Arhaus Furniture's Custom iPad App Aims to Drive Cross Channel Sales
The application is designed primarily for customer use: customers will be handed the iPad at the start of the delivery, which will include a welcome and thank you message from the retailer, will be able to look at different furniture setup options and even browse the entire Arhaus ecommerce catalog. Customers will also sign off on deliveries using their fingers on the touch screen and will also be able to fill out a post delivery survey on site.
While the iPad application will certainly result in efficiencies in the retailer’s fulfillment and delivery systems, what is interesting here is how the company is adding another level to their customer service experience through a true cross channel retail strategy. For example, while a customer is having a sofa delivered that they purchased at their local store, they will be able to browse the Arhaus.com ecommerce catalog through the iPad app for the matching chair they recall seeing during their shopping trip.
No doubt that we will continue to see more and more retailers integrate these type of mobile and tablet products into their multi channel strategy to enhance their customers' retail shopping experience, be it in-store or on the go. And as retail channels become increasingly blurred and intertwined, the importance of having consistent content and product information for your customer no matter where they are shopping will be imperative and essential to driving sales.
How are your stores or franchises integrating technologies such as the iPad into their sales or customer service process?
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Social Media Still Needs Local Relevance
Almost half (48%) of the brand managers surveyed by Harris find measuring ROI a challenge to connecting with local retail markets, while 45% cited managing and maintaining information as an obstacle. Additionally, 42% pointed to engaging audiences as a challenge for localized social media marketing.
In short, even across social media networks, your customers are still looking for a local message that is relevant to them.
While national or global campaigns are important for elevating a retailers' image, localized content helps consumers to relate to you and your products. Localization is at the heart of our approach at Blueport and it drives the ecommerce strategies for all of our multichannel retail clients.
Social media is a natural extension of any multichannel retailer's online strategy and it's a no brainer that this too needs to have a localized flavor. When used to connect with consumers at a local, regional level, your social media presence will become a true cross-channel sales driver integrated with your overall localized internet retail strategy.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Local E-Commerce:
The GSI Commerce Perspective
One of the most interesting things that stood out for me from their conversation was Rubin’s identification of localization as one of the next key e-commerce trends to watch in the near future. Consumers are increasingly demanding more personal, relevant and local products and services from their online shopping experience. Consequently, retailers will need to invest in technologies that cater to these local preferences to capitalize on the consumer need.
Part and parcel to a localized e-commerce experience is the expectation of rapid and lower cost delivery and return of products. In order to deliver on this promise, Rubin points out that multichannel retailers will need to leverage their stores and distribution centers to get consumers the products they want as quickly and cheaply as possible. This is an area where GSI is investing a great deal of time to provide innovation.
We have been focusing on e-commerce localization at Blueport Commerce for the last decade. Like GSI, we believe this is at the heart of the next generation of e-commerce, or rather, the next generation of cross-channel retailing. Whether they are shopping for a new piece of clothing or a new piece of furniture for their home, consumers want their retail experience to be local. They want the comfort of knowing they can connect with retailers in their area, who can answer questions about the product, or handle exchanges or returns quickly and easily.
In order to deliver this kind of experience, retailers need to stop thinking of e-commerce as an isolated ‘island’ within their operations and begin to construct a truly coordinated, cross-channel strategy. E-commerce teams need to be aligned with bricks-and-mortar stores as well as fulfillment and warehouse facilities. When all of these components are working as one holistic retailing effort, localization is inherent and e-commerce becomes a driver of multi-channel retail sales.
This approach is at the heart of Blueport’s e-commerce package and I am intrigued to see the innovations from GSI in this area as well.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Enabling the Socially Mobile
As such, the impact of social media as part of a complete cross-channel approach cannot be ignored. Already impacting the traditional e-commerce space, the growing use of social applications through mobile devices highlights the importance for retailers to carve out a social media presence that ensures their brand is visible and accessible in this space and creating sites that are optimized for mobile viewing and sharing.
Are you seeing this trend within your stores? How are you addressing the intersection of mobile and social commerce?
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Capturing Consumers On The Go
To capture this shopper, a compelling “traditional” website is a must - ideally one that is synchronized with what’s happening in local stores. With a localized website in place, retailers, especially those targeting smartphone-wielding demographics, should take the next step – capturing consumers who have already left the house.
Whether or not you believe that your products will ever sell over a phone, you can take advantage of location-based services and GPS-enabled phones to entice on the go consumers into stores. Product information, prices and nearby locations to “touch and feel” products can be ‘pulled’ through local searches by consumers. Coupons and promotions can be ‘pushed’ to a consumer’s phone based on their location.
