E-Commerce
The e-commerce category has posts about e-commerce in general and NetSuite e-commerce in particular
Thinking about it now, the David and Goliath metaphor may not work perfectly, but it does quickly focus this post. The enterprise world has spent untold billions of treasure on customer relationship management over the past two decades, and you have to ask to what avail? For the business to business organizations, one understands giving sales and channel partners a solution. But for retailers, the value of CRM has been difficult to ascertain. E-commerce might be slightly better because you have transaction record with an identity. But getting to really know your customers, to the point where you have something approaching a relationship, has been the proverbial mirage of retail, and CRM generally. We have the little keychain ID cards for the local grocery stores, but have not yet received a personalized alert that the groceries we tend to buy seasonally have gone on sale, or that this group of items is available at a discount. You would think that after three or four years they would know us better.
AisleBuyer is out to change all that. By offering consumers an easy to use tool to shop, research in store, review promotions, order and checkout and by offering retailers a rules based marketing platform integrated with their back office inventory and the other systems, AisleBuyer bridges the divide between the customer and the 'store'; it's real time CRM initiated by the customer for the customer's benefit. (There's a novel concept.)
Loaded onto thousands of servers the world over are massive CRM systems that try to make heads or tails of customer behavior after the fact, when the customer has long since checked out and driven home, maybe even moved to another city. But for all the data, the information is sparse. AisleBuyer not only lets you see real time what the individual shopper scans and buys, but what they scanned and did not buy. For example, if they scan a sweatshirt in medium but put it down, and inventory in large is unavailable in the store, AisleBuyer can alert you that other sizes are available and let you place the order right on your phone.
Shoppers can now research the products they are interested in while in the aisle and holding them, simply by using the AisleBuyer app and their smartphone's camera/scanner. And when a retailer's rules sense that you are interested in a clock radio, they can dial up a promo on the spot. When you make your selection, you add the item to your cart, literal and virtual, and move on. When you are done shopping, you checkout and pay online. No more put it in the cart, remove it from the cart and put it back in the cart. When you are done shopping, you checkout as you stroll to the door, where you show a store clerk your smartphone order.
Retailers, manufacturers and consumers all have their own good reasons to use a service like AisleBuyer: The ability to connect with your customer real time for the retailer; a data store for the manufacturer; and true convenience for the shopper.
The technology landscape is littered with the wreckage of large tech companies who tried a consumer offensive, as detailed in this NYT article, where consumer world is referred to bleakly as the "Afghanistan" of enterprise technology. So what makes AisleBuyer different. In a word it's simplicity. The user interface of the smartphone app is simple and straightforward. All the complexity is hidden behind the scenes where AisleBuyer's web APIs integrate volumes of data with retailer's back office systems and the their own marketing platform.
While large tech companies would do well to tread lightly in the consumer space, large retailers have some quick decision making at hand. The adoption of smart phones is changing the way we communicate, compute and live; and the rate of adoption has accelerated so fast recently that many retailers were caught off guard – they did not budget in 2011 for mobile shopping. At this point they can try to build it themselves or they can use a service like AisleBuyer – in either an on-demand version, or on premise if the retailer insists.
AisleBuyer does more than just mobilize the store and give retailers a strategy to compete with e-commerce, it also arms store personnel with an app that gives them the ability to be real value add to the customer. The clerk app offers a veritable knowledge base of information on products. Imagine a harried clerk being able to stop and answer your question right in the aisle without using the obnoxious store wide loudspeaker phone. Your shoppers might actually ask a question that leads to a sale.
System complexity is often the result of trying to mirror human behaviour and its off the charts idiosyncrasies. But what if you don't try mirror behavior but simply capture it as it happens. How does that change the enterprise CRM game? Instead of waiting for customers to line up and walk through our predefined corn maize, you let the customer behave and you simply respond as a fascinated, helpful third party.
We, or at least I, have long questioned whether our systems were off on a tangent, trying desperately to keep up with a marketplace that cares nothing for processes or transaction conformity. Sometime in this business, as in life, we don't actually answer the question, so much as the questions become moot and we move along to, inevitably, new questions. If you accept the premise that AisleBuyer is an enterprise CRM system, and I do, then the next step is to ask is does it provide a new question about how CRM is going to operate in the future: Customer driven, customer focused, process and transaction lite? Where does that leave the massive CRM systems we have struggled under these many years?
The other question you can't help but ask is how a service like AisleBuyer ramps up in the market. Large retailers might each bring it on-premise and then go through the typical heavy lifting of sourcing infrastructure, laying pipe, etc. Each install will be different because each retailer has a custom back end integration project; but the big boys have full wallets, or so I hear in the press. On the other end of the sprectrum small retail chains could swap out AisleBuyer for a majority of their POS terminals. And if AisleBuyer was already integrated with a SaaS back end, say NetSuite or Business By Design, all mutual customers could avail themselves of the magic without having separate integration projects. Just another huge benefit of the SaaS model.
Businesses across the spectrum are anxious, to say the least, to increase business. This might be one reason that the amount of daily calls, emails and other detritus of SEO fraud that crosses my desk everyday increases exponentially. Also, someone must be making money off this scam to have it explode in popularity so quickly. Essentially, all these SEO pitches say that the fraudsters have found the secret formula and can help you improve your page rankings on Google search.
First, the ‘success’ of SEO fraud speaks directly to the fact that a lot of people think that improving your rank on Google search pages is a black and mysterious art. It’s not. You must simply work hard at creating content that other people find interesting and link to. But when you tell people that content is the key, they look at you like you’re a high school English teacher asking for a three page essay due the day after prom. Believe me, it’s worse than that. Content is a three page essay once or twice a week if you really care about search rankings. It also means spending time reading and understanding the subject matter. You have to make yourself part of a larger discussion, and you have to add something meaningful to the discussion.
