service | Get Elastic - 0 views

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    We don't do a lot of posts on branding on Get Elastic, but I had to blog about Seattle-based ski, snowboard and wakeboard shop evogear. evo is an example of a retailer that has taken its corporate culture and incorporated its personality into nearly every aspect of its marketing.
Frederik Van Zande

Webinar Recap: What's Your Website Personality? - Get Elastic Ecommerce Blog - 0 views

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    Jason and Carolyn matched 4 well-known celebs to 4 consumer-mindsets that you should know.
Frederik Van Zande

Designing for the Social Web: The Usage Lifecycle - Bokardo - 0 views

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    The Usage Lifecycle describes how far a person has progressed in using your web application, helping to identify the hurdles someone needs to overcome to become regular, passionate users.
Frederik Van Zande

Ratings and Reviews Engage Your Visitors | Practical eCommerce - 0 views

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    Trust in word-of-mouth recommendations is at an all-time high. Public relations firm Edleman says in its 2008 Trust Barometer study that "a person like me" is still the most trusted source for information about a company and its services or products.
Frederik Van Zande

Optimizing for Hunters Part 2: Beyond Search and Navigation | Get Elastic - 0 views

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    To follow up our recent post on customer motivation and optimizing your website for hunters (e.g. moms armed with Christmas lists), I want to show you some examples beyond the search box and navigation menu. I'll use a personal story - I'm in the market for a car GPS. Previously knowing nothing about them (features, brands, prices etc), so I started off a howser. I decided I want to check Crutchfield (great product filters and product descriptions), Amazon (access to more products, the seller marketplace and more customer reviews) and Best Buy Canada (Canadian pricing, option to pick up in store).
Frederik Van Zande

Can Product Images Improve Conversion? Showing Products in Context | Get Elastic - 0 views

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    Yesterday we looked at examples of image zoom and alternate views, which can help customers experience the product better than one small view. A good photographer plus AJAX or Flash technology like Scene 7 or Magic Zoom can achieve this. But online retailers can go a step further and use photos that show products in use, or "in context." This can reduce a shopper's fears, uncertainties and doubts about a purchase like "how does this look on a person?" or "how large is this in real life?." Images can also "sell" by triggering an emotion, showing the quality or versatility of an item or illustrating a products features and benefits.
Frederik Van Zande

The Diagnosis? Buying Stage Schizophrenia | FutureNow's GrokDotCom / Marketing Optimiza... - 0 views

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    Every visitor comes to your site in their own personal "buying stage." The buying stage is a wide spectrum, but we generally break it into Early, Middle, and Late stages:
Frederik Van Zande

Ecommerce Know-How: Writing Product Descriptions that Sell | Practical eCommerce - 0 views

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    An ecommerce website, boiled down to its dry essence, is a virtual salesman at best and a slow-to-deliver electronic vending machine at worst. Consciously or not, online stores are conceived, designed, and created to sell products while making as little personal contact with a customer as possible. And as such, well-written product descriptions can have a significant impact on a store's success.
Frederik Van Zande

Poor Product Recommendations Turn Online Shoppers Off :: Varien :: Open Source eCommerc... - 0 views

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    One of the hazards of product recommendations is that you may suggest the wrong thing. But online shoppers love product recommendations, so it is helpful to use them. And they can be great marketing tools. The key is personalized product recommendations.
Frederik Van Zande

Ecommerce Product Search: Handling Attributes :: Varien :: Open Source eCommerce Develo... - 0 views

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    One of the most important aspects of an ecommerce Web site is its product search. How your search results page is designed, and what it offers, are very important in terms of providing the results customers want. And as customers continue to expect more personalized results, they will create product searches that are increasingly narrow.
Frederik Van Zande

How Deep is Your Ecommerce Email Linking? :: Varien :: Open Source eCommerce Developmen... - 0 views

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    Over at The Email Wars, there is an interesting post about personalized links in ecommerce emails. Instead of linking to the relevant email topic, many times an ecommerce marketing email will simply send me to a homepage, or a broad category page.
Frederik Van Zande

Usability: eCommerce Wishlists :: Varien - 0 views

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    Wishlists are becoming increasingly popular on ecommerce Web sites. This is due in great deal to the fact that we like to be able to personalize our online shopping experiences. Plus, what happens when you see something you like, but can't buy right now? With ecommerce wishlists, it is possible to save something you like for later purchasing without having to look all over the Web site to find it again.
Frederik Van Zande

Seth's Blog: Scarcity - 0 views

  • Why be scarce? Scarcity creates fashion. People want something that others can't have. Lines create demand. People want something that others want. Scarcity also creates word of mouth, because people talk about lines and shortages and hot products. And finally, scarcity drives your product to the true believers, the ones most likely to spread the word and ignite the ideavirus. Because they expended effort to acquire your product or service, they're not only more likely to talk about it, but they've self-selected as the sort of person likely to talk about it.
  • Waiting in line is a very old-school way of dealing with scarcity. And treating new customers like old customers, treating unknown customers the same as high-value customers is painful and unnecessary. Principle 1: Use the internet to form a queue. If you have a scarce product, you almost certainly know it's scarce in advance. Instead of taxing customers by wasting their time, reward the early shoppers by taking orders online. A month before sale date, for example, tell them it's coming. If you sell out before ship date, that's great, because next time people will be even quicker to order when they hear about what you've got. (And you can do this in the real world, too--postcards with numbers or even playing cards work just fine.) A hot band that regularly sells out on the road, for example, could put a VIP serial number inside every CD or t-shirt they sell. Use that to pre-order your tix. Principle 2: Give the early adopters a reward. In the case of Apple, I would have made the first 100,000 phones a different color. Then, instead of the buyer being a hero for ten seconds, he gets to be a hero for a year. Principle 3: Treat different customers differently. Apple, for example, knows how to contact every single existing customer. Why not offer VIP status to big spenders? Or to those that make a lot of calls? Let them cut the line. It's not fair? What's fair mean? I can't think of anything more fair than treating the people who treat you well, better. Principle 4: When things happen in real time, you're way more likely to screw up. One of the giant advantages of the Net is that you can fix things before the whole world notices. Try to do your rollout in small sections, so you can fix mistakes before you hurt the very people you're trying to embrace. Principle 5: Give your early adopters a forum to celebrate. A place to brag or demonstrate or show off or share insights and ideas. Amplify the heroes, which is far better than amplifying the pain of standing in line.
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    One day, you may be lucky enough to have a scarcity problem. A product or a service or even a job that's in such high demand that people are clamoring for more than you can make. We can learn a lot from the abysmal performance of Apple this weekend. They took a hot product and totally botched the launch because of a misunderstanding of the benefits and uses of scarcity.
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