How is your company integrating mobile into your cross-channel strategy? For more information on how other retailers are successfully using mobile to capture consumers on the go, check out this article: How Mobile Commerce Can Capture In Store Sales.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Is Mobile Commerce Right for Big-Ticket Retail?
But mobile commerce means more than just buying goods through your phone. Increasingly, mobile is impacting how consumers search, locate and decide to purchase goods both online and in bricks and mortar stores. As consumers are evolving into true cross-channel shoppers, the real mobile opportunity for retailers presents itself. Integrating mobile into a comprehensive cross-channel strategy ensures you are meeting your customers where -- and how -- they shop for your products today.
Give the article a read: How Mobile Commerce Can Capture In-Store Sales
I’d love to hear your feedback on Blueport’s view on how a mobile strategy can help big-ticket retailers like you.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Multichannel retailers have their work cut out for them if they want to succeed online
Goldman notes that while online pure plays already realize the importance of investing in Web technologies, multi-channel retailers will be challenged to keep up with their pace of innovation and e-commerce spending. While pure play e-tailers spent 7% of their revenue on e-commerce technology in 2008, multi-channel retailers only spent 2%.
This is an important consideration for Blueport and our customers, who are predominantly multi-channel or brick and mortar retailers in the early stages of their e-commerce development. While they will certainly not be able to keep up with the e-commerce budgets of mammoths like Amazon, they will be challenged to harness the right e-commerce innovations that bring in the most bang for the buck, generating the most leads and driving cross-channel sales.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Live from IRCE: Drop the ‘e’ in ‘e-commerce’
Because we specialize in “big-ticket” retail, a lot of the companies we work with use their e-commerce sites not only to sell direct to consumers, but also to educate shoppers who will ultimately make their purchase in a local store. So we tend to think of our platform as cross-channel and not solely ‘e-commerce’.
Walker went on to say that Forrester (which typically has conservative estimates compared to other analysts firms) believes 51% of all retail sales will be made or researched online by 2013. He also pointed out that e-commerce sites will not be driving all those sales. With the emergence of new devices like the iPad, consumers will be shopping from nearly everywhere – TRUE multi-channel shopping. And if that’s the case, the term ‘e-commerce’ will address only a piece of the entire commerce pie.
What do you think? Is it about time we drop the ‘e’ in ‘e-commerce’?
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
IBM Invests in E-Commerce
This week IBM announced its plans to acquire Sterling Commerce, an e-commerce company and provider of cross-channel fulfillment solutions, for $1.4 billion. While IBM already participates in e-commerce with its WebSphere division, the integration of Sterling Commerce will add collaboration, communication and integration solutions for fulfillment, as well as a stellar client list with more than 18,000 customers worldwide, including 80% of the Fortune 500 list.
From a technology standpoint Craig Hayman, general manager of IBM's WebSphere division noted that the cloud computing model which Sterling employs is attractive to IBM. He also noted that many of IBM’s current customers are looking for easy-to-scale solutions, which make them great candidates for migration into the cloud.
From an industry perspective, it’s great to see giants like IBM expanding their reach into e-commerce as it further validates our fast-growing industry. The move will help IBM to better position itself against the likes of tech giants HP, Cisco, and SAP. It also represents a greater business goal of the company, which is to grow through acquisition. IBM has said that the company plans to spend $20 billion on acquisitions by 2015 and its purchase of Sterling Commerce is certainly a good start.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
e-Dialog Acquires MBS and M3 – Gains Targeting Insight Across Channels
What does this mean for e-Dialog?
These acquisitions are all about the data. e-Dialog not only gains a wealth of data acquisition and integration technology, it also leverages interesting consumer behavioral insights and patterns. This technology will help the company to better collect, analyze and act on customer data across channels. We believe this will only strengthen e-Dialog’s already great targetingimpressive data segmentation capabilities.
What does this mean for the industry?
John Rizzi, CEO of e-Dialog noted that the average multichannel retailer does about 7% of revenue online and 93% in stores – yet most retailers do not tie those customer activities together or create strategies that are truly cross-channel. The missed opportunities resulting from this lack of integration are glaring.
As consumers’ shopping behavior (be it for mass products or high-ticket items) becomes increasingly cross-channel, retailers must be ready to meet them where they shop – be it in the store, online or through mobile – or risk losing the sale. That means that it’s increasingly essential for companies to be able to integrate their databases across channels to create a ‘single view’ of each customer.
e-Dialog’s ability to integrate email, point of sale, mobile, social media and online databases will prove to be a competitive differentiator which will push others in the industry to further innovate to keep up.
