In the Age of Mobile Networks, E-Commerce Gets Personal - Knowledge@Wharton
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In the Age of Mobile Networks, E-Commerce Gets Personal
Published: June 09, 2010 in Knowledge@Wharton
Imagine an online store that replicates the experience of stepping
into a boutique.
As online and in-store retailing converges with the growth of mobile
networks, the daydream could become a reality. Via their
smartphones, shoppers at retail stores will have the capability to
check the Internet for online promotions, product descriptions and
reviews by past customers. Meanwhile, online customers will have
access to software that allows them to "try on" clothing, or discuss
a buying decision with contacts on social networking sites.
New mobile capability, social networks and better analytics will play an important role in the
future of the retail industry, according to speakers on a recent Wharton Retail Conference
panel titled, "E-Commerce: Is It the Future of Retail?" "Mobile will be a critical piece of
retailing, even more so than shopping online," said Dave Larkins, vice president of NetPlus
Marketing in Conshohocken, Pa., and a co-creator of The Colony online boutique.
Mobile technology has not advanced to its full capability, Larkins noted, but continues to
evolve due to expanded bandwidth and increasing consumer adoption of smartphones. As
networks get better, it becomes easier for retailers to target customers based on where they
live or shop, and to communicate with them in real time. Location-based social networks such
as Foursquare, which essentially ask users to share their retail patterns with friends, are
viewed as another way for brands to link to communities, he added.
The history and visibility of bricks-and-mortar stores helped retailers achieve immediate
brand identification for new Internet ventures. But the support is now moving in the other
direction -- from the Internet to physical stores, said Kris Roberts, divisional merchandise
manager of Target.com. She pointed out that consumers are eager to use mobile devices to
inform in-store decisions because accessing online information on the spot is more convenient
than having to research an item later via computer. "This brings the two [retail modes]
together, and I think it will transform how people shop," Roberts stated.
Cross Channels
Most retailers continue to view online customers and shoppers at physical stores as two
separate entities, panelists said. Roberts noted that Minnesota-based Target is trying to
develop "cross channels" that would link the offline and online experience, and reach
consumers more effectively. But she added that cross channeling is often an overused
buzzword that presents many obstacles for retailers, including the need to update
organizational systems to integrate in-store operations with Internet retailing. "We will need
to see a generation or two of management changeover to really leverage the power [of crosschanneling]."
Successful integration, said Larkins, will require top managers to embrace new technology
systems. "It begins with leadership," he said. "It is all about philosophy and how much the Clevel executives are going to embrace these channels as one." Retail executives need to
reduce divisions in their organizations and bring together people working in catalog, stores
and online operations to create new added value. "It's tricky," noted Larkins. "The point is to
have everyone at the table thinking about things and not just in silos -- from stores to online
to mobile and social media -- beginning [with] the idea process and the planning process and
the thought process."
Roberts suggested that the web is the "ultimate" branding opportunity for companies because
it is available anytime and anywhere. Buying an item in a store is a "primal" experience that
will never go away, she said, but online shopping can deliver new levels of information and
convenience for consumers. Roberts predicted that as online retailers interact more with
consumers, shoppers themselves will take a role in shaping brands.
Consumers are beginning to expect brands to bring added value to their online stores, and to
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In the Age of Mobile Networks, E-Commerce Gets Personal - Knowledge@Wharton
9/28/11 12:47 PM
the social media networks businesses use to reach out to shoppers -- and not just in the
economic sense. The creativity a company uses on its Facebook page, for example, is
becoming increasingly important. "[Shoppers] expect more now," Larkins noted. "If [an online
promotion] has no value, no creativity, it doesn't show that you thought about the audience.
A lot of this starts with the audience and understanding and exploring, enlightening and
engaging them in a completely different and new way."
Web customers are in search of new information, particularly opinions from other shoppers,
and increasingly want to read product reviews, said Tony Capasso, vice president of retail at
Bazaarvoice, an Austin, Tex.-based marketing firm that specializes in online customer
reviews. When customers read what other shoppers write, it helps deliver a more tactile
experience to web retailing, he suggested.
One of the leaders in the development of e-commerce is Amazon.com, which started out as
an online bookseller but has now broadened its scope to every major retail category. Capasso
said 15-year-old Amazon continues to be the biggest surprise in the industry. Retailers
invested significantly in transferring their brand equity to the web, but Amazon -- a store with
no bricks-and-mortar locations -- continues to dominate the channel, he noted.
