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St. Louis Product Manager’s Meeting Forrester Consumer 2008 Forum Jennifer Ruffino January, 2009

St. Louis Product Manager’s Meeting Forrester Consumer 2008 Forum Jennifer Ruffino January, 2009. Overview. About Forrester’s Consumer Forum The Psychology of Product Adoption Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years Social Computing Updates Mobile and GPS advancements

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St. Louis Product Manager’s Meeting Forrester Consumer 2008 Forum Jennifer Ruffino January, 2009

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  1. St. Louis Product Manager’s MeetingForrester Consumer 2008 ForumJennifer RuffinoJanuary, 2009

  2. Overview • About Forrester’s Consumer Forum • The Psychology of Product Adoption • Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years • Social Computing Updates • Mobile and GPS advancements • Methodology best practices  reserved for future meeting

  3. Forrester’s Consumer Forum • Leading Forrester analysts present research on how firms are responding to empowered consumers, and industry executives share their companies' experiences and best practices as they entice consumers in today's multichannel environment. • Various segments of presentations: • Consumer Market Research • Consumer Product Strategy • Customer Experience • Direct Marketing • eBusiness & Channel Strategy • Interactive Marketing • Marketing Leadership

  4. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  5. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  6. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  7. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  8. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  9. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  10. The Psychology of Product Adoption as opposedto Maslowe’s

  11. The Psychology of Product Adoption 2 examples fromthe same consumer:Brian – in college, choosing a computer vs. Brian – selecting a tie for his first job interview

  12. The Psychology of Product Adoption

  13. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  14. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years • A transaction is defined as: • Receiving goods or services • In your home, outside of your home, at work, outside of work • Research, payments, loyalty • Retail, travel, financial services, health care, entertainment

  15. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  16. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  17. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  18. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years Three Traits of Transactions of the Future: Efficiency: Speeding Transactions, Driving Convenience Security: Reducing Fraud and Protecting Data Customer Service: Helping People as They Transact

  19. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  20. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  21. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  22. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  23. WebSite Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  24. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  25. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years Three Traits of Transactions of the Future: Efficiency: Speeding Transactions, Driving Convenience Security: Reducing Fraud and Protecting Data Customer Service: Helping People as They Transact

  26. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  27. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years It has reduced transaction volume

  28. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  29. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  30. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years Three Traits of Transactions of the Future: Efficiency: Speeding Transactions, Driving Convenience Security: Reducing Fraud and Protecting Data Customer Service: Helping People as They Transact

  31. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  32. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  33. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  34. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years

  35. Web Site Readiness for the Next 10 Years What can be done today? • If you’re a transactional business, get on the alternative payment bandwagon. • Ensure that help sections and product detail pages are comprehensive and self-explanatory. • Monitor your Web transactions and make sure that customers are not abandoning for reasons you could avoid (e.g., slow download time, low site availability). • Study up on mobile initiatives in your industry — it’s coming and it’s going to be big.

  36. Social Computing Update

  37. Social Computing Update

  38. Social Computing Update

  39. Social Computing Update Consumers by Activity on the Participation Ladder

  40. Social Computing Update

  41. Social Computing Update

  42. Social Computing Update

  43. Social Computing Update CRM is moving beyond the goal of optimizing a two-way relationship between an enterprise and a customer to include . . . . . . the simultaneous relationships that customers have among themselves! What should companies do?

  44. Social Computing Update • What should companies do? • Collaborate with customers and partners in new ways. • Online social networks allow a prospective customer to facilitate human-level connection with individuals within an organization. • Collaborate within the enterprise to deliver more value. • Online networks with even basic profiles can cut problem-solving time by enabling a faster connection between a questioner and an employee who has solved similar problems in the past.

  45. Social Computing Update What should companies do? • Benchmark customer and prospect social readiness. • Define your social customer objectives. • Understand the Social Computing solutions landscape. • Map out your social CRM capabilities-building plan. • Define your metrics for success.

  46. Mobile and GPS Advances

  47. Mobile and GPS Advances Where are we now? • The PC browser-accessed Web site is still the hub for eBusiness transactions. • Mobile devices are starting to play a more substantial role in digital interaction. • Social networks and widgets are just emerging as alternate platforms for transactions.

  48. Mobile and GPS Advances

  49. Mobile and GPS Advances

  50. Mobile and GPS Advances

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