Newspaper Advertising Falls to 1950s Levels, While Online Skyrockets -- How Are You Spending Your Ad Dollars?

Friday, March 2, 2012 by Carl Prindle

We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: Retailers must advertise online to compete in today’s market. We’ve showed you that customers are online, and we’ve shared data that proves the direct correlation between online advertising and increased in-store sales.

We continually talk to our clients and other big-ticket retailers about the merits of advertising online vs. sticking with what some still call a “tried-and-true” newspaper advertising strategy.

The times, they are a changing. This week, a little graphic has been making its way around the Web, showing the decline in print newspaper advertising revenue, adjusted for inflation.

Print newspaper advertising revenue adjusted for inflation, 1950-2011

The image was created by Dr. Mark J. Perry, a professor of economics and finance at the University of Michigan in Flint. One of his more striking observations? “It took 50 years to go from about $20 billion in annual newspaper ad revenue in 1950 (adjusted for inflation) to $63.5 billion in 2000, and then only 11 years to go from $63.5 billion back to about $20 billion in 2011.” Said another way, in the last decade, newspaper advertising has fallen back to 1950s levels.

As an article from The Atlantic explains, newspapers have been losing advertising revenue to websites, because the softer sections of the newspapers that actually sell the ads, like “the car section, the style section, the travel section and the classified” all have online counterparts. “Ad dollars started flowing to websites that gave people their car, style, travel, or classifieds directly. So did the readers. And down went print.”

What is it about print advertising that still has some retailers hooked? Print ads are expensive, can’t be personalized and the ROI is often hard to track. Meanwhile, online advertising has numerous capabilities for localization, personalized targeting and tracking. They reach shoppers not when they are reading a news article, but when they’re searching online for the goods that you can sell them.

As the print advertising industry has been collapsing, the folks at the Interactive Advertising Bureau have been tracking online advertising growth, and have a very different story to tell.

In the third quarter of last year, US online advertising revenue hit nearly $8 billion, reaching double digit increases despite the lagging economy. “The ongoing increases in internet advertising revenues points to a new paradigm within the advertising world -- one in which digital is taking a bigger seat at the table,” said David Silverman, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, in the IAB press release. “Moreover, even with a softened economy, digital advertising is making tremendous gains.”

Overlay these two trends since 2000, and the message becomes even clearer: Advertisers are fleeing newspaper advertising for the improved ROI of online.

Compare how you spend your advertising dollars to this trend. Are you spending like it’s 2012, 2000 or 1950?

Related posts:

Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

Thanksgiving, Black Friday, Cyber Monday -- How Did E-Commerce Do?

Friday, December 2, 2011 by Betsy Miller
Combined together, Thanksgiving Day's couch commerce, Black Friday's mobile shopping on the go and Cyber Monday’s work surfing all made the official opening to this year’s holiday shopping season quite the event. Numbers across the board have been record-setting, and both brick-and-mortar and online retailers are excited as this is just the start of the holiday shopping season.

Here’s a roundup of articles and blogs reporting on these successful online shopping days and what might come next:

Thanksgiving & Black Friday

TechCrunch – Thanksgiving Day Online Holiday Sales Up 39%; Mobile Shopping on the Rise: “As we heard a few weeks ago, retailers were expecting Thanksgiving Day to be a major online shopping day as more and more consumers are hitting their laptops, tablets and more to get a head start on sales in between Turkey time. It looks like early results point to the day being a profitable one for retailers. According to IBM’s Coremetrics retail data, online Thanksgiving 2011 sales were up 39 percent over Thanksgiving 2010.”

E-Commerce Times – E-Commerce Rings Up Boffo Black Friday: "Though Black Friday is typically the day shoppers make a beeline for the big box stores and malls, there were plenty of sweet e-commerce deals to be had, and shoppers swarmed online to snap them up. On Black Friday alone, $800 million in online spending occurred."

Business2Community – Black Friday Saw Strong Increases in Online & Mobile Sales: “As many could have predicted, consumers continued to turn to online and mobile to make purchases on Black Friday. And as it turned out, brands with a strong, integrated retail marketing strategy in place took the cake. According to IBM Smarter Commerce CSO, brands [that] came out on top were those [that] ‘delivered a smarter commerce experience with compelling, relevant deals that people could easily access from their channel of choice.’”
 
Cyber Monday


New York Daily News – Cyber Monday Sales Break Records, Soaring 33% As More Shoppers Do Their Holiday Buying on the Go: “Cyber Monday turned out to be a monster hit for retailers. On the heels of a supersized Black Friday, Cyber Monday broke the record for the most e-commerce sales ever, with sales rising a whopping 33%, according to IBM Benchmark.”