We look forward to continuing working with e-Dialog to provide our clients with the very best in multi channel marketing services.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Google Moves into Local Inventory Search
Blueport Commerce Reaction: Been there, done that… (since 2001).
In March, Google announced its plans to move into yet another new area – local inventory search. Through a new deal with Best Buy, Sears, Williams Sonoma, Pottery Barn and the Vitamin Shoppe, Google will begin experimenting with localized search for inventory at brick and mortar retailers. Using the system, a consumer could search for a specific item and in theory find the store closest to their location with the item in stock.
Perhaps the most interesting part of Google’s strategy is that rather than waiting for retailers to have their own online local inventory strategy in place and then making it searchable, (a more typical model, where a search engine helps consumers find data) the company is developing its own system in conjunction with these retailers (in effect, trying to create data).
This new ground for search is causing some growing pains for Google, as their retailers have not uploaded full inventory lists, making the system inaccurate. According to StoreFront BackTalk’s Evan Schuman, Google’s inventory search also forces users to select specific models, rather than allowing searches for broader product categories. Customers may know model numbers for some products, but for many categories, consumers may not have a clue as to the model number they are looking for (home furnishings? flooring?). And finally, let’s face it – so far, few retailers keep track of their local inventory online, making it extremely difficult to provide accurate local search results.
It’s clear that a system like this has tremendous potential. And, Google’s interest reinforces to a key fact - when it comes to big-ticket retail online, localization is crucial. Most cross-channel shopping is for big ticket items. To sell these items, you need a great local online presence, seamlessly linking your website, local inventory, and stores.
In time, Google will likely work out the kinks. In the meantime, Blueport Commerce already provides its customers with websites with that provide fast, accurate, local inventory search as part of the company’s core localization strategy. We’ll continue to look to Google to help consumers find our customers’ great, localized shopping experiences, but we’ll take care of building them ourselves.
What the heck is a ROBO?
The term ROBO (Research Online, Buy Offline) was coined by Yahoo! to describe the growing number of consumers who research online, but buy offline. Online ‘pre-shopping’ has become a common activity prior to a variety of purchases. According to Forrester, online research will influence $1 trillion in offline sales by 2012, making it imperative that retailers understand the full impact that their online presence—as well as those of their competitors—may have on consumer in-store behavior.
Understanding Research Online, Buy Offline (ROBO) behavior is particularly important when selling ‘big-ticket’ items - online or in-store. Big-ticket purchases require more research and consideration due to higher price points and their high degree of personalization. Furniture, mattresses, appliances, flooring and home décor are all examples of products that consumers are spending a significant amount of time researching online prior to purchase.
What should multichannel retailers be doing to better understand and meet the needs of ROBOs while they are in this ‘pre-shopping’ mindset? Whether the ultimate purchase is made at ecommerce store or at a local store, a multichannel retailer needs to take the necessary steps to ensure they are providing a seamless cross channel customer experience that ultimately makes a sale. When executed well – and with ROBOs in mind – ecommerce sites can become a critical tool to help stores compete both locally and chain-wide.
By understanding how the ROBO shops, and synchronizing your online presence with your local stores, retailers can provide the seamless cross-channel experience these shoppers seek and capture their business - through whichever channel they ultimately choose to buy.
Put focus on these key areas:
- Localize online merchandising to match local stores
- Build credibility through rich, synchronized information
- Provide accurate, local delivery information
- Integrate local in-store and online offers and promotions
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Big Ticket vs. Small Ticket:
Why disaggregating e-commerce matters.
There’s no shortage of e-commerce conventional wisdom - sweeping pronouncements that online is growing at a certain rate. That one tactic works, another doesn’t. That a multi-channel strategy is increasingly important.
I love such analysis and opinion – back in the day, as a consultant at McKinsey, I performed and provided my fair share. However, I will point out the need to dig deeper. What is loosely called “e-commerce” is dramatically different in its application depending on what you are selling.
A few things to keep in mind as you digest the latest e-commerce wisdom or evaluate a vendor:
E-commerce expertise correlates with where money has been made to date, not where it will be made.
Well known e-commerce experts, agencies and technology companies become so because they’ve been doing it for a while and have been well paid for their work. As such, their experience tends to be in those categories that went online early and successfully, yielding enthusiastic clients and customers who could pay.
There’s nothing wrong with that, as long as you are also in those categories. If not, think about whether what you are being told makes sense for your business.
