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Bachelor of Business Administration Program ©Mathieu CHAUVET – 2014/2015 1 MARKETING ON THE WEB 2 Learning objectives In this part, we will address aspects related to: When to use product-based and customer-based marketing strategies Communicating with different market segments Customer relationship intensity and the customer relationship life cycle Using advertising on the Web Reviewing technology-enabled customer relationship management Creating and maintaining brands on the Web Search engine positioning and domain name selection 3 1) Web strategy mix 4 As a reminder… Marketing mix Element combination to achieve the following goals: Selling and promoting products and services Developing a Marketing strategy through the Four Ps Product Price Promotion Place (distribution) Two possibilities of designing your website 5 a) Product-Based Marketing Strategies Web presence must integrate with image and brand Customers will use product categories to order and identify their own shopping paths Web site examples: Home Depot, Staples, Sears Not a useful Web site design when customers look to fulfill a specific need 6 b) Customer-Based Marketing Strategies Web sites to meet various types of customers’ specific needs First step: identify customer groups sharing common characteristics Second step: identify subgroups Strategy pioneered first on B2B sites, before B2C sites adding customer-based marketing elements Example: university Web sites 7 2) Communication with different market segments 8 Products with few characteristics and easy to understand Highly complex People now resistant to mass media messages: products and Successful mass media campaigns relied on services passive nature of media consumption But Web users are more likely to be in an active state Market segmentation 9 Market Segmentation Divides potential customer pool into segments Emergence of Micromarketing Practice of targeting very small market segments Three categories to identify market segments Geographic segmentation Demographic segmentation Psychographic segmentation (social class, personality, etc.) Television advertisers use all three categories: Companies try to match advertising messages to market segments 10 11 Offering Customers a Choice on the Web One-to-one marketing Offering products, services matched to needs of a particular customer Example: Dell Offers several different ways to do business Home page links for each major customer group Specific products, product categories links available Dell Premier accounts High level of customer-based market segmentation 12 3) Beyond Market Segmentation: Customer Behavior and Relationship Intensity 13 a) Segmentation Using Customer Behavior Same person but needs different combinations of products and services depending on the occasion Behavioral segmentation: Creation of separate customer experiences based on their behavior Websites will then try to propose features for each type of profiles: Browser Buyer Shopper Other alternative modes 14 Browsers: Visitors just surfing or browsing Web site: must offer something to pique visitors’ interest Trigger words: Prompt visitor to stay and investigate products or services Links to site explanations, instructions Include extra content related to product, service Aim: Leading them to favorable impression (bookmark) 15 Buyers: Ready to make a purchase right away Websites have to Offer direct route into purchase transaction Shopping cart Parts of the Web site that keep tracks of selected items for purchase and automate purchasing process Page offers link back into shopping area Aim: getting buyer to shopping cart as quickly as possible 16 Shoppers: Motivated to buy and looking for more information before purchase Websites have then to: Offer comparison tools, product reviews, and features lists Aim: convincing customers to buy now or on future visits 17 Alternative models McKinsey & Company’s six behavior-based categories Simplifiers (convenience) Surfers (find information, explore new ideas, shop) Bargainers (search for good deal) Connectors (stay in touch with other people) Routiners (return to same sites over and over) Sportsters (spend time on sports, entertainment sites) People do not retain behavioral categories from one visit to the next, even for the same Web site Must identify groups and formulate ways of generating revenue 18 b) Customer Relationship Intensity and Life-Cycle Segmentation 19 Awareness Customers recognize company name, product Exploration Customers learn more about company, products Familiarity Customers have completed several transactions Customers aware of returns and credits policies Customers aware of pricing flexibility Commitment Customer experiences highly satisfactory encounters Customer develops fierce loyalty or strong preference Separation Conditions that made relationship valuable change Parties enter separation stage Leads to manage acquisition, conversion, and retention of customers 20 c) Acquisition, Conversion, and Retention of