Comment: Branding the Web and the art of online shop-keeping
 
Mon, 30th March 2009
 
 

Comment: Branding the Web and the art of online shop-keeping

Monday March 30th 2009

Online and in-store experiences will always provide different experiences for consumers.

by David Walmsley

Shopping on the web may well be quick and convenient -but it's a world away from the sights and sounds of the store. However, as brands are built on customer loyalty, it's vital that the web experience can complement real-life shopping. Successful e-commerce should offer all the choices, personalisation and price promises you'd

get in store - while capturing the right look and feel to suit your brand.

Setting up a brand online is much more than creating a homogenous user experience. While online tactics need to be closely aligned with your business strategy, they also need to take into account the individuality of each and every customer. Naturally, customers want to be treated as individuals - whether they're on your shop floor or browsing your website. So just as you'd treat them in real life, so you should on the web. So the biggest challenge here is personalising the impersonal. In stores, you can achieve the ultimate personalisation simply through dialogue between our customers and our shop-floor partners. The online experience is by definition more generic, but must appeal to the same sense of customer loyalty. How?

1. Understand. As always, success begins with knowing your audience. At John Lewis, for example, nine out of ten of our online customers also shop in our tores. They choose to shop with us because they trust our brand - so we in turn must understand how our online experience fits in with their behaviour.

2. Create. Your editorial and functional choices make up your online language. Instead of friendly and helpful staff to show your customers around, your choice of words, pictures and design are there to do their work. (In fact, one tiny change to our website's formatting led to an extra £1 million in revenue over the course of a year - so details really do make the difference!)

3. Challenge. Personalising the online experience as much as possible can only really be achieved by challenging e-business orthodoxy. There should be no set-in-stone strategies. Instead, gradual and small experimental changes can achieve huge results - both in terms of brand value and in terms of revenue.

4. Reach out. One advantage of personalising the impersonal is the enhancement of your marketing techniques. But e-marketing is more than just remembering who bought what and knowing that this customer also bought that. Web 2.0 technologies - such as company blogs and social network outreach - can boost consumers' engagement with your brand.

5. Drill down. Through analytical measurement and multivariate testing, we can get a really good understanding of individual customer behaviour. For example, technology can tell us exactly where and when a particular customer abandoned their online shopping, and give us a view of the frequency and specific times of visiting, browsing and buying. Essentially, a successful online strategy is led by central business strategy. In most cases, the technology is secondary to its actual application in practice - and for this to deliver the best possible return on investment, it needs to match with customers' real-life expectations. Already, we're making small and gradual changes to maximise online sales. In future, we may even come to understand the discrepancies between a customer's actions and their actual preferences or personality. And in this way, online strategists will be able to brand experience - as well as simply branding the web.

The view from Echo E-Business

We've already seen how the lines between small and large companies - and between business and technology - are blurring as a result of e-business. For the retail sector, however, e-business has also blurred the line between the in-store and online shopping experience. Where once they were viewed as separate, the most successful e-retail strategies of the future will be those that offer as consistent an experience as possible. Personalisation is therefore an essential component of any web strategy. A successful storebased brand can only transfer that profitability by replicating those values and experience to the online channel. That 'shopkeeper' approach - knowing your customer, their preferences and behaviours - will be key to the online shopping experience. Features like John Lewis Direct's click-to-collect service indicate a more combined approach based around individual preference. Essentially, the retail brands that thrive online are those who understand consumer psychology and recognise the intersection of e-commerce and in-store principles. As web and real-life strategies becomes more aligned, and as measurement technologies become more sophisticated, the retail sector will be able to sell and market to specific customer through increasingly personalised (and more successful) methods. From the E-Business Evolution 2009 white paper from Echo E-Business.

(David Walmsley, head of web selling at John Lewis Direct)

Should your colleagues be reading the Retail Bulletin?
Let them know about us.

Receive free news alerts, click here
 
 
category Retail  |  source The Retail Bulletin
 
   
 
 
 
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
WHSmith buys Gadget Shop
WHSmith has bought gadget and gift etailer the Gadget Shop from toy specialist The Entertainer.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
WHSmith buys Gadget Shop brand
WHSmith has bought gadget and gift brand the Gadget Shop from toy retailer The Entertainer.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Sports Direct enjoyed World Cup Boost
Total group sales increased to £408m for the 13 weeks ending 25 July 2010 from £375m a year earlier.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Debenhams launches surprise in-season Sale
Debenhams has launched a four day Sale Spectacular on new autumn stock, a highly unusual move for the department store.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Back to School boosted retail sales rise but confidence remains fragile.
UK retail sales values were up 1.0% on a like-for-like basis from August 2009, when sales had fallen 0.1%. On a total basis, sales were up 2.8% against a 2.2% increase in August 2009.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Tesco director Lucy Neville-Rolfe joins ITV board
Tesco corporate and legal affairs director Lucy Neville-Rolfe has joined the board of ITV, the UKs biggest commercial broadcaster.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
H&M proposes global employee incentive scheme
Swedish fashion retailer H&M is launching a major global employee incentive scheme to encourage staff and reward loyalty.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Strong first quarter for Sports Direct
Sports Direct had a strong first quarter despite a poor performance from the England team in the football World Cup with sales up 8.8% to £408m in the 13 weeks to July 25.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Ocado sales up 30%, but shares fall in early trading
Ocado has revealed strong sales growth this morning in its first trading update as a quoted company, but its shares fell following the update.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Retail sales rise in August
Retail sales rose 1% like-for-like in August and 2.8% in total, the BRC-KPMG Retail Sales Monitor showed.

more >
 
Tue, 7th September 2010
Sales rise at Ocado
Ocado Group said gross sales increased 29.5% to £126.5m for the 12 weeks to 8th August (2009: £97.7m), with average orders per week for period of 92,834.

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
Best summer for years on the high street
Growth across board as Autumn ranges hit the shelves

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
How will LEP impact retailers?
Retailers support the drive for more business involvement in local decision making, but have concerns about how plans to devolve power could impact on national businesses.

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
Mobile Advertisers Forecast to Spend $1.8 Billion on Location-Based Campaigns in 2015
Location-based advertising is still in its infancy, but according to a new study from ABI Research, businesses are primed to spend $1.8 billion on it in 2015 as part of their overall mobile marketing budgets.

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
Survey reveals demand for mobile commerce and shopping
Majority of respondents would use their mobiles to buy big-ticket items

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
Consumers are seeking out retailers on Facebook and Twitter in growing numbers
83% of consumers buying online at least once a week

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
UK tackles online payment fraud head on
Shopping online has never been more secure for UK consumers thanks to strategies put in place by retailers to beat card crime

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
Lidl UK boss steps down
Lidl UK managing director Frank-Michael Mros is understood to have stepped down from his post.

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
Food for thought: Online food retail's future depends on label standardisation
Every six months or so, the cycle of food labelling rumours re-surface, with reports that the FSA are once again suggesting a change in food labelling. The most recent of these was the suggestion of including traffic light labelling on products, a proposal which has since been dropped.

more >
 
Mon, 6th September 2010
BRC seeks assurances on local enterprise partnerships
The British Retail Consortium has welcomed opportunities for business to become involved in local decision making but warned that localism should not be allowed to harm national companies.

more >