Wired – Cyber Monday Pays Off Big Time: “Cyber Monday, until last year the often over-hyped alter-ego of Black Friday, has not only broken over $1 billion for the second year in a row, but has seen last year’s billion and raised some. There was a time when the busiest online shopping day of the year was generally sometime closer to Christmas, when people were getting last-minute gift-shopping done. But now the race is on hours after Thanksgiving, in both the bricks-and-mortar and virtual worlds.”

E-Commerce Times – Cyber Monday Racks Up Impressive Gains: “So far, so good for e-commerce this holiday season. Both Black Friday and Cyber Monday saw robust sales with surprising gains over last year's performance. Whether consumers will continue to spend beyond expectations, however, is questionable.”

Marketing Pilgrim – Cyber Monday Beats Black Friday: "Cyber Monday is over and the results are in. It’s a HIT! According to IBM Benchmark, Cyber Monday sales were up 33% over last year. The average order value also rose from $193.24 to $198.26. Unlike Black Friday, there were two peaks during the day, one at 11:05 PST and again late in the evening…. Except for the early morning hours, Cyber Monday beat the pants off online Black Friday buying to the tune of 29.3%."

Sign on San Diego – New Shopping Pattern Emerged on Cyber Monday: “The biggest surprise this Cyber Monday was that consumers didn't do most of their shopping at work, according to an IBM analysis of online activity. In the past, people would shop online mostly during the work day. But this year, they did a significant amount of shopping before and after normal commuting hours, using everything from PCs to laptops to iPads.”

Cyber Week & Beyond

ZippyCart – Cyber Week Off to a Successful Start: “Holiday shopping season 2011 got off to a great start with retailers reporting record-breaking Black Friday sales in both brick-and-mortar and online storefronts. According to research by comScore…online sales in the US surged on Black Friday and generated an estimated $816 million, up from $648 million last Black Friday…. The report released by comScore showed that ecommerce spending on Black Friday jumped 26% this year, even though researchers thought brick-and-mortar store deals would detract from the amount of consumers opting to shop online.”

Yahoo! Finance – Cyber Monday’s Unintended Consequences & Other Key Themes Emerging in Retail: “With Black Friday and Cyber Monday behind us, it's time to move past the retail euphoria and look ahead to the sustainability of strong retail sales through the key holiday shopping season. The effects of this season's earlier sales onset and increased doorbuster openings is a must-watch situation moving forward, according to Sucharita Mulpuru, e-commerce analyst at Forrester Research…. ‘All of the research that we've seen is that when there is a really, really strong Cyber Monday and free shipping offers, what we see in the days that follow is some softening,’ Mulpuru says.”

UPI.com – Retailers Extend Cyber Monday Throughout Week
: “Some U.S. online retailers extended Cyber Monday sales through the week as shoppers spent a projected $1.2 billion on the year's biggest online shopping day.”

Related posts:
Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

E-commerce 2.0 – The Next Wave

Tuesday, March 22, 2011 by Morgan Woodruff
Excerpts from Lazard Capital Markets  Tech and Media Conference
March, 13, 2011; Boston, MA

Blueport Commerce executives recently participated in a panel presentation titled “E-Commerce 2.0: The Next Wave” at Lazard Capital Markets Annual Technology & Media Conference. Held in Boston, on March 14 and 15. This conference brought together industry executives in a fireside chat format, with presentations from more than 50 leading technology, media and Internet companies. 

Drawing on his deep expertise developing online strategies for leading big-ticket retailers, President and Chief Executive Officer Carl Prindle, discussed the next e-commerce frontier and what brands need to do to capitalize on its growth.  Below are some key excerpts from his presentation:


Colin Sebastian – Lazard Capital Markets:  Carl, please take a minute to introduce Blueport.

Blueport is the only managed e-commerce provider focused on localized, big ticket commerce.

Think of us as GSI Commerce (GSIC) for players that need to involve local stores in their online efforts and whose products don’t fit in a UPS box.

Our clients range from a $250M furniture chain in Chicago, a $1B appliance, electronics and furniture superstore chain in Canada, a $4B flooring retailer with 1,100 independent dealers, to Sears (SHLD).

We provide each with a managed e-commerce solution – a localized, cross-channel commerce platform and the managed services to make their unique businesses work online.

