Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Dear Distributors, don’t over analyze, just START!

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Most distributors are in the process of either starting an eCommerce initiative or improving an existing one.

However, in the midst of process and following a plan, many distributors are getting bogged down in the minutia.  The details tend to overwhelm and even paralyze them.

My summary of this article – you don’t have to get it all right from the beginning, so start as soon as possible.

This is what you need

The biggest problem that most distributors face is that without having done this before, how do they know what to look for?  How are you expected to decide which features are released when?  What should we customize?  What do we need to integrate?  What features give us the biggest return?

So, here is your baseline or benchmark:

  • User experience / creative – the look and feel of the site should match your culture and your organization.  It should feel like walking into one of your locations.  That means you need a creative person or an agency design the look and feel of the site.  Keep it simple.
  • Search and Navigation – if you have over 1,000 SKUs then you must have a good search box.  Guided navigation is also critical for them to refine the catalog.
  • Good product data – it doesn’t have to be perfect or 100% complete, but you must create an ongoing process (which probably means forever) to continuously improve your product data (descriptions, attributes, images, specs, attachments)
  • Customer pricing – when customers come on to your site they want to see their pricing, terms and conditions
  • Simple checkout – the checkout should be intuitive, simple and as frictionless as possible.  That means you should probably take a hard look at your “new customer” onboarding process.
  • ERP integration – pricing, inventory, order status, product information

I try not to solution without knowing you.  In fact I made fun of people that do.  However,  I want to give you a few suggestions, so forgive me:

Whatever software you choose, don’t customize it for the first 3 – 6 months.  Invest all your time and money into 3 things:

  • Integration with your ERP
  • Integration with your ERP
  • Integration with your ERP

You get the point.  Only kind of kidding.  Now the for real list:

  • Integration with your ERP
  • Product data
  • Creative look and feel

In that order.

Integration

You want to at least integrate the following from your backend systems (most of the time that means ERP and/or CRM):

  • Product information
  • Inventory
  • Customer information
  • Contracts, custom pricing
  • Order status

Product Data

If your product data sucks, then you are normal.  So don’t stop your eCommerce initiative, simply pick the top 5 – 10% of your most popular products and invest in that product data.  Have your people build product data, invest in 3rd parties, buy your data, and import it from your suppliers.  Make some small percentage of your product data as rich as possible.

What do you do with the rest of your data?  Use supplier data and ERP data to make it “okay”.

Here is the hard part.  Create a continual data optimization process for the rest of your life to make product data better.  Every quarter get better.

HINT:  Use third party data providers and builders.  They will save you a lot of time and money in the long run.

Creative Look and Feel

Invest in an agency or designer to make your site look good.  Don’t let the developers do it. Please!  It matters. You know it does, because you have gone on sites before and said how bad they were.  And then keep them on retainer.  Designers are worth every penny because they will make you look professional.  They will help you build online trust with your customer.

One last note on software

I purposefully left software selection out of this.  I wrote a 50 page manifesto on how to select software.  My point in this article, is to pick software that provides those initial benchmarks (search, navigation, product data, customer pricing, integration into ERP) and don’t customize it – take it out of the box.  Because, let’s be honest  – you don’t really know what areas to customize that will get you a ROI, right?  Instead, invest in integration, product data, and creative.

THEN – just watch how your customers use it.  Let’s figure out ways to get more customers to use and adopt eCommerce.   Let’s watch it, then use our analytics to tell us what we should change, why we should change it, and what kind of return we will get on our investment.

If you want more

I don’t right hook (ie make a sale) often, but the Private Advisory Group for Ecommerce (cleverly named P.A.G.E.) was built exactly for this purpose.  I answer all of your questions.  I guide you, coach you, help you plan, even advise you on your decisions.  P.A.G.E. helps you start.  Check it out.

photo credit: Pallet Pick 1 via photopin (license)

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Thursday, October 8, 2015

Looking for eCommerce or Digital staff members?

I have received a number of requests recently to help spread the word about open positions in all kinds of organizations. I would love to help you do that. I have a fantastic network and audience of really talented people – from contractors to full time.

Vice versa — if you are looking for new opportunities.

Reach out to me and we can chat about it.

The post Looking for eCommerce or Digital staff members? appeared first on eCommerceandB2B.com.



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Saturday, October 3, 2015

Don’t think I’m crazy when I suggest that FaceBook should be one of your highest B2B priorities for the rest of 2015

two-guys

FaceBook?? Seriously Justin??  Are you losing your way??  I know, believe me.  That is why this is one of the most important posts I have ever written.

One of my biggest pet peeves in B2B eCommerce is when newly B2C-turned-B2B consultants forget their audience and talk about FaceBook.  Sometimes they just forget about a retail social media logo on a slide and say something like “oh, FaceBook doesn’t apply to B2B.”  And yet, here I am — about to talk about why FaceBook should be one of your highest priorities for the rest of 2015 and all 2016.  Like everything else I do, I hopefully will turn this topic upside down for you.  Here is what I will cover:

  • Why B2B marketers MUST use FaceBook
  • How I use FaceBook in my B2B strategy
  • How to start today

I have recently realized that I have become a B2B marketer myself — a practitioner, no longer a consultant or a software guy.  I have spent hundreds of hours reading, learning, and testing.  Testing is the key.  Everything I am about to say, I actually do every day.  It is an understatement to say I have tested it.  And it works incredibly well.

