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-Joni Fisher, Fisher Search GroupRecent Posts
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- Shopping Cart Abandonment Rate Set To Rise in 2012
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- Online Checkout User Experience – In Real Life
- Not Doing Website Usability Testing? Are You Nuts?
- eBay’s X.commerce – What It Means for Merchants
- What the iPhone 4S Means for Mobile Commerce
- Recapping the 2011 Shop.org Annual Summit
- The Pros and Cons of Selling on Amazon
- Shopping Cart Abandonment Rate Tops 75%
- 3 Reasons Why Real Time Shopping Cart Recovery Emails Work Better
- 4 Email Addresses Capture Techniques to Increase Website Conversion
- Shopping Cart Abandonment Emails Generate $17.90 per Email
- Is Your Website a Bucket or a Sieve?
- Analysis: Three Promotion Pitfalls to Avoid When Remarketing to Abandoned Shopping Carts
- Analysis: Promotions Make Big Impact on Abandoned Shopping Carts
- Forget Selling on Facebook (for now) – Think Social Plugins
- Tom Davenport – Competing on Analytics in eCommerce
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‘Have we conditioned most customers to the point that they expect discounts and won’t buy without one?’
This is a great question, and it’s worth considering in more depth. Recent research shows that coupon redemption is at an all time high, and at the same time, Ben Bernanke warns that the economic recovery is fragile and taxes will inevitably have to rise. It’s no wonder that customers are nervous and cautious.
This is evidenced in a recent Forrester Research report that found that some 136 million people abandoned shopping carts in the U.S. last year, a full 88 percent of the online shopping population. The number one reason why people abandon shopping carts is price, specifically the cost of shipping and handling (44 percent), rapidly followed by ‘Not yet ready to buy’ (41 percent) and ‘Looking for a better deal’ (27 percent).
These numbers would suggest that many, but not all, customers are deal hungry—scouring the internet for the best price, free shipping offers and voucher codes.
So, it was with some interest that I read ExactTarget’s latest installment in their Subscribers, Friends and Followers series. Their most recent research paper, ‘The Social Profile,’ looks at the different online personalities and identifies 12 specific personas:
1. Inner Circle: 47% of online consumers
Inner Circle consumers are interested in maintaining and deepening existing relationships with family and close friends, not necessarily developing new online relationships.
2. Cautious: 33% of online consumers
Very selective about with whom they communicate and the types of information they’re willing to share online.
3. Info Seeker: 33% of online consumers
Info Seekers go online to find and consume information. They aren’t interested in creating new content or in commenting on the experiences of others, though they do seek out others’ opinions.
4. Enthusiast: 32% of online consumers
When Enthusiasts go online, they’re motivated by offline interests and hobbies.
5. Deal Seeker: 30% of online consumers
Deal Seekers have a huge appetite for promotional content across all online channels. They see email, Facebook and Twitter as opportunities to obtain exclusive deals, freebies, discounts, coupons, and sale notifications.
6. Shopper: 24% of online consumers
As their name suggests, Shoppers are most interested in the topic of shopping when they’re interacting online. But their interests aren’t limited to online transactions—they spend a lot of time researching and preparing for in-store shopping trips at their favorite local stores. In contrast to their Deal Seeker counterparts, Shoppers tend to be more focused on quality, as opposed to savings, though both are important to these consumers.
7. News Junkie: 21% of online consumers
Consumers who are motivated by the quest for real-time breaking news and current events. News Junkies use the internet as either their primary source of information for news-related content or as a secondary source to supplement the information they get on cable news networks. These consumers are active social media contributors, especially when it comes to posting articles on sites, commenting on news stories, and submitting ratings and reviews to retailer websites.
8. Gamer: 19% of online consumers
Gamers are motivated by the latest and greatest in gaming software, and can be split into two sub categories—Casual vs. Serious.
9. Social Butterfly: 13% of online consumers
Making and maintaining a lot of online friendships is a Social Butterfly’s #1 priority. And to do so, they use a wide variety of social media tools. Social Butterflies use Facebook to maintain their social lives, and their Friends are personal contacts, not work colleagues. In addition to becoming Fans of brands on Facebook, these consumers are also interested in promotions and sale notifications across email, Facebook and Twitter.
10. Business First: 8% of online consumers
Business First Consumers use the internet for business purposes, keeping up with the latest trends, communicating with business contacts, and making new connections through sites like LinkedIn. In short, they’re actively engaged in promoting their companies and personal careers online.
11. Megaphone: 7% of online consumers
Megaphones want to connect, educate, and share resources and information online with others. These consumers clearly fall into the “influencer” category—meaning they can impact a brand’s bottom line—but Megaphones represent an especially elite group that takes their online interactions very seriously.
12. Open Book: 6% of online consumers
Open Books are uninhibited consumers who freely express their likes, dislikes, experiences and opinions with the online world.
What’s interesting about these profiles is that only 30 percent are Deal Seekers. It’s very easy to forget that the deal-focused consumer is in fact a minority. The ExactTarget research also points at Shoppers (24 percent) and Social Butterflies (13 percent) as being interested in promotions, and connecting with brands by both social networks and by becoming email subscribers. But these consumers are not driven towards deal-seeking as their primary motivation online, rather they are focused on shopping research and the social aspects of shopping, respectively.
These online personas are interesting reminders to us to not treat website visitors as a homogeneous mass—it’s all too easy when we use language like Unique Visitors, Page Views and the like as part of our daily web analytics language.
Unfortunately, these types of online personas cannot easily be used to personalize our online marketing strategies but do contribute to our understanding of all the different types of online consumers.
This is echoed in some of the remarketing campaigns that our customers run (see Q&As with Rockler and Eat N’ Park). Some of the most successful abandoned shopping cart recovery email programs that SeeWhy powers—generating millions of dollars each year for the brands—do so with any form of promotion.
Tags: abandoned shopping cart, abandoned shopping cart recovery, abandonment, conversion rate, email conversion, exacttarget, online marketing, Online personas, remarketing, SeeWhy, shopping cart abandonment, social commerce
This entry was posted on Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010 at 8:00 am and is filed under Blog. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Coupons started off as nothing more than pieces of paper that you would cut out of advertisements that were ordinarily inside the newspaper having a pair of scissors to ensure that you could possibly bring them for the retailer to redeem for a small amount off of whatever obtain you were about to produce. Most people (possibly yourself included!) still do this. But you will discover a good deal more ways to use coupons now!
I appreciate that you discussed the different Social Profiles. After reading this, I know how to identify them. Keep it up!