CS: The pace of innovation in e-commerce is accelerating.  This is also driving another step forward in the shift of commerce and advertising from offline to online channels.  Given this overall trend, in your own businesses and markets, can you specify what are the 2 or 3 most important drivers of growth today?

Well, this session is definitely aptly named.  We’re at an inflection point – the start of a second wave of e-commerce.

The first wave of ecommerce was characterized by the Amazon model – online shopping for relatively simple, understood products shipped via UPS. 

There’s very little local store involvement in this model.  Customers buy things on their lunch break, and a guy in a brown shirt delivers it. 

A massive eco-system has grown supporting this model in last 15 years – advertising, merchandising, technology and so on. And, it works great – we see 45% penetration in some categories like PCs.

But, the e-com 1.0 model is bounded in a couple of ways.  One boundary is size – this model probably only works for less than half of all retail, less if you include services. 

The other boundary is profitability – e-com 1.0 was first because it’s easier.  Because it’s easy, it’s prone to commoditization, price pressure…it’s an efficient market, with all of the margin pressure that it entails.

What we’re seeing now is a second wave that pushes past these boundaries, engages the rest of the retail economy, and can be more profitable.

What’s driving it? Consumers looking to apply the habits learned via the Amazon model to new areas.  Companies that that have for a long time been on the sidelines because they DIDN’T fit that model – are now heading to the internet to meet them. 

The energy, the growth, is in the technology connecting the two – whether it is mobile, social, coupon sites, etc. – new technologies are giving new players access to new customers.

And Blueport is providing the multi-channel solutions for these new players to do something meaningful with that traffic.

CS:  You mention mobile. How big a factor is mobile becoming, for example as a percentage of your own transactions or volume, or as a lead generation tool?


Mobile is a huge factor, but different depending on whether you are an e-com 1 or e-com 2 player.

For e-com 1 players, mobile’s increased convenience is arguably driving new volume.  It’s also increasing price transparency, which accelerates the commoditization of some of these categories.

For an e-com 2 player, it’s a huge factor in a different way:  local.  Where e-com 1 was national, e-com 2 is local – local businesses, local services, huge retail chains were their offering is fundamentally local.

Take appliances as an example – I don’t think we’ll see refrigerators transacted via phone any time soon, but mobile can drive customers to local stores, critical for retailers trying to gain a slice of precious weekend “in-store” shopping minutes.

The game changer that starts to blend the two is the tablet…increased use of big screen browsing plus local is intriguing.

CS: There is a fairly rapid increase in merchant and enterprise use of Facebook, not only as a tool to reach out and communicate with consumers, but also to drive transactions.  Similar to the mobile question, how quickly is social becoming a meaningful part of real lead generation and driving online sales?

Well, Facebook, at its most powerful, is a personal network of friends.  A company interrupting that conversation can be pretty cringe worthy.  A company trying to be your friend doesn’t really work.

At the same time, along with apps, Facebook has become the “other” Internet, and retailers have to be there. 

We’ve seen it work in three ways:
  1. Brand Building: in high engagement categories, brands can interact with their customers on topics they are passionate about.
  2. Deals: Facebook can replace email as a way to distribute deals.
  3. As a Platform: we look at Facebook as an emerging platform/operating system that can host online stores with built in traffic.
CS:  Blueport appears to be in a sweet-spot helping merchants in challenging product categories figure out their e-commerce strategies.  Can you talk about the multi-channel environment, how the pace of that shift online may be changing?

It’s a phenomenal time to be where we are.  As we’ve talked about, there’s a seismic change from e-com 1 to e-com 2, and we’re in the middle of it.

You asked about the multi-channel environment.  The term multi-channel has been around a while, but its meaning is changing. 

In e-com 1, multichannel meant exactly/only that – more than one channel.  Retailers in categories that work well via direct ship built drop ship e-com systems, often entirely separate from their store business.

In e-com 2 today, we see true multi-channel, or cross-channel commerce (or just “commerce”).  Retailers are using the internet to drive their core business, not build a separate one.

Companies that were on the sidelines are now investing in solutions that reflect their businesses.  They look to online to drive customers to local stores, sell their local inventory and services, reflect their local pricing and local deals – to drive their core business.

A client, CarpetOne, is one of my favorite examples of this.  They are a $4B flooring retailer in 1,100 local markets.  They didn’t want to be Lumber Liquidators and drop-ship cheap boxes of hardwood.  They wanted to drive their core business – local installation of quality flooring. We enable that – their site reflects each market’s local product, pricing – pictures of owner’s dog, whatever makes that local market work.  It’s a seamless online experience that connects online to local store.