Why B2B marketers MUST use FaceBook

First of all,  this is not about good photos, cute branding strategies, promotions, giveaways, any of that.  You are not retail.  FaceBook for B2B should be about one thing.  Understanding your audience.  In the future, I will write about advertising on FaceBook for B2B companies.  In the community, it is hands down my most popular workshop.  By prioritizing FaceBook in your marketing strategy for eCommerce or otherwise, you will learn more about your audience than you ever thought possible.

If not ads, then how will I learn about my audience?

It is called a “Custom Audience Pixel.”  You put it in your website code like you do with Google analytics.  If the person coming to your website visited FaceBook on their computer at some point, they would be tagged AND tracked in FaceBook!  Have you ever wondered how you get ads on FaceBook from sites or products that you have visited recently?  I had previously thought that only big retail companies could do that.  I found that anyone could do it.  And it is FREE!  And incredibly powerful.

It is called remarketing, but we are going to start with understanding how this helps us understand our audience.

Once FaceBook has tagged over 1,000 website visitors there is an incredible amount of information immediately available to you about your audience, your customers, and your prospects.

There are over 100+ ways to segment, but here are a few

  • Age and Gender
  • Lifestyle (married, rural parents, suburban seniors, kids and clout)
  • Location
  • Education level
  • Job Title
  • Most popular likes
  • Household income
  • Household size
  • Home market value (yep, crazy)
  • What kind of car they drive (yep, it is getting crazier)
  • Spending methods (credit card, ATM, Travel & Entertainment, Cash versus Card)

Pretty crazy – as a marketer, isn’t that Gold information?

But wait, I haven’t even gotten to the good stuff

  • Interests – books, movies, sports teams, sports they like to play
  • Purchase behavior – BUSINESS PURCHASES!!!

Take a look at a few of the purchase behavior insights

facebook-power-editor-behavior-business-purchases

What does all of this mean?

It means I can understand my audience in ways I never have before.  I can see that my audience is 62% male, married with two kids,  lives on the east coast, and prefer golf over hiking.  My audience also likes Jordan Spieth, Dave Ramsey, and Seth Godin, drives a Honda, uses mostly credit cards, and buy training for their company.  And that is just scratching the surface.  I know a lot more about you.

If you had that type of information, could you put together the right headlines, engaging campaigns, and unbelievable product offerings?  Absolutely!

How I use FaceBook in my B2B strategy

I will save most of this for the workshops, but I use FaceBook heavily.  When you visit my website, I build an audience for you on FaceBook and Twitter (yes you can do the same thing on Twitter).  I know who you are, what pages you have visited, even which emails you have opened, and which you have clicked on.

I know who my audience is, what they like, and what they buy.  I show specific ads to only that audience that has visited my site.  I test ads to see which work and which do not.  I keep a swipe file.  And when someone buys something, I add them to a new audience.

I segment my audience by all kinds of things to test what works best.  If I am using an image of a car, and I know my audience drives a Honda, maybe I show them a Honda so we can relate.  But maybe I show a BMW because that is where they want to be eventually.

If I am promoting an event, I segment my audience to see what kinds of activities they want to do.  Golf?  Check.  Orioles game?  Hmm – maybe.  Hiking or mountain biking?  Not for my audience.

How to start today

If this sounds crazy to you – then first start with my simple eBook on using a LinkedIN hack in a similar fashion.  It is a fantastic concept.

If this doesn’t sound so crazy, then still get the eBook and then create your custom audience pixel, immediately.  It is simple to do.  You need to have two things.  A FaceBook fan or company page and a website.

  1. Log in to that FaceBook company page profile, and thengo to FaceBook ad manager.
  2. On the left-hand column select “”
  3. Click Create Custom Audience
    When you create your first audience, it will give you a pixel or code for you to place in the <HEAD></HEAD> tags of your website.
  4. After that is installed, you can create a Custom Audience.  See screen shots below.

Create custom audience by website traffic.  If you see the other options, your mind will start racing.  Hold off for now, we will get to that.

create-custom-audience-1

Facebook uses a single pixel to track everything.  But based on that pixel we can create many different custom audiences.  Again, as you see what the options are in the Website Traffic box, your head will start spinning.  Stay with me though.  Create an audience with “180 days” and anyone who visits your website for now.  Give it a name called “Visited WebSite” and then let it sit.

create-custom-audience-2

Don’t do anything crazy yet – just let your custom audience fill up to more than a 1,000.  Then we can talk about some crazy ways of using this data.

Like what you see?  We do deep dives in the community.  Join us – the ROI is instantaneous.

photo credit: Startup Riot 2009 via photopin (license)

The post Don’t think I’m crazy when I suggest that FaceBook should be one of your highest B2B priorities for the rest of 2015 appeared first on eCommerceandB2B.com.



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