1 / 39

The Answers to All Your Online Marketing Challenges: Understanding the Customer

The Answers to All Your Online Marketing Challenges: Understanding the Customer. By Aaron Kahlow CEO, Online Marketing Connect . Who am I? . Aaron Kahlow (Facebook preferred) CEO, Online Marketing Connect “Education based media company” Online Marketing Institute

adelle
Télécharger la présentation

The Answers to All Your Online Marketing Challenges: Understanding the Customer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Answers to All Your Online Marketing Challenges: Understanding the Customer By Aaron Kahlow CEO, Online Marketing Connect

  2. Who am I? • Aaron Kahlow (Facebook preferred) • CEO, Online Marketing Connect “Education based media company” • Online Marketing Institute • Online Marketing Summit

  3. What We Will Cover Understand the Foundation of a Good Website Define your web site challenges Solving the issues

  4. Search + Usability = Highest Yield

  5. Part 2: Understanding Your Web Site

  6. The Web Stop & Think About Marketing Efforts … Catalogs Search Engines Association Meetings Email Marketing Direct Mail Portal & Destination Sites Trade Shows Banner Advertisements Magazines Blogs & Community Sites Newspapers Distributor Shows

  7. Challenges with Website

  8. Serving the Customer: Usability

  9. Introduction to Web Site Usability • What is Usability? • How does it affect your web site, your brand, your sales? • Common Myths of Usability • I know my customer better than anyone • Surveys are Usability Studies and Suffice • Success vs. Satisfaction Example

  10. Minimum standard, best practices and learned conventions… Minimum Standards: • Very few justifiable reasons not to comply. Best Practices: • Tested practices that have proven to have a positive effect on the user experience • Not hard fast rules Learned Conventions: • May not be more intuitive, BUT users already know how to use; therefore, is easier to use. • Preconceived expectations Complying with minimum standards, best practices and learned conventions allow you to focus on the bigger picture challenges rather than wasting time on what is known.

  11. Opposing Objectives • Business Objectives • We want to get users to visit my site on a regular basis • We need to offer multiple content types and features to sell to clients (white papers, news, ask the expert, etc) • We want users to register so we can leverage their information for sales • We want to display content to show to everyone regardless if it is relevant or not. (News on home page) • We want to be viewed as the source for standards in our industry • Visitor Objectives • I don’t want my decisions manipulated (now or later) • I want control over my experience • I don’t want to be distracted with cluttered pages or too many like options • I only want to see content that apply to my industry or my needs • I want to reach information in as few steps as possible • I want to be able to easily find the same information another day (mental model) • I want to know what exactly I can and can not do on this site right away without having to waste time exploring or being distracted by marketing ploys. Design to meet the visitors objectives first!

  12. How do my Customers Look at my Web Site

  13. How customers view your site • On a single track mission • Find what they want, THEN peruse or browse • No Patience (remember college … long road trip) • Scan not Read • Let’s look at some research…

  14. Design: Understand how users read the page • A common misperception is that people read a web page the same way they read a paper, from left to right • Extensive eye-tracking research has shown that users read the page: Center-Left-Right

  15. Eye Tracking Example..

  16. Sample Eye Tracker *Research from The Usability Company

  17. Eye Tracker Results SIMPLIFIED

  18. Where you are losing your Customers

  19. Purpose Driven Design • Assumptions: • Visitors go to websites for a reason (they have a purpose) • The quicker visitors reach their goal, the happier they will be • The happier visitors are, the more likely it is that they will return • Benefits: Increases the Scent (trail to destination) • Eliminates visitor guesswork • Helps visitor rapidly determine what the site has to offer • Helps visitor quickly find what he is looking for • Keys to Success: • Action links identifying visitor’s purpose • Create a mental model of the site so visitors can find what they are looking for and quickly orient themselves within the site’s structure

  20. What Can You Do?

  21. Think Usability Sooner Than Later Design Flexibility High Discovery • Requirements Definition • Competitive Analysis • User Centered Analysis • Persona Development Elaboration Site Launch • System Flow • Information Architecture • Card Sorting Construction • Design • Coding • Documentation • Beta Test Maintenance Time Low