A Quicker Route to Checkout
Despite Amazon's success, the company and other online retailers have yet to create
experiences that guide consumers to the specific products that they want, Capasso pointed
out. Real-time applications would make it possible to conduct an analysis of shoppers in the
moment, rather than pulling data that might be two or three weeks old, he suggested, and
technology that makes better use of peer recommendations would also contribute to
increased personalization of e-commerce.
Making online stores more relevant to consumers depends on the amount of time, technology
and investment executives are willing to spend on integrating and adding personalization to
their sites, Larkins noted. It's a question of "just where does it fall in the mix? Unfortunately
right now it gets pushed down. But the technology keeps improving and applications are
getting better." He predicted that in the next two years, customer personalization will play a
much more important role in e-commerce than it does now because of the growing
importance of social media in retailing. "If you are not there you are definitely going to be
behind," he said. "It will become a necessity, where before it was a luxury."
Developing technology also has the potential to make it easier for retailers to figure out how
to infuse their online stores with the look and feel of the company's bricks-and-mortar
locations. Larkins pointed to electronics giant Best Buy and clothing retailers American Eagle
and Roxy as brands that are working across channels in a way that is immediately apparent
when a customer walks into the companies' stores or visits their websites. "It's not just instore and online; it is in their advertising. It is truly fluid. With these brands it is natural....
You need to get the people in place to make it a natural integration."
But Roberts suggested that, while Internet retailing has made huge advances, online stores
are still unable to provide the instant gratification offered by a physical shopping experience.
A potential "game-changer" for retailers would be the ability to get orders to a shopper's
home within several hours, rather than days or weeks. Speeding that process would allow
online retailers to offer shoppers a more timely sense of satisfaction after making a purchase.
Another common problem among Internet retailers is shoppers abandoning their virtual
"shopping carts" before finalizing a purchase. Roberts named shipping as one of the main
barriers to completing online sales. When customers see shipping charges that represent a
significant portion of the item's price, they balk. Visitors to online stores also tend to use the
cart as a shopping list, or to facilitate browsing or price comparisons, she added.
Emerging technology may decrease the number of "abandoned" shopping carts by removing
other barriers that exist in online shopping, such as the difficulty for customers to grasp the
fit of pants or dresses, Roberts noted. She added that computer-generated programs are
evolving that allow consumers to "try on" jeans virtually to see how the pants would look on
their own bodies.
Larkins' company works with apparel retailers that target teen girls. He discovered that these
shoppers need affirmation from their friends before finalizing a purchase. When they walk into
a store, they are often with friends and are able to communicate with them to make sure they
are buying the "right" product. He noted there are web tools in development that would allow
shoppers to open chat sessions and bring friends into the decision-making process online.
Another tool to curb Internet cart abandonment, he said, is a dynamic e-mail system that can
recognize that the cart has been abandoned and then send an e-mail quickly to the shopper
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In the Age of Mobile Networks, E-Commerce Gets Personal - Knowledge@Wharton
9/28/11 12:47 PM
offering a discount or another type of incentive to encourage the final follow-through.
No More Guessing
The level of integration will vary by brand and by customers' expectations of that brand,
Capasso noted. "It will be important for the brand to understand where it fits from a
customer's perspective -- whether they want to lollygag or discover, or whether the brand
helps them get to where they want to go. Brands are struggling with that." He added that
brands are trying to build online communities that allow customers to interact with other
shoppers or celebrities.
Larkins said retailers can use new analytical tools to gauge the response they are getting
online. "They don't have to guess anymore," he said. In addition to more traditional
marketing metrics, such as focus groups based on demographics, new tools are available to
measure Internet buzz and feedback from blogging communities, he noted.
"Whether someone has an experience in a store or online or mobile, they will come online and
tell about it," suggested Capasso. "The one thing I think you can begin to measure is the
impact of better branding, which comes down to how you run and understand the types of
data you are collecting." Capasso said he is not a fan of focus groups because of the time lag
in getting information. He pointed out that some brands are able to make adjustment and
tweaks to their merchandising programs -- such as Internet promotions -- but "real-time
feedback is crucial."
Larkins added, however, that despite the potential to enhance online sales with new
marketing tools, retailers must still deliver value and remain mindful of their return on
investment for new technology. "If you are investing $1 million in a branding program, you
better have the measurements in place. If you don't, you are missing the point of [being]
online."
Additional Reading
E-Commerce: The Taxman Cometh...Or Does He?
(http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1182)
How the Offer of 'Free Shipping' Affects On-line Shopping
(http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1449)
How "Social Contagion" Affects Consumers' Willingness to Try Online Retailers
(http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1056)
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