Customers Goal: Attract new visitors to a Web site Necessitates to take into consideration: Acquisition cost: Total amount of money site spends drawing one visitor to site (average) Conversion cost: Total amount of money site spends (average) to induce one visitor to make a purchase, sign up for a subscription, or register Retention costs: Costs of inducing customers to return and buy again Importance of measuring these costs? Indicates successful advertising, promotion strategies 21 22 4) Advertising on the web 23 Advertising on the web Effective advertising involves communication Five-stage customer loyalty model: helpful in creating devoted advertising messages Online advertising always coordinates with existing advertising efforts Advertising on the web can be done thanks to various models: Banner ads Text ads Site sponsorships Affiliation Viral Marketing 24 a) Banner Ads Banner ad Small rectangular object on Web page Displays stationary or moving graphic Includes hyperlink to advertiser’s Web site Versatile advertising vehicle Attention-grabbing banner ads Use animated GIFs and rich media objects created using Shockwave, Java, Flash Companies can make their own banner ads or work with advertising agencies Price range: $100 to more than $5000 25 b) Text ads Short promotional message with no graphic elements Usually placed along Web page top or right side Deceptively simple but very effective Inline text ad Text in stories displayed as hyperlinks Example: Google Initially criticized for including unobtrusive ads on its pages Now clearly labels ads (to prevent confusion) 26 Other web-ad formats Pop-up ad Appears in its own window When user opens or closes Web page Considered to be extremely annoying Must click close button (small) in window of ad Pop-behind ad Pop-up ad followed by a quick command Returns focus to original browser window Emergence of Ad-blocking software Prevents banner ads and pop-up ads from loading 27 c) Sites sponsorship Web sites offer advertisers opportunity to sponsor all (or parts) of their sites More subtle way of doing advertising Goals similar to sporting event sponsors, television program sponsors: Tie company (product) name to an event (set of information) Increased revenues for the website 28 Cost Per Thousand (CPM): Dollar amount paid for every thousand people in the estimated audience 29 d) Affiliate marketing Affiliate marketing One firm’s Web site (affiliate site) Includes descriptions, reviews, ratings, other information about a product linked to another firm’s site (offers item for sale) Affiliate commissions: Pay-per-click model Affiliate earns commission each time site visitor clicks link, loads the seller’s page Pay-per-conversion model Affiliate earns a commission each time site visitor converted from visitor into qualified prospect or customer 30 e) Viral marketing strategies Viral marketing relies on existing customers Tell other people (prospective customers) about products or service Use individual customers to spread the word about a company Example: Tippex The hunter and the bear Huge success on social networks 31 Online advertising will have the aim to: Increase the revenues of the company Foster the brand image of the company through Product differentiation Relevance Perceived value (key element) Online advertising effectiveness remains difficult to measure by yourself Use of specific software and analytics (Google, etc.) 32 5) Technology-Enabled Customer Relationship Management 33 Technology-Enabled Customer Relationship Management Technology-enabled relationship management Relates to the information gathered about visitors Firm obtains information on customer behavior to: Set prices, negotiate terms, tailor promotions, add product features, customize customer relationship Also known as: Customer relationship management (CRM) Electronic customer relationship management (eCRM) 34 a) CRM as a Source of Value CRM efforts are relatively successful thanks to current tools: Customer touchpoint: Any occurrence of contact between customer and company Data warehouse (large database): Contains multiple sources of information about customers, their preferences, their behavior Data mining (analytical processing): Technique that examines stored information, and looks for unknown, unsuspected patterns in the data Statistical modeling: Technique that tests CRM analysts’ theories about relationships among customer and sales data elements 35 36 b) Search Engine Positioning and Domain Names Search Engines and Web Directories Search engine helps people find things on the Web Web directories provide classified hierarchical lists of categories Search engine ranking: Search engines use factors to decide which URLs appear first on searches for a particular search term Became a critical aspect of Web Marketing 37 Development of Search Engine Optimization (SEO): The combined art and science of having a particular URL listed near the top of search engine Development of Search Engine Marketing (SEM) : Paid placement (sponsorship, search term sponsorship) Offer