Category Archive: 'Social Shopping' Category

The Future of Customer Experience

by David Hogue
Saturday, September 27th, 2008

I will be presenting at the Web Experience Forum in Boston on October 14 and discussing the future of online customer experience in a session titled “Can I Get That in Pink and Eggplant?”  Here’s the blurb for the session:

“As more and more retail purchases occur on the Web, the ability to portray products as if they were in the buyers’ hands will become one of the key drivers of an excellent Web experience. Color change, product configuration, magnification, rotation, and personalization are already mainstream features expected by and familiar to consumers. What will online customers want next, and what do they not even realize we can offer? What is the next level of Web experience we need to attain to drive growth in Web transactions? This presentation will look at how emerging technologies and innovative design will transform the Web experience in the coming years.”

I don’t want to give everything away before the session (and I don’t think the folks at the Web Experience Forum would appreciate it), but here are some hints about what we see in the next two to five years:

  • Video is the next JPEG,
  • Sites will be smarter and more aware of who we are and what we like,
  • Mass customization of products, whether or not we realize it,
  • Sites will relinquish total control of the experience and become deconstructed,
  • Mobile devices will be links and keys in much larger experiences,
  • Social, social, social!

Check back the week of October 20 for start of six installments summarizing each of these future directions in online customer experience.

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Catalogers’ Delight

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Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Many of the multi-channel merchants we work with have invested in beautiful photography that shows a range of products in highly branded settings. Many of these photos are shot primarily for print catalogs and, up to now, retailers haven’t been able to put these assets to affective use on the web.

In some cases, catalogers have uploaded versions of their print catalog to the web. While there are legitimate reasons to do this, Fluid’s customers have generally found results from these efforts disappointing. Conversion rates are low, as you would expect from directly translating a print layout to the web. Even with the fancy page flipping affect many of them add ;) .

In other instances retailers have simply taken the existing photo assets and overlaid merchandising text in Photoshop. While this serves the purpose, this text frequently looks cluttered and may significantly lessen the brand impact of the photo. These photos were taken to create an emotional connection between the shopper and a brand or product. Reading text overlays certainly lessens the visual impact and can also distract from the emotional connection of envisioning yourself in the scene.
Other retailers have used these assets as the basis for a richer shopping experience, creating tooltips that appear on mouse over. This is a great use of interactive technology but up to now has been resource intensive to produce. The manual production required to update a banner has required a designer to create the visual and an engineer to wire up the custom Flash or AJAX technology. By the time the banner is integrated into the site it could be a week or more later.

The Fluid Retail team has recently released an enhancement to Fluid Experience that allows retailers to more efficiently use rich brand photography on their site. Using our authoring tools virtually any member of the production team can pull in existing photography, mask out and associate products and publish the assets to the site without need of any technical skills. The whole process can be completed in a matter of minutes.

I’ve embedded an example of the type of interactivity that is possible with Fluid Experience below. Note that shoppers are able to learn about all the products shown, without leaving the photography that has engaged them. Combined with a quick shop window and mini-cart, this type of interactivity encourages the purchase of multiple products.

It is also worth noting that this merchandising component is embedded using Fluid Social’s content syndication capabilities, that allow anyone to take your site content to iGoogle, blogs, MySpace or Facebook.

As I said earlier, the real magic behind the Fluid technology is the authoring tool that eliminates the need to have Flash developers or IT involved in publishing new assets to the site. If you are looking for better ways to engage shoppers with rich product photography you should contact us to learn more.

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Fluid Goes Social

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Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Today Fluid announced the immediate availability of Fluid Social, which allows retailers to offer the same level of interactivity and control in social networking widgets and Google Gadget Ads as they have over the merchandising on their own site. While there have been a recent flood of announcements about retailers deploying widgets to social networking sites this announcement is notable in that this is the first productized offering that allows merchants to publish and update gadgets as they see fit, using the same visual assets and interactive technologies that they use to merchandise their own site. No longer will merchants worry about a gadget that was embedded months ago featuring products that are no longer in stock. They are in complete control of both the featured content and products.

The specific implementation for The North Face is available for users to embed as a Google Gadget and is also being served to highly targeted snowsports sites in the Google ad network. The gadget offers a mix of brand experience – a fresh snowsports-focused video each day that is user contributed or one that features The North Face’s athletes – and interactive shopping. While shoppers watch a video they can explore The North Face’s Defy line of snowsports gear, including the ability to interact with the products.

At Fluid we believe this merging of compelling brand content and merchandising is one of the under-utilized opportunities available to retailers and branded manufacturers. Allowing brand advocates to enhance their own personal pages with this content is a win-win for consumers and brands. We have already heard a range of great ideas from our other customers for how they plan on using our tools to extend the reach of their brands beyond their online stores in unique and brand appropriate ways and we can’t wait to hear more.

The North Face snowsports gadget features a fresh video every day.

The North Face gadget features a fresh video every day.

Shopppers can explore The North Face's Defy product line while watching the video, without leaving the site they are visiting.

Shopppers can explore The North Face’s Defy product line while watching the video, without leaving the site they are visiting.

It is possible to interact with the products from within the gadget or Google Gadget Ad.

It is possible to explore The North Face’s products from within the gadget using Fluid Retail’s interactive components.

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