Sears (SHLD) – is a company taking another innovative approach.  They are reentering the furniture category via a unique cross-channel strategy.  They’re putting small footprint galleries in their stores, that drives traffic to a dedicated furniture website that we run for them, http://sears.furniture.com.  The site taps into local inventory, and Sears customers can get a sofa delivered tomorrow for $79.  Blueport powers the whole thing.

So, we’re seeing massive change in these categories, the evolution of true cross-channel categories, and it has accelerated dramatically in last 18 month. 

CS:  What are the key attributes that a bricks-and-mortar retailer or supplier of goods look for in an e-commerce vendor?

When looking at vendors, look at what experience they have in YOUR vertical.  Are you looking for an e-com 1 solution, or e-com 2?  Do you want a direct ship, separate enterprise, or do you want your local markets involved? 

Make sure the vendor has experience in your markets and your vision of what you want ecommerce to do for your core business. 

You can make some disastrous mistakes trying to sell appliances or furniture like you do shoes & apparel.

CS:  What would it cost a retailer or brand to build and maintain a state of the art e-commerce site from scratch, versus using a service provider such as Blueport?

Here again, it depends on what you’re selling. 

If you’re looking for an e-com 1 solution – you can put up a Yahoo! store up for next to nothing.  My 10 year old has one.

For e-com 2 – it’s more complex, requiring far more integration with your local stores’ existing systems and operations.  There’s no Yahoo! store or ready-made platform for that (but Blueport is close).

If you try to build an e-com 2 solution yourself, you have to look at three costs:  the cost to build it, the cost to run it, and the opportunity cost of screwing it up. 

We have a current client who first tried to build it themselves.  They spent $3M, and it never got off the ground.  It was two years of lost opportunity. 

With Blueport, they pay a monthly platform fee and a revenue share.  We’ve done major redesigns of their sites three times in the last two years, and added countless new features.  And they pay only their share of the overall platform and hosting costs.

We also help run the business for them from a marketing, merchandising and services perspective.  This is paid through the revenue share, so they get a turnkey, expert staff on a pay for performance basis.

This story has repeated itself a number of times – people trying it themselves, then deciding to work with us.  At the other end of our contracts, we’ve never lost a renewal, so people see the value of what we do (and would prefer not to have to do it themselves).

Part of the story is that the categories we’re in are a good fit for outsourcing.  They are challenging, don’t match the internal expertise of the players in them, and ultimately, they’re not like PC’s or software, where online is 45%-65% or more of volume. Stores are still key, so our clients get to focus on that part of their business, while we port and drive that business online.

CS:  Can you talk about the competitive nature of your business, who do you see as the most successful competitors and what are trends in pricing for these e-commerce services?

Sure, we segment the market on two dimensions. 

One dimension is e-com 1 versus e-com 2.  Is the customer in a market that will be a simple drop ship model, or do they need a cross-channel solution involving local stores?

The other dimension is platform versus managed solution.  Does the customer just want a technology solution, or are they looking for a partner to help them manage their online business?

On the e-com 1 side of the market, e-com 1 platforms are increasingly commoditized and under a lot of price pressure.  It’s a pure customer acquisition game.  Yahoo stores again.

For e-com 1 managed solutions, GSI Commerce (GSIC) is dominant with a huge lead in infrastructure and increasingly in services, where they’ve made some great strategic acquisitions.  While Amazon (AMZN) keeps looking at this space, GSI is the clear leader.

On the e-com 2 side of the market, e-com 2 platforms are mainly custom builds from players like IBM, and ATG (ORCL).  These are big dollar projects with two commas in the total cost, and they leave the customer to manage the solution - there’s no marketing, management, etc. And, they don’t have a ton of experience in these e-com 2 categories.

For e-com 2 managed solutions, where Blueport plays, we’ve yet to run up against a true competitor. 

I guess we really have two competitors: a customer doing nothing, which is less and less of a factor, and a customer trying to do it themselves, which with our case studies, is an easier and easier argument to overcome.  In a lot of cases, people are coming to us now who tried themselves, and now want out.

We expect competition to evolve, but we have a technology platform and service staff with a lot of specific functionality and experience in these markets, which makes it easy to talk to prospective clients, most of whom have been on the sidelines waiting for a provider that understands their business.

CS: That’s time – thanks to everyone for their participation.

Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

Canadian Consumers are Waiting for You Online

Friday, March 18, 2011 by Betsy Miller
Analytics firm comScore recently released their 2010 Canada Digital Year in Review report.  Consumers north of the border continue to be a growing market for multichannel retailers here in the U.S. and many Blueport Commerce clients, particularly as ecommerce retail gains in popularity in Canada. comScore’s report looks at digital trends among video, search and mobile users, and reveals what opportunities are available for marketers and retailers targeting Canadian consumers online.

Here are some of the highlights:

-    Canadians are a captive online audience: In 2010, Canada maintained its position as the most engaged online audience, ranking highest among the top markets in average hours and visits per visitor in Q4 2010.
-    Blogging and social networking is on the rise among Canadians, especially older consumers: According to comScore, Canadians spent 58% more time on blogs and social networks in Q4 2010 compared to that of Q4 2009. As this category continues to grow, older age segments are increasingly more engaged with social networking sites.
-    Video rules: Just like their U.S. counterparts, Canadians love video, especially those that are over the age of 35, who accounted for more than half of all viewers in Q4 2010.
-    Mobile is growing in Canada: Canadian consumers are updating their devices more frequently and will be able to access more and more online content in 2011. comScore believes mobile is the next marketing frontier in Canada.

The big ticket retail take away? Canadian consumers are a powerful, often untapped market for online retailers.  The ecommerce principles remain the same when targeting these digitally savvy shoppers.  Incorporating video, social media and mobile elements into an online retail strategy will be essential to engaging Canadians with your brand.



Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

Cross Channel Commerce:
How The Home Depot 'Gets It'

Friday, February 18, 2011 by Morgan Woodruff
Providing a seamless cross channel experience, with physical stores and ecommerce retail sites working towards a coordinated selling effort, has always been at the heart of our strategy at Blueport Commerce.  We get the importance of this approach in driving sales for big ticket items in particular, and so do our multichannel retail clients. 

The Home Depot is another retailer that ‘gets it’.

Hal Lawton, president of Home Depot Online, recently gave a presentation at the  Internet Retailer Web Design & Usability Conference 2011, focusing on The Home Depot’s successful integration of online and offline stores. At the heart of this is the understanding that Home Depot customers want to shop, browse or do research through their channel of choice – and they want that experience to be consistent, whether it is online or in-store.

Since 45% of Home Depot customers visit the retailer’s site first, providing a localized e-commerce experience is essential to making sure customers get the most accurate pricing and inventory information for their area.  So the price and product selection customers see online is what they will see in store. This is a fundamental approach to the sites we build for clients like Carpet One and RoomStore.

One of the most interesting points of Home Depot’s cross-channel strategy is the fact that associates are responsible for sales in both channels.  For example, a store manager’s compensation is based partly on in-store sales and also on online deliveries to the local area. This represents a seismic shift in the siloed approach we still see many retailers take towards their e-commerce site and store network, but it’s a powerful motivator in making sure all your teams are truly working together towards an end goal: the sale.

What are your thoughts on Home Depot’s strategy?




Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

2011: The Year of Mobile Commerce

Thursday, January 27, 2011 by Morgan Woodruff
I came across several headlines this week touting 2011 as “The Year of Mobile.”  This past holiday shopping season, the influence of mobile on retail (be it mobile commerce or mobile shopping tools used in store) was undeniable, and many experts predict we will see a true tipping point for the mobile channel this year. 

The latest forecasts come from Forrester, which has just released a list of mobile predictions for 2011.  Forrester analyst Melissa Parrish says the mobile marketing category is poised for major investments, though challenges such as consumer privacy still remain.  According to Parrish, 34% of online retail marketers had or were planning to have a mobile presence in 2010, while consumers continued to adopt smartphones as their primary mobile device.  Both of these trends help set the stage for mobile’s advancement in 2011. Parrish does caution that multichannel retailers will need to rethink their mobile strategies and steer their focus away from apps towards more integrated mobile experiences for their customers.


Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce


It's not always about price...

Friday, October 22, 2010 by Betsy Miller
When it comes to ecommerce (and particularly big ticket retail) the impact of stellar customer service should not be underestimated. A new study from Harris Interactive highlights the fact that although low prices can certainly lure a customer in, a great customer service experience will ultimately make the lasting impact.  What’s more, 85% of the consumers surveyed by Harris said that they would be willing to pay more for a service or product if it meant that they would receive better customer service. Specifically, 55% of the people surveyed said that they would be willing to pay an additional 10%, and 10% indicated that they would pay 25% more.