good ad placement on search results page for a certain price Buy banner ad space at the top of search results pages that include certain terms Example of Google: The company sells services directly (Google AdWords program) 38 U.S. online advertising expenditures 39 c) Websites names and issues URLs should reflect company name or reputation Troublesome domain names Companies sometimes purchase more suitable domain names Examples: www.iflyswa.com changed to www.southwest.com www.delta-air.com changed to www.delta.com Companies often buy more than one domain name In case user misspells URL, it stills redirects to intended site Processes regulated by Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) 40 Buying, selling, and leasing domain names Domain names that sold more than $1 million 41 B2B ACTIVITIES: IMPROVING EFFICIENCY AND REDUCING COSTS 42 Learning objectives In this chapter, you will learn about: How businesses use the Internet to improve purchasing, logistics, and other support activities Electronic data interchange and how it works Supply chain management and how businesses are using Internet technologies to improve it 43 1) Purchasing, Logistics, and Support Activities 44 a) Purchasing activities Procurement includes: All purchasing activities Monitoring all purchase transaction elements Managing and developing supplier relationships As such, procurement also called supply management Supply chain Part of industry value chain preceding a particular strategic business unit Includes all activities undertaken by every predecessor in the value chain to: Design, produce, promote, market, deliver, support each individual component of a product or service 45 b) Logistics activities Classic objective: Providing the right goods in the right quantities in the right place at the right time Important support activity for sales and purchasing Includes managing the movements of: Inbound materials and supplies Outbound finished goods and services Web and the Internet provide increasing number of opportunities to better manage activities Example: DHL, UPS, and their tracking systems Real-time shipment information: customers’ browsers 46 c) Support Activities General categories for B2B organizations: Finance and administration, human resources, technology development 47 Network Model of Economic Organization for B2B activities Trends in purchasing, logistics, and support activities: Shift from hierarchical structures toward network structures Procurement departments’ new tools (technology) in order to negotiate with suppliers and form strategic alliances All these activities are enhanced thanks to the development of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) 48 2) Electronic Data Interchange 49 Electronic Data Interchange EDI: Computer-to-computer business information transfer between two businesses using a standard format Firms EDI compatible: Firms exchanging data in specific standard formats How does EDI work? EDI purchasing process: Mail service replaced with EDI network data communications Paper flows within buyer’s and vendor’s organizations replaced with computers running EDI translation software 50 Going from this process… Information flows in a paper-based purchasing process 51 …To this type of process Information flows in an EDI purchasing process 52 Value-Added Networks EDI network: Businesses operate on-site EDI translator computers, connected directly to each others Trading partners receive, store, forward electronic messages containing EDI transaction sets 53 3) Supply Chain Management Using Internet Technologies 54 a) Value Creation in the Supply Chain Supply chain management: Managing integration of company supply management and logistics activities across multiple participants in a particular product’s supply chain Ultimate goal: Achieve higher-quality or lower-cost product at the end of the chain Firms engaging in supply chain management want to: Reach beyond limits of their own hierarchical structure Create new network forms of organization among members Aim: originally developed to reduce costs, but today value- added in the form of benefits to the ultimate consumer 55 Supply alliances: Long-term relationships among participants in the supply chain Major barriers: Level of information sharing Example: Dell Computer, reduced supply-chain costs by sharing information with suppliers Successful supply chain management key elements Clear communications Quick responses to those communications Benefits from Internet and Web technologies? Effective communications enhancers 56 b) Increasing Supply Chain Efficiencies Internet and Web technologies managing supply chains can: Yield increases in efficiency throughout the chain Increase process speed, reduce costs, increase manufacturing flexibility Allows response to changes in quantity and nature of ultimate consumer demand Example: Boeing Invested in new information systems increasing production efficiency of the supply chain Also launched spare parts Web site 57 Using Materials-Tracking Technologies