Get Back-to-School Quick, the Holidays Are Coming (just 115 days to Black Friday)

Even as online retailers are being pelted with back-to-school marketing tips—like these helpful “8 Trends to Tap” from NextDayFlyers.com—the early warnings are going up for the 2010 holiday season.

My reaction? Well, as the saying goes: “It’s about time.”

Two weeks ago, Lisa Morgan over at Practical eCommerce cautioned, and I would concur:

“The economy is still shaky, customers remain fickle, and if you’re not prepared you could miss out on the most important shopping season of the year.” (Gearing Up for the 2010 Holiday Season)

Then today I get an email from Internet Retailer headlined “Only 115 Days ’til Black Friday.” The message is actually a teaser for the Online Retailer Survival Guide put together by website performance specialist Keynote, but it’s worth registering and checking out the content. Keynote’s point, and it’s a good one,  is that…

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Monetate Client ModCloth on TechCrunch TV: A new model for fashion retailing

TechCrunch TV Interviews ModCloth FoundersThis week TechCrunch TV interviewed one of Monetate’s first clients, ModCloth, a web-based retailer specializing in retro and indie fashion. The ModCloth story is an inspiring one if you’re the least bit entrepreneurially-inclined or marketing-minded. And we’re very proud to say that ModCloth has been a Monetate client since 2008. In that year ModCloth achieved revenues of $3.2 million.

In the next year, 2009, ModCloth’s revenue was over $19 million! It’s a great story about smart marketing and the vistas that open up when you take a web-savvy approach to retailing. So here are ModCloth’s founders, Susan and Eric Koger, talking to Jason Kincaid on TechCrunch TV. It’s worth watching.

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Where Your Customers Are At: Location-based merchandising without GPS

Ge-location targetingThe GPS capabilities of smartphones can be dazzling but I think they could be leading some retailers to overlook a different and potentially more profitable type of location-based marketing. I’m talking about geo-targeted marketing opportunities that have nothing to do with mobile devices, opportunities with more revenue potential than anything currently triggered by GPS.

I  wrote about this recently in an article that appeared in All About Retail Online Integration. I pointed out that an overwhelming majority of online purchases are still made from notebooks and desktops. What follows is an updated and extended version of that article:

The fact that smartphones can display information which reflects their physical location is generating a lot of buzz. Marketers are getting positive results when using this capability—made possible by GPS technology—for adverts, offers, and coupons. However, marketers should not overlook the fact that any web site, any online store, can market and merchandise relative to location, without GPS. That’s because, whenever you visit a web site from your desktop or notebook or netbook, the site can determine the general location of your device based on its IP address.

This simple fact of Internet technology creates the potential to market and merchandise relative to location, but… Read the rest of this entry »

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When’s Mum’s Day? Get the right message to the right visitor at the right time and place

Depending on where you live and your relationship with your mother, forgetting Mother’s Day could be a crime or a sin or both. That means retailers can earn valuable goodwill by reminding customers of this date, not to mention increased revenues from offers and promotions centered around this event.

However, to do this right, you first have to know where your customer is. That’s because “Mother’s Day” happens at different times in different places. For example, Mother’s Day in the US falls on May 9 this year. But it will be Mother’s Day in the UK in just a few days, this coming Sunday to be precise.

To be completely accurate, March 14 in the UK is Mothering Sunday. (While use of the term “Mothers Day” in the UK has grown in recent years, a lot of people—and most importantly, to me, my Mum—still prefer to call it Mothering Sunday; and if you look at this ad that I clipped from a UK retail site you can see it uses a clever linguistic compromise to avoid both terms.)

So let’s assume you’re tracking traffic to your US-based online store by country of origin. You see a fair number of UK visitors who sometimes buy from you. If you want to make an effective Mothering Sunday pitch to this traffic segment… Read the rest of this entry »

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4 Ways Tech-Savvy E-Retailers Maximize Screen Real Estate

Pixel-by-pixel they build out the screenFollowing on from last week’s “tips on improving the performance of scarce online retail real estate,” I wanted to share three ways in which tech-savvy online retailers are making the most of precious screen space.

And if you’re in charge of an online store you don’t need me to tell you it’s tough to find enough screen space for all the information you want to share with cyber-shoppers. Indeed, those precious pixels are a prime example of scarcity, that vital element of economics classically described as “scarce means that have alternative uses.”

For example, in my last post I talked about the challenge of balancing just two alternatives:  product shots and offers (such as discounts, price cuts, shipping deals, and all the other incentives to buy that reside in the online retailer’s arsenal). I referenced an excellent post by Kevin Ertell in which he pointed out how often (hint: too often) online stores err on the side of promotional messaging versus presentation of the products, eventual purchase of which the promotions are designed to encourage.

