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MAR 6936902

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Information Wants To Be Free. Information Wants To Be Expensive. 7. Last ... as an 'sustainable' SCA anymore the half-life of an SCA has greatly been reduced ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MAR 6936902


1
MAR 6936-902
  • E-Commerce Marketing
  • Fall 2002Tampa--MBA
  • Customer Interface
  • Rich Gonzalez
  • November 7, 2002 (Week 11)

2
URLs
  • www.websitesthatsuck.com
  • Several, see slides

3
Agenda November 7, 2002
  • BusinessWeek Article
  • Class Exercise on DBI
  • Customer Interface
  • Due For November 14

4
For Today November 7
  • Chapter 6Customer Interface
  • F2F to S2F
  • How To Achieve Digital Nirvana, p28,
    BusinessWeek, November 4, 2002

5
For November 14
  • Chapter 7Marketing Communications Branding
  • The Last Laugh, Chip Bayers, Business 2.0,
    September 2002
  • www.useit.comBe ready to tell us what Jakob
    Nielsens philosophy/guidelines are.

6
Digital Nirvana
  • 1. Fair Use Must Be Preserved
  • 2. DRM Will Never Be Perfect
  • 3. Concessions Have To be Made
  • Information Wants To Be Free
  • Information Wants To Be Expensive

7
Last Time
  • Pricing
  • Porter

8
Porters Most Interesting Question
  • Will all the values end up going to customers, or
    will companies be able to reap a share of it?

9
Reasons To Disagree With Michael Porter
  • Doesnt recognize the real consumer need
  • Fails to realize value Metcalfs LawCritical
    mass from consumer perspective
  • Doesnt adequately realize the critical mass must
    be reached to pursue pricing goals.---Temporary
    price promotions are often necessary to reach
    critical mass.
  • Lower barriers to entry are not really low vis a
    vis scale
  • There IS a new economy. Profits are not a right
    because innovation is continuously necessary.
  • In a way, there is no such think as an
    sustainable SCA anymorethe half-life of an SCA
    has greatly been reduced
  • Porter focuses too much on the Advertising model
    criticismuses as primary focus
  • It is not a zero-sum game

In Class Exercise
10
2 TeamsDiscuss Develop
11
Marketing Strategy Digital Opportunities
  • Goal Develop Potential Strategic Marketing Idea
    Digitally-Based
  • What digitally-based idea can you identify that
    would give a business/industry an SCA?
  • Other than music.

12
Deliverable
  • Report
  • 1. Industry/Service/Product (Pick Only Two)
  • 2. Basic Idea (Rough Description)
  • 3. User Benefits
  • 4. Why Might It Succeed?
  • Cite idea(s) From Porter, Textbook, Discussions,
    Starbucks, etc.

13
Home Security Innovation
  • 1. Home Security
  • 2. Use Internet to View Home or Business
    Online---Alarm phones in report
  • 3. Monitor kids, pets, cable man.. Peace of mind
  • Remote control of activities in home
  • 4. High bandwith, low cost, people now worry
    about this technology available now

In Class Exercise
14
Checkout Innovation
  • 1. Automated Checkout
  • 2. No checkout, just leave the retail
    storeautomatic payment
  • 3. Waits eliminated, EZ payment, accuracy,
    reduces shoplifting, laziness rewarded
  • 4. Impatient consumers, time demands always
    present, people dont balk, reduces store costs

In Class Exercise
15
Results 3
  • 1. Industry/Service/Product (Two)
  • 2. Basic Idea (Rough Description)
  • 3. User Benefits
  • 4. Why Might It Succeed?

In Class Exercise
16
Results 4
  • 1. Industry/Service/Product (Two)
  • 2. Basic Idea (Rough Description)
  • 3. User Benefits
  • 4. Why Might It Succeed?

In Class Exercise
17
(No Transcript)
18
Customer Interface
Technology-mediated interface
People-mediated interface
Face-to-face interaction
Screen-to-face interaction
There has to be an interface and it has to be
effective. People are pretty effective.
19
3 Fundamental Business Shifts
  • 1. Most transactionsB2C, B2B, C2C and G2C will
    become self-service digital transactions.
  • 2. Customer service will become the primary
    value-added function in every business. Personal
    consultancy not routine services.
  • 3. The pace of transactions and customer needs
    for customer service will force firms to adopt
    digital processes---for survival.