  22. Primary Persona Secondary Persona Segment Personas Business Objectives

  23. Build Online Persona • Try to understand • Motivations • Goals • Needs • Decision Making factors • People / influencers • Expectations • Preferences • Demographics information • Brand Attitudes

  24. Sample Persona • Background with site: Diane has visited the site a few times but only when her friends send her links to their slideshows. When she is on the site, she is more of a general consumer with little to no emotional investment in her need for expressing herself freely. She looks at other people’s slideshows and bounces from one slideshow to the next. She is an observer who browses, searches, comments (gives feedback), and fuels her friends’ desires in providing more creative content such as the slideshows. • Analysis: A typical bouncer would have the personality of a moviegoer in which the consumption of a “good” movie is more important than the movie theatre she frequents to accomplish the task of movie watching, which is probably why she has no real brand loyalty to any particular product or application. • Needs: • Wants to know what is popular / “cool” • Easy to view slideshows / movies • Gives opinions / comments • Likes being heard • Business Opportunity: • Since Diane is already on the site, we want to keep her on there longer. Maybe creating a rating system consisting of 10 stars so that she can rate the individual slideshows. Then based on how she rates the types of slideshows, we can present newest slideshows that would be relevant to her the next time she logs onto the site. Diane Age: 22 Job: College Student working towards degree in Marketing Technical Expertise: 4/5 Hours Spent on Internet / week: 8- 10

  25. Tip 2: Build Strong Navigation / Thru Information Architecture Information Architecture Labels Organization Navigation

  26. The Bridge between Usability & Website (not design) • Organization is based on users’ previous experience / expectation of how it should be organized. • IA strives to bridge this gap • Best practices and learned conventions come from this User with Expectations Display that info How do we display the information so that it satisfies the user’s expectations?

  27. Display information so that it makes sense • How do you ensure that the user understands the information? Universal Set of Behaviors Audience Specific Behaviors

  28. Current Business Improve Usability (1% gain in RFQs) • 10,000 users per year • 3% submit RFQ (300 RFQs per year) • 30% close rate • Average sale price of $10,000 • SAME • 4% submit RFQ (400 RFQs per year) • 30% close rate • Average sale price of $10,000 • Revenue = $900,000 • Revenue = $1,200,000 • 1.0% gain in RFQ = $300K in additional revenue Bottom Line ..even small increases in conversion can generate substantial revenue

  29. Summary • Usability is Ease of Use • Why Usability? • Competitive advantage • Site created only with business objectives in mind • Increase Conversions & ROI • Foundation: Follow learned conventions & best practices • Refine Personas • Don’t need Designer, Need an Information Architecture • Users first, Monetize second

  30. Cannot forget Social Media Customers DO NOT WANT experiences managed; want to manage themselves … now call CRM to CMR

  31. Who is the Social Customer • Active & Passive • Loyal vs. Advocate • Consumer or Contributor

  32. Who’s The Social Customer What do they Say? • I want to have a say • I want to know when something is wrong • I want to help shape things I find useful • Don’t want to talk to salesperson • Want to buy things on my schedule • I want to tell you when you are screwing up • I want to do business with Transparent Companies * Chris Carfi Blog

  33. Breakdown of Social Customers * Source: Forrester Benchmark Survey

  34. Time Spent in Week

  35. Ultimate Manifestation of Usability • For the User by the user • Telegraph to Telephone (full duplex) • Success already (LinkedIn, ItToolbox) • Try it and see…

  36. Why Now? The Perfect Storm • Web 2.0 Technologies • Broadband Proliferation • Online Adoption

  37. Why does it Matter? • The conversation is happening; either you are a part of it or not (raising children) • 30% who read blog/post more likely to purchase • 80% who contribute more likely to purchase* CoreMetrics, Web 2.0 Study

  38. Take Away … Further Your Education • www.OnlineMarketingSummit.com • www.OMICertified.com Want PPT or Top 10 Site Usability Assessment Facebook or LinkedIn “Aaron Kahlow” Old School Aaron@OnlineMarketingConnect.com

More Related