But beyond just price, a clear motivation factor for multichannel retailers to ramp up their customer service programs is the fact that bad customer service can have negative consequences beyond just that one dissatisfied customer. The Harris study found that 79% of consumers who have had a negative customer service experience said that they have told other people about it. Additionally, 66% of those consumers said they wanted to discourage other people from doing business with that retailer. And with Twitter, Facebook and other social communities acting as a regular avenue for shoppers to vent their customer service frustrations, that influence will no doubt very quickly spread beyond just the customer’s immediate circle of friends.

For the big ticket retail category, where the purchase cycle is longer and results in more opportunities for the customer to interact with your staff, the payoff of good customer service as part of a robust multichannel retail strategy can be significant.


Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce



Ecommerce Marketing: Multichannel Analysis Is a Must!

Monday, October 11, 2010 by Betsy Miller

If you’re an ecommerce marketer in the 2010s, then your marketing efforts likely span multiple channels: SEO, pay-per-click, banner ads, retargeting banner ads, email, social media and more. Like so many others, you are doing more with fewer resources and with a higher need to show your return on investment.

Determining ROI Begins with Multichannel Analysis

What are you doing to determine which of your channels are working the best for you? Here at Blueport Commerce, our multichannel analysis begins with tracking, tracking and more tracking. We tag and track everything, but we also know even that does not give us the full picture.

Today’s marketers and analysts must be forensic scientists, piecing together the information from our multiple channels with an overlay of our own site data and sometimes even gut instinct. And in this multichannel world, beyond data, we need to communicate a story.

Use Multichannel Analysis to Tell the Marketing Story

Perhaps someone makes a purchase seemingly through a pay-per-click ad on search. That’s not surprising, since the majority of consumers begin their online shopping at search engines. But is it solely that pay-per-click text ad that sealed the deal?

With a little further analysis, you may find that user also saw your banner ad the day before on a news site and received an email from you earlier that week. Does this make pay-per-click more valuable than your other marketing channels, or does this tell you that there is a buildup that crescendos by being in front of the consumer at the right place and the right time?

From my perspective, it's different channels working together to make the sale. As time progresses, we'll likely learn that different marketing combinations better attract a certain type of customer or more quickly lead to different types of conversions. But one thing is for sure: Putting all your marketing eggs in one basket is not the best strategy in this  multichannel age.

 

Forrester's Brian Walker Outlines the Fundamental Shifts Taking Place in E-Commerce Technology

Friday, September 10, 2010 by Morgan Woodruff
Forrester’s Brian Walker recently coined the term Splinternet to describe how consumers are beginning to interact with e-commerce companies in numerous ways, including mobile phones, social networks and in-store displays. This e-commerce transformation naturally requires significant new technology investments and fundamental changes in how retailers approach e-commerce. Internet Retailer covered Walker’s new report, "What every exec needs to know about the future of e-commerce technology," which addresses the shifts taking place in the e-commerce space. 

Some key takeaways from the report:

  • As the influence of the online retail channel on consumers continues to grow, retailers will need to shift spending to this channel -- or risk losing sales.
  • Consumers' interactions with retailers will move beyond just the website to include mobile phones, iPads and other innovations. According to Walker, many of these innovations will be built on proprietary technology requiring that retailers "develop systems that can easily integrate and support these existingm -- and emerging -- customer experiences in order to compete and capitalize on changing customer expectations."
  • Consistency of information, policies and fulfillment across channels will be a must for retailers as they expand their touchpoints with consumers
Walker notes that most retailers today don’t have the systems in place to manage this new kind of multichannel retailing and fulfillment model. Thus, they will require a fundamental shift in how they approach e-commerce within their organizations and focus on investing in flexible e-commerce systems that can meet their cross-channel retail needs.

How is your e-commerce strategy changing in light of this shift?

Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

Nordstrom Links Online/Offline Inventory to Increase Multichannel Sales

Friday, August 27, 2010 by Morgan Woodruff
The New York Times had a fascinating piece this week about how multichannel retailer Nordstrom is reaping the rewards of integrating its online and offline inventory. 

When shopping on Nordstrom.com, consumers are able to see what items are in stock in the Web warehouse as well as what is in stock in Nordstrom stores.  This means that if a particular item is out of stock online, customers can quickly search for it across Nordstrom’s 115 retail store network and, even if just one single SKU of that product is left in the most remote retail store location, it would be displayed in the ecommerce store, and store employees would ship it to the Web customer.

Nordstrom has seen immediate and quite remarkable results from this initiative. In the 11 months since Nordstrom made the inventory change, its same-store sales have increased 8 percent and have outperformed the department store average. The number of customers who buy products after searching for an item in the ecommerce store have doubled. But, in my opinion, one of the most important benefits for Nordstrom has been that its inventory is moving faster, and often at high prices.