20
No Frills Discounter/E-tailer
  • www.overstock.com
  • Kind of like outlet malls
  • www.cdbaby.com

21
Rich E-tailer
  • www.FAOschwarz.com
  • www.maxstudio.com
  • www.barneys.com
  • www.disney.com
  • Less Commerce (Transaction), More Content

22
Customer Interface 7
  • Virtual Representation of Firms Value
    Proposition
  • Information
  • Navigation
  • Is the site worth spending time at?Should I
    flee?
  • i.e., Download Time
  • War Developers vs. Marketers(Customers)
  • Brand?

23
Design Principles
  • FitHow do the 7Cs support the business model?
  • ReinforcementDegree of consistency between each
    of the Cs
  • The idea is performance and synergy.

24
Jakobs Law of Internet User Experience
  • Users spend most of their time on sites other
    than on yours.

25
Jakobs Nielsens Homepage Guidelines
  • Generally apply also to the entire website.
  • Has Several. Well Use Only 8.

26
Jakobs Nielsens Homepage Guidelines
  • 1. Communicating the Sites Purpose
  • 2. Communicating Information About the Company
  • 3.Content Writing
  • 4. Navigation
  • 5. Search
  • 6. Graphics and Animation
  • 7. Customization
  • 8. Fostering Community

27
7Cs Framework
  • of Interface Design

28
The 7Cs of the Customer Interface
Context Sites layout and design
Content Text, pictures, sound and video that
webpages contain
Commerce Sites capability to enable commercial
transactions
Community The ways sites enable user-to-user
communication
Connection Degree site is linked to other sites
Customization Sites ability to self-tailor to
different users or to allow personalization
Communication The ways sites enable site-to-user
communication or two-way communication
29
Dimensions of Context
The context of a site has many different forms.
The two key context dimensions are function and
aesthetics
Look and Feel Of S2F
30
  • www.CeoExpress.com
  • www.reflect.com
  • www.nordstrom.com

31
Context Archetypes

Content archetypes refer to broad, generic
approaches to context design
Aesthetically Dominant
Functionally Dominant
Integrated
  • High form low function
  • Look-and-feel of the site is the primary emphasis
  • The site is slow to load, limited in information
  • Low form high function
  • Focused on the display of textual information
  • The visual design is limited
  • Pure text no graphics, sound or animation
  • Balance of form and function
  • Attractive and easy-to-use interface
  • The use of a clear design theme, small images and
    plenty of white space

LandsEnd.com vs. LuckyJeans.com
32
Five Content Archetypes
  • One-stop shop with a wide range of goods in
    multiple product categories

Superstore
Offering Dominant
  • Exclusive provider of products and services
    within the specific category

Category Killer
  • Focus on exceptional quality and exclusivity
    while selling single or multiple categories of
    products

Specialty Store
  • Provider of information goods although physical
    products can be purchased as a complement
  • Sites are generators, sources or aggregators of
    content

Information Dominant
Market Dominant
  • Provider of place for transactions, where
    buyers and sellers come together to conduct
    business

33
Content Archetypes Ex.
  • Superstore amazon.com
  • Category Killer petsmart.com
  • Specialty Store Williams-Sonoma
  • Information Dominant Business 2.0
  • Market Dominant buy.commerx.com

34
Community
  • User to User Interactions
  • www.ebay.com
  • www.nytimes.com

35
Customization
  • Sites Ability To Tailor Itself Or Be Tailored By
    (Or For) Each User
  • Marketing MantraKnow Your Customer(s).

36
Customization
  • PersonalizationThe Customer Does It
  • TailoringThe Firm Does It

37
Or...
  • PersonalizationThe Firm Does It
  • CustomizationThe Customer Does It
  • ex. www.wsj.com

38
Communication
  • Dialogue of user and site
  • AsynchronousSite to UserUser to Site
  • SynchronousLive Talk/Chat--------LandsEnd

39
Connection
  • ConnectionsAffiliatesRevenue
    SharingMarketingComplementary ProductsCustomer
    Acquisition
  • Can Be Distracting

40
Commerce
  • Selection
  • Pricing...Shipping
  • The Shopping Cart
  • Approval and Payment
  • Can you avoid this experience? (browsing,
    selection, approving, paying?)
  • Half.com pre-orders

41
For November 14
  • www.useit.com
  • Be ready to tell us what Jakob Nielsens
    philosophy/guidelines are.
  • Pick a Site That You Can Say Something About and
    Forward To ListservWhat would Nielsen say about
    the site?

42
End Here
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