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Friday, September 26, 2008

How to Build Your Cross-Channel Selling

With Social Networking

Attaining the optimal mix of product selection, pricing, content in catalogs and collateral, and the tailoring of guided selling and navigation within multi-channel management strategies is too important to leave to just trial and error. Lacking frameworks to define the optimal mix of resources, anecdotal data instead of actual results often define the mix of resources across channels. Tapping into the immediate feedback social networking can provide, there isn't the need to just rely on anecdotal data anymore. You can find out what's working and why, quickly.

Cross-channel shoppers spend more, tend to be more loyal, and purchase more from companies that get cross-channel selling as close to optimal as possible.

Cross-Channel Shoppers Are King

With so much at stake from being able to attract and retain cross-channel shoppers, the need for optimizing content, applications, pricing and product selection is crucial. Several studies have highlighted how much more profitable it is to attract cross-channel shoppers than being only focused on just a single channel for a given type of customer.

  • Getting the optimal mix of guided selling, content and catalogs is critical. Customers who rely on multiple channels are 70% more likely to purchase from dealers, or in the case of retailers, their stores, and 110% are more likely to purchase from a retailer's catalog. The IBM study, "Integrated Multi-Channel Retailing (IMCR): A Roadmap to the Future," quantifies how cross-channel shoppers are catalysts of increased sales growth over time.
  • Cross-channel shoppers are the heavy spenders online, from catalogs and in stores. Studies by AMR Research, DoubleClick and many others all support the fact that cross-channel shoppers consistently spend 50 percent or more than a single channel shopper. Another study showed that cross-channel shoppers spend 70% more than those that rely on just a single channel.
  • The long-term effects of being more optimally aligned with cross-channel shoppers' needs are most evident in the area of loyalty. Studies from McKinsey & Company state that only 15% of loyalty is gained from perceived product quality and promotional strategies, leaving 85% to the actual purchasing and post-sales purchasing experiences of customers.
  • Cross-shopping consumables lead to selling workgroup printers for one printer manufacturer. Based on positive experiences with cross-channel shopping in consumables, one printer manufacturer is finding that repeat printer customers now routinely purchase replacement printers online, and only visit channel partners to see the larger, more expensive workgroup models.

With so much at stake in selling to cross-shoppers, companies need to get beyond trial and error and define a

framework that will make optimizing them possible.

Optimizing Channels Using Value Curves and Social Networking Feedback

W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne in "Creating New Market Space," an article published by Harvard Business Review in January 1999, define the concept of value curve where the key elements of product, service and delivery were compared. The following graphic created by Kim and Mauborgne of Bloomberg's value curve is shown below. The seven categories below the value curve include those attributes most critical to customers who rely on multiple channels for information. The financial information services value curve Kim and Mauborgne published is shown below.

Bloomberg's Value Curve

Retailers and other companies that are heavily dependent on multi-channel strategies are using the framework to measure how each of their channels measures up to key elements of product, service and delivery. Accessibility, added-value services during the shopping process, browsing, convenience and pricing are listed along the bottom of the graphic. Next, each channel is graphed according to their relative strengths and weaknesses on each factor. The value curve is a scorecard of how existing multi-channel strategies are performing.

Social Networking: The New Catalyst for More Profitable Cross-Channel Selling

There's just not enough time anymore to wait and see if your

mix of applications, content, catalogs, pricing and service is optimal every ninety days. It needs to be a daily take on performance, and with social networking, that's possible without being obnoxious or intruding to your customers.

Consider the following approaches in which companies are using social networking to gain insights into how they can achieve higher levels of cross-channel optimization:

  • Starbucks is a leader in this area with two popular social-networking initiatives including MyStarBucksIdea.com and their very active participation on Twitter with @starbucks. Based on the data they have, they can easily define their value curve and takes steps to create more of an optimal mix for enabling cross-channel shopping.
  • Dell has embraced Twitter and has the potential to understand how they could chart the feedback they are getting to define the value curve for their multi-channel efforts. You can find the Social brand Index compiled by Jonathan Kash on his blog Fluent Simplicity and a listing of Dell employees and departments on Twitter there as well.
  • A pet-food manufacturer is using its blogs to post web-based surveys that continually ask customers their expectations versus experiences online, in-store and with printed and online catalogs and changing product mix by segment accordingly. A student of mine is the operations director for this company, and she has successfully built a value curve for each income segment of her customer base, leading to a major shift in online pricing and product strategies.

Bottom line: Striving to get real-time feedback on how cross-channel shoppers' expectations versus experiences measure-up is one of the most valuable insights any company can get. Optimizing cross-channel experiences can now be done with real-time data based on listening to customers using social networking.

Courtesy - Louis Columbus, Expert Access

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