We still run into people who think they can increase their page rank by hiding keywords in the white areas of their site. This does not work. At least not anymore. Back when we used Alta Vista search this was a common practice, judging by the weird search results we used to get. Google owes the value of their franchise to the fact that they eliminated this nonsense. They created algorithms that allowed us to find “relevant” search results. Relevant is obviously a very rare commodity on the web, judging by the money Google makes. They could also help their cause by making it more obvious how they are search your web pages. They have done some of this the last few years, but as long as legitimate marketing agencies can say, with some honesty, that they have figured out what the Google crawlers are looking for, SEO is going to have a fraudulent underbelly.
By the way, if you want to learn more about SEO fraud and what specifically to watch out for, just Google it.
If you have a NetSuite website, or are in the middle of implementing NetSuite, you should really take the time to understand the SEO attributes before you start setting up the hierarchy, or importing your items. There are several fields that are very important for SEO in the system and it makes sense to understand them well before you have too much setup. Take notice of URL components, page titles, meta tags and your sitemap.
Ultimately, the SEO fraud will spread to other areas of Google’s franchise. There now appears to be a fraudulent Adwords practice surfacing. These come in two flavors. First there are groups that pay people in the third world to click on Adsense and Adwords ads; or they may use a machine. So I guess there are people in internet cafes just clicking all day on ads on those dummy sites. The owner of the site gets a small cut when Google charges the ad owner.
The other fraud is similar to the SEO fraud, wherein the fraudster makes a pitch that they can increase your PPC traffic and conversions because they have the best copywriters, the best knowledge of Adwords, etc. Obviously, you must be very careful when giving someone access to your Adwords account, because once they are in it they can setup campaigns that cost you thousands while netting them hundreds, or even thousands. Since Adwords has your credit card, this can be a very dangerous situation.
Obviously we all need to be better buyers of services, but the marketing industry also bears some responsibility here. SEO should be part of your typical web design and development practice, not a black art that you pitch to prospects. As long as legitimate marketing agencies try to make a buck on the SEO, the marketplace will be full of the plain old fraudsters.
Well, it’s an interesting question. There may be several possible explanations. First, the correlation between strong growth and NetSuite could be purely spurious. That is to say, there might be a third factor that many of NetSuite’s e-commerce companies share that results in really strong growth. For example, they might all share a strategic vision of how they want to run their companies, and in their quest for efficiency, growth and profitability they have found NetSuite’s completely integrated solution. Let’s face it not every small business is equal. Some want to survive and others want to succeed.
Another explanation is the the software itself actually makes it easier to sell in NetSuite web sites. Honestly, I can’t really buy this one. There are a lot of very good e-commerce engines out there. They provide excellent functionality for managing a web site. The one thing that they do not have is an integrated inventory and financial modules. This is perhaps the most compelling explanation for why NetSuite e-commerce companies do much better than others: They don’t have to spend a lot of time manipulating data or managing spreadsheets, or rectifying inventory or the books. Without all of those business distractions, a NetSuite e-commerce user can spend more time on the stuff that really matters, like search marketing and product updates.
GoEngineer uses the NetSuite ERP/CRM system extensively, including a division that uses Advanced Project Accounting to manage a large professional services team. Previously they had the website hosted by a local company, and every time they needed a change they had to pick up the phone to speak to the principal, and then wait for time on his schedule.
What they really needed was a Content Management System, or CMS, to help them manage the site ongoing; adding new pages, products and training announcements on their schedule. The NetSuite CMS was a perfect fit. They didn’t have to learn another User Interface, it’s completely integrated with the rest of NetSuite, and it enables them to sell online effortlessly, they are doing a bit of e-commerce, as well as list new classes, events, whitepapers, videos, etc.
The key for GoEngineer was to find a way to put a lot of content into a site and keep it looking streamlined and classy. The last thing that GoEngineer wants is a ‘busy’ website. They sell B2B and need to present a professional face to their audience. At the same time they want engineers and designers to find interesting content that will help them make a decision about both SolidWorks and GoEngineer.
One of the neat customizations that we did on the site was a Calendar that lists all of the schedules classes that Go offers, by location. The allows current customers to check in and see when they might have a chance to send a new employee to a class, or take an advanced class themselves, and they can find it in the most convenient location. We also added some scrolling customer testimonials and placed a SolidWorks rotating advertisment on the interior pages.
A large site like this requires a good deal of content gathering and editing and Go’s Marketing Director Jennifer Douglas did an awesome job. Great site, great project.
We created the site in NetSuite, top to bottom, with some interesting additions. First, since Tall Couture sells clothing, for Tall Women as you might have guessed, they needed matrix options for sizes. This required a custom solution because Jennifer did not want sizes appearing in the drop-down if they were not in stock. Always thinking of the shopper is that Jennifer. It was a good call, no doubt. Shopping can be difficult enough without having to find out after you have made your choice that the size you need is out of stock. Takes the fun out it pretty quickly. With the custom solution shoppers will only see sizes that are in stock.
Along the same lines, we also added in custom narrowing filter on the product pages so that the shopper can quickly filter out items which do not have their size. Again, that makes for a better shopping experience.
I’ll add on to this post over the next few days, but until then I invite any tall women who read this blog, or any men who know tall women and the difficulty of finding great fitting fashion, to take a look at Tall Couture.
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