The fact is that consumers don’t want to have to think about what "channel" they are shopping -- the most important thing to them is getting the product they want when they want it.  Today, a consumer may do research on your ecommerce store, visit your physical retail location to see the product firsthand and perhaps even do some price comparisons on their mobile phone, in any given order.  Where they make the final purchase is really not as important as ensuring they get the information and products they need, and that all of the information they get is consistent and accurate.

What Nordstrom has done is still considered unusual in the industry. But, it’s at the heart of big-ticket multichannel retail and an ecommerce strategy inherent to the ecommerce services we provide our clients.  I'm certain we will be seeing more retailers adopt this strategy in the near future.


Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce


Arhaus Furniture's Custom iPad App Aims to Drive Cross Channel Sales

Thursday, August 19, 2010 by Morgan Woodruff
Arhaus Furniture, a high-end furniture multi channel retailer with stores in 13 states in addition to a print catalog and an e-commerce site at Arhaus.com, will soon arm their entire delivery team with an iPad application aimed at not only enhancing the product delivery experience, but also driving repeat and incremental purchases from their customer base.

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

Friday, August 13, 2010 by Betsy Miller
A recent DMNews article about the challenges multichannel marketers face in using social media to reach local customers caught my eye.  According to research from Harris Interactive, seventy-two percent of brand managers believe social media can be powerful in connecting with customers globally, but not necessarily at a local level.

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

Friday, August 6, 2010 by Morgan Woodruff
Forrester’s e-commerce analyst Brian Walker recently featured a great interview with GSI Commerce founder and CEO Michael Rubin on his blog. Rubin discussed how GSI is evolving and what some of the main areas of focus will be for the company in the near future.

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



The Blueport Commerce Customer Story & Multichannel Retail Software

Thursday, June 3, 2010 by Morgan Woodruff
We were the first Akamai e-commerce client, more than 11 years ago. Our hosted Multichannel E-Commerce platform is more effective with partners like Akamai rounding out our offering.

 

Here is a link to a video (featuring Carl Prindle, President and CEO of Blueport Commerce) that describes well Blueport's E-Commerce applications and specifically how our long time expertise in Internet retail strategies has allowed Blueport to win clients again and again.

Watch the video >>



Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce


What's Really Wrong With Online Shopping?

Tuesday, May 18, 2010 by Morgan Woodruff
Last week TIME’s Brad Tuttle posted an article, “What's Wrong with Online Shopping” which expanded upon a recent interview with Paco Underhill (environmental psychologist and author of the book Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping), that can be found on the WSJ’s Digits blog. Both posts are worth reading for anyone doing multichannel commerce because they  focus on the disconnect between online and brick-and-mortar versions of the same stores.

It’s a fact that the majority of  consumers shop across channels, often  researching online and closing the sale in store. Yet, as Underhill points out, many retailers are still treating their online and offline channels as separate entities - something that often leads to customer confusion and eventual loss of sales.


Some of the biggest disconnects are ones that Blueport overcomes with ease for our customers: 

  • Price Inconsistency – Inconsistency in pricing between in-store and online very quickly leads to customer frustration and more often than not, leads potential customers right into the competition’s arms. Blueport’s Price Sync feature ensures that pricing is consistent not just online and in-store, but based on each customer’s location as well - automatically.
  • Inventory Inconsistency –Underhill’s interview describes a scenario that most of us know all too well: making a trip to the store to purchase a product you have been researching online, only to discover it’s not actually available in your local store.  Getting a clear, real-time view of inventory levels across all stores is a challenge for most retailers, but it’s truly one of our sweet spots at Blueport.  We automatically update inventory levels based on a customer’s location, so whether your customer is shopping in-store or online, they will always have an accurate view of what’s in stock.
  • Delayed Shipping Cost Info – This is often a make or break issue for big-ticket items – customers need to know all of the information involved in their purchase and unexpected shipping costs or delays can easily be a deal breaker. Expertise in shipping and delivery is one of Blueport’s core strengths. This includes clearly marked pricing, timing and logistics based on the items purchased and the customer’s location.
So, while the issues addressed in both articles are legitimate concerns for the online shopping industry, we’re proud to say that they’re all things that Blueport handles for our customers. This coordination truly helps to build integrated, multichannel retail strategies.


Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce


e-Dialog Acquires MBS and M3 – Gains Targeting Insight Across Channels

Wednesday, May 12, 2010 by Betsy Miller
Last week e-Dialog, a division of GSI Commerce and a Blueport partner, announced the acquisition of database marketing firm MBS for approximately $22.5 million cash. This announcement follows closely on the heels of last month’s acquisition of mobile services company M3.