But product shots and promotions are just a few of the space hogs you need to feed. There are product details, endorsements, testimonials, reviews, and ratings to accommodate. Then you have the nuts and bolts of the shipping and return policies, payment options, and so on. So what can you do to ease the strain of competing demands for screen space? Here are four suggestions: Read the rest of this entry »

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Tips on Improving the Performance of Scarce Online Retail Real Estate

bigsaleThis week I read two excellent blog posts that I wanted to share. The topic of the first post is retail signage, namely the relationship between the display of messages in online stores and the use of signs in brick and mortar stores. Here’s the main point that author Kevin Ertell is making:

“In brick and mortar retail, we use promotional signs in our windows to draw people into the store, where we expertly display lots and lots of product to customers the moment they walk in the door. We certainly reinforce our promotional messages with signage throughout the store, but we never block the product with the signs. On our sites, our promotions seem to be more important than our products. What message are we sending to our customers about the value of our products when promotions get more prominence than the merchandise?”

If you’re running an online store I recommend you read the entire blog post because Kevin has put his finger on something that could be costing you money–distracting customers with too many signs about offers and discounts–as well as something that could make you money–getting the right balance between products and offers.

You probably don’t need me to tell you that striking the right balance is not easy. You have loads of great product shots, testimonials, deals, discounts, offers, and so much more that you want to put in front of people who land on your site. No wonder it seems like there’s never enough real estate on the screen. Of course, if you’re driving people to your site with targeted email or ad campaigns you can create landing pages where the content is chosen specifically for that target audience. But in general you can’t control which page of your site people land on.

One solution is to give up trying to show all messages and offers to all site visitors. Instead, just show different content to different visitors on the same page (which incidentally is one way to describe what Monetate does). If you segment your traffic into different groups which see different content you don’t have to cram all the signage for all your offers onto a single page; you can show just those offers that are appropriate for each segment. This is true for even the most basic segmentation: new versus returning visitors. Some offers are more appropriate for new customers. Returning customers need fewer messages about how the site works, and so on.

map-jigsThe second post that caught my eye was “8 Applications of IP Geolocation” and it delivered just what you would expect from the title: eight different ways in which online retailers can use geolocation information to vary content according to the physical location of the site visitor (based on IP address).

As you may know, Monetate greatly simplifies the process of creating geolocation-based campaigns, so it was great to see an article that illustrates the many possibilities that geolocation technology opens up. Of course, one of those possibilities is economizing on web site real estate by varying your signage according to the location of the site visitor. For example, point out the availability of international shipping to a non-domestic visitor, but use that space for something else when the visitor is domestic.

For more information on this topic, we have a geolocation case study here and geolocation was the subject of one of our press releases, picked up by several publications such as this.

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Leading Consumer Brands Segment, Target, and Personalize with Monetate

60th post on the Monetate blogIn case you missed it on the wire and in the social networks, below is the text of our latest news release. We wouldn’t normally post a release on the blog, but we’re particularly proud of this one because it demonstrates Monetate’s growing penetration of multichannel retail market. You can find an archive of our news releases here.

(We’re also pleased to note that this is the 60th posting on this blog since it was launched at the end of August last year. Your readership and comments have been much appreciated. Thanks!)

More Leading Consumer Brands Segment, Target, and Personalize with Monetate

To provide web site visitors with an even more personal, relevant, and compelling site experience, Casual Male Retail Group selects Monetate

Philadelphia, PA / September 1, 2009 — Online marketing tools like personalization and behavioral targeting are one way that retailers seek to meet and beat the challenge of today’s tough economy. One supplier of such tools, Philadelphia-based Monetate, today announced that five more consumer brands have joined the growing list of web sites employing its platform to segment, target, and personalize. Read the rest of this entry »

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Hanging Brutal Murder on Brand Names: User Input + Automated Marketing = Issues

rolex-loosWould you ever advertise your web site as the place to turn for brutal murder or hanging people? No? Surprisingly, I have encountered several companies that do, big name retailers with brand names that every consumer knows. They illustrate some serious issues with online marketing.

But before we get to the murder and other dark deeds, it might be instructive to engage in a little toilet humor. Can you spot the marketing problem in this picture? It was taken in Moscow a few years ago. At that time, no pun intended, the center of the city was in the middle of an upscale building boom.

As you can see, someone paid a lot of money to cover the side of a construction site with a huge image of a Rolex watch (the young woman in the bottom right of the picture gives you a sense of scale). I imagine that when it was installed the marketing folks were feeling pretty proud of themselves. The print quality was excellent and the placement very visible. Unfortunately, Read the rest of this entry »

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