One example: It’s been said that 65% of e-commerce keyword searches include a manufacture name and/or model number. Most online agencies build keyword strategies around that fact. And, it works well in those categories that have dominated e-commerce in the past.
But, say you’re a furniture retailer.
Most of your prospective customers have no idea who manufactured the sofa they already own, much less the one they are thinking about buying. Model number? Forget it. Conventional wisdom is out the window - how will your agency react to not being able to rely a favorite approach?
Beware sweeping pronouncements and general statistics. Dig for what’s happening in your market.
I’m an e-com stat addict. There are outstanding analysts out there providing the pulse of e-commerce on a regular and accurate basis. That said, it’s important to pull apart e-commerce statistics and trends to find those that apply to what you do.
Some recent examples:
E-Commerce Growth Statistics
Pundits seem to be in general agreement that in 2009, e-commerce grew or shrank by single digit percentage points. In the face of brick and mortar declines, this is touted as strength – ecommerce holding its own despite significant economic headwinds.
All true – but there’s more to the story. Big ticket online took off in 2009.
Big ticket (think things that cost more and can’t ship via UPS…consumer durables like furniture, appliances, flooring) is 45% of the US Retail Economy, $550B in annual retail sales. It’s never done much online – until now.
Consumers are online and big ticket retailers are now meeting them there. Forrester reports customers feeling comfortable buying furniture and appliances online just in the last 18 months. Big ticket players Blueport works with are seeing monstrous comp increases for online sales and even bigger benefits in stores.
If you happen to be in big ticket markets, this is an opportunity you can’t miss…but easily could, if you just look at broader online growth stats.
E-Commerce by Channel Statistics
Similarly, stats show roughly 45% of e-commerce transacted by Web-only players and catalogers (i.e. pure plays), 15% by manufacturers, and 40% by retailers.
Beneath this stat is a dramatic big ticket vs. small ticket schism in who is winning in e-commerce.
For traditional (small ticket) e-commerce, pure plays have tremendous cost advantages. With no store costs, they can price low. Their products are well known, approaching commodity status, and the shipping is fast, cheap and risk free. In categories from books to shoes, pure plays are cleaning up.
Not so in big ticket. Here, consumers know less about the product. They want to touch and feel in a store. They look for trusted brands – not only for the product, but for the retailer who can deliver and service it. And, they are highly focused on delivery times and costs. Here, retail chains, with trusted brands, local stores and fast, cheap local delivery have the upper hand.
Combine these advantages with the growth noted above, and it’s a good time to be going online if you’re a big ticker player. And, if you’re a retailer in these categories, there’s certainly more than 40% of the online marketplace available to you.
The Importance of Cross-Channel Commerce
There’s significant recent buzz about “multi-channel” or “cross-channel” commerce as the next big thing. We couldn’t agree more – with emphasis on the “big”.
For small ticket items, I don’t think cross channel is that important. Anyone think that opening Zappos bricks and mortar stores is on any of the whiteboards at Amazon?
Conversely, in big ticket, cross channel is critical. The key differentiating factors in big ticket online are store based. Big ticket online and offline channels must be synchronized, as consumers move between them constantly.
This is why we’ve architected our platform to be localized. Big ticket commerce comes down to the local relationship between a consumer, a store, and the inventory in her area. If you’re in big ticket and you’re not reflecting this reality online, you’re missing the point.
Balance online conventional wisdom against what you know about your customers.
Ultimately, e-commerce comes down to a combination of persuading and enabling consumers to buy, using the internet.
Here again, how your consumers do this may not be the same as in “traditional” e-commerce categories.
To grossly over simplify traditional e-commerce shopping, it comes down to finding a product and deciding you like it. After that, the assumption is that UPS takes it from there - you will have your product cheaply, quickly, and some nice brown-shirted gentleman will take it back if things go awry.
As such, most e-commerce wisdom is focused on search and merchandising, helping consumers to find and buy (maybe getting a deal).
These areas are critical (and unique) in big ticket as well, but there’s more to the story – specifically, the part of the story that UPS takes care of in traditional, small ticket e-commerce.
With a sofa or a fridge, more goes into the shopping process than features and price. Customers want to touch and feel in a store. They may want to speak to an expert. They want to know how fast they can get something, and that delivery is as cheap as it can be. They may want financing options. They want to be sure the product can be serviced, and that, worst case it can be returned.
If these are questions your consumer is likely to ask, be sure to push beyond UPS-based ecom conventional wisdom. If you’re a retailer, you’ve got some of the best possible answers to these questions – be sure your online presence takes full advantage (see localization above).
* * *
As consumers look to buy more products online, and e-commerce pushes beyond the simple, UPSable products that were the first wave of e-commerce, the importance of disaggregating e-commerce increases. The opportunities online have changed. E-commerce conventional wisdom soon will too.
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Channel Surfing: Engaging the Online Customer
Several years ago the idea of purchasing a piece of furniture online made many shoppers nervous. Today, shoppers make these types of purchases effortlessly cutting across multiple channels to do their research, familiarize themselves with the product and finally to buy.
A recent survey from PriceGrabber.com pointed to a growing trend that we here at Blueport have seen coming for some time now:
- 80 percent of online consumers indicated they will likely research their next kitchen appliance online, and 30 percent said they will likely make their purchase online as well
- 77 percent of online consumers will likely research online their next laundry home appliance and 26 percent will likely purchase that appliance online
- Overall, 65 percent of consumers will research big-ticket home furniture purchases online as well
A typical shopper may start off researching and comparing prices at a retailer's ecommerce store. They may then visit a local store to get more information and finally may go back to the ecommerce store to make the purchase. Their decision process may involve any number of physical visits or online clicks. To the consumer, there is no difference between the online and physical stores – they expect to get the same type of information, to see the same products and to have the same level of service no matter their preferred shopping channel.
It’s important to note that this behavior is particularly important in big-ticket retail. For smaller ticket items, an isolated online channel can thrive (anyone expect Amazon to open stores?) In big ticket on the other hand, stores play a critical role and cross-channel sales represent the primary online opportunity.
Yet, too often I see a disconnect from this reality in the approaches of retailers, especially larger retail chains. Many still view (and operate) their physical stores as separate from their ecommerce offering and vice versa. A few years ago, some chains thought their ecommerce offering might undercut bricks and mortar sales. Today it's clear that the opposite is true - that the two channels drive each other’s sales. We also recognize that a multi channel offering is a significant competitive advantage, and that an integrated multi channel strategy is at the heart of this approach.
Just like today’s consumer, retailers must consider their online and bricks and mortar channels one unified offering, and they must synchronize pricing, promotions, product offerings, delivery options and branding across channels. This cohesive, integrated, multi channel approach will undoubtedly be a recurring theme in our discussions as it’s central to the work we do with many of our clients.
I’m interested in hearing your perspective on the changing consumer, how do you think this new ‘channel surfing’ shopping behavior can best be leveraged by retail chains?
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
Going Beyond Your Standard Ecommerce Platform: A Big-Ticket Retailer's Wishlist
Unlike their mass merchandise counterparts, big-ticket retailers need a platform that will help them overcome challenges such as:
- Merchandising products that are challenging to sell online because they are expensive, unbranded, not well understood or highly customizable
- Managing shipping requirements and costs for products that have complex delivery requirements that can't be met by standard parcel services
- Integrating franchise or co-op models where brand, product offering and distribution is controlled locally by independent dealers
- Greater emphasis on cross-channel shopping
These retailers need a system that goes beyond just a standard ecommerce platform. They need a business solution that integrates their ecommerce store into a seamless multi-channel strategy offering.
Key ecommerce platform requirements for big-ticket retailers include:
- Localization
- Custom System Integration
- Online Merchandising
- Online Marketing
- E-Commerce
- Order Tracking
- Franchise/Co-op Extranet
- Store Intranet
- CRM & Email Marketing
- Inventory Management
Blueport Commerce's E-commerce Platform
At Blueport Commerce, our ten years of experience in big-ticket, localized retail allows us to understand your business and apply technology intelligently — not just hopping on the latest technology bandwagon, but finding solutions that work for your unique managed e-commerce retailing needs.
Blueport Commerce works with you to review your site strategies and programs, as well as with other technology providers to guarantee your customers the highest quality hosted e-commerce solution available, and to guarantee you the highest e-commerce returns possible – including leads to your local stores. We keep on top of the latest technology so you don't have to. We find the best providers, test them against our unique consumer profile, and adopt or develop best in breed e-commerce technologies to meet your needs.
Key features include:
- Website Development – Blueport Commerce works with you over the course of our agreement to add new features and functionality to your e-commerce platform.
- Partner Plug Ins – Blueport Commerce includes leading technology providers into our platform, driving down your costs through our scale and integrated platform.
- Custom Integration – Blueport Commerce integrates with your retail systems, enabling cross-channel shopping and simplifying its management.