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



Big Ticket E-commerce Playbook, Rule Four: Localize

Monday, April 12, 2010 by Carl Prindle

E-commerce 1.0 = World Wide Web (only):  Typical e-commerce does not accurately reflect how multi-channel chain retailing is done in-store.  Just as “all politics is local,” all big ticket chain store retail is local, too.  Through local selection, local prices and local promotions, stores battle local competitors for local customers.  Most e-commerce solutions aren’t built for localization – one site offers the same thing to every visitor, regardless of where a customer resides.   Retailers who adopt this approach for big ticket e-commerce hamper both their online efforts and their stores.

Big Ticket E-commerce = Localize!  Remember that e-commerce supports your overall multichannel retail strategy and your websites should be as localized as your stores.   Some big ticket retailers have hundreds of localized, micro-branded sites with content that resonates with local consumers.   Others use IP mapping to localize prices, offers and product selection, directing customers to local stores with products on display.  All have checkout processes that reflect that delivery times may be 48 hours in one area, two weeks in another.  Make sure your e-commerce platform embraces the complexity of local e-commerce – when done correctly it’s a powerful sales tool online and in your stores.


Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce


Big Ticket E-commerce Playbook, Rule Three: Think Multichannel

Thursday, April 8, 2010 by Carl Prindle

E-commerce 1.0 = E-commerce Rules!:  Inhabitants of E-commerce Island often focus solely on one metric - online sales - to the point of becoming competitive with the “rest” of the multichannel retail operation.   Internal competition may work for first wave markets where multichannel upside is limited, but this strategy hamstrings big ticket ecommerce efforts.

Big Ticket E-commerce = Multichannel Impact:  Take a more holistic view of the potential the e-commerce channel has for your retail chain.  Set multichannel key performance indicators (KPIs) and track interactions across every channel.  It’s every bit as big a win for your big ticket e-commerce efforts when a customer sees your TV ad, goes to your website and is convinced to buy in your bricks and mortar store as when someone clicks “Place Order” online.   It takes additional coordination to drive multi channel results, but in big ticket categories they represent the majority of your upside.  Recognize this, and measure and reward a holistic set of metrics.
 

Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce

Big Ticket E-commerce Playbook, Rule Two: Avoid Duplicating Strategies

Monday, April 5, 2010 by Carl Prindle

E-commerce 1.0 = Duplication:  Stranded on E-commerce Island, e-commerce teams often build redundant staff, processes and infrastructure.   Perhaps through lack of understanding of a chain’s existing processes or thinking they have a better way, they create new e-commerce processes and strategies for critical multichannel retail operations.   For first wave categories, this may not be so bad – the processes are simple and the risk of customers seeing multichannel inconsistencies minimal.  Capturing the potential of big ticket e-commerce, on the other hand, requires an integrated rather than duplicative approach.

Big Ticket E-commerce = Integration:  Leverage existing people and their retail expertise wherever possible for your big ticket e-commerce strategy.  Use the same data and processes as the rest of the retail chain, simplifying coordination.  Once you’ve identified existing assets, then (and only then) evaluate and augment these assets, adding resources only as needed to fill e-commerce-specific gaps.

Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce
 

Big Ticket E-commerce Playbook, Rule One: Don’t be an E-commerce Island

Friday, April 2, 2010 by Carl Prindle

The rules for big ticket e-commerce differ from first wave, ecommerce 1.0 practices.   More often than not, big-ticket ecommerce problems occur when retailers apply first wave e-commerce solutions to second wave challenges.

E-commerce 1.0 = E-commerce Island:  A common mistake occurs at the outset of many big ticket e-commerce efforts – big ticket retailers organize their e-commerce business as an ‘island’, isolated within a department or wholly outsourced.  A departmentalized approach, isolated from a company’s overall retail operations, is typical of (and may work for) simple ”first wave” e-commerce categories, but the local, multichannel complexity of big ticket e-commerce makes this structure at best ineffective, and more likely detrimental to the chain.

Big Ticket E-commerce = Embedded E-commerce Strategy:  Launch your e-commerce operation as a coordinated, multichannel commerce effort, ideally with the head of e-commerce having a seat at the management table.  This structure allows e-commerce to become what it should be in big ticket categories– a force multiplier for chain-wide initiatives – and optimizes e-commerce results.

Copyright 2010, Official Blog of Blueport Commerce