Friday, July 4, 2008
2D is here
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Research while you shop
This week in a meeting amongst stores and buyers, the topic was a very stylish and well-constructed kid’s bed. The buyer had recently reduced the price (again!) from $648 to $598, and was asking the stores: what’s happening with this bed? It’s fun, has lots of storage and functionality, and the price is less than half of retail. The stores said it gets a lot of looks, but the above-$600 price tag for a kid’s bed is off-putting. So, we’re trying it at another price level, and I hope it will work.
Today I did a quick Internet search to see what retailers were selling it and at what price: every quoted price I saw was 4 figures. Our retail is so far below the market value it’s not funny.
Which just made me think (again) how powerful it would be to enable the customer to combine the benefits of Internet search (comparison pricing, reviews etc) with her in-store experience. Sure, we could allow the customers to use our showroom PCs to comp shop while in the store, but it would be so much more powerful if the customer could take a picture of the item (or its 2D barcode) with her own phone to search for and display comparative prices, specs, and reviews. Although our price tags declare the comparative retail price, how much more credible that price would be if the customer could verify the actual retail from other retailers’ websites.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Raising the bar
I had an interesting experience today when I engaged in an SMS promotion one of the speakers mentioned in his presentation. The SMS experience was fast and satisfying -- I had to type maybe a total of 15 characters over 3 fast-paced text messages that resulted in an order to be shipped to my home address (which has more than 15 characters in one address line alone). Impressive, and a powerful example. Until... I read the last message: "Your order will be shipped in 6-8 weeks." OK, this is a free sample, so the order lead time is consistent with that service. But still.
The fulfillment industry remains challenged as ever, and marketing will be able to move much quicker, and will set customer expectations that only the very dedicated suppliers will be able to meet (Amazon and Dell can be exemplary, but they have worked at it from the get-go). Thing is, if I can place an order in under 30 seconds, why should I have to wait even a week, when ground service is usually 3-5 days in the US?
Truth is, fulfillment is dull stuff. And yet - it overwhelmingly determines the final impression left on our customer.
Going mobile
But with mobiles, we're finally acknowledging a responsibility to provide content that is absolutely customized for the user. I doubt this is harder (requires more effort), but it does require a fundamental change in thinking that has to persist through the entire application life cycle. Change is usually harder than work.
The more things change...
Bigfoot
I take heart, though. I notice that the hotel offers a 50% discount on valet parking rates if you drive a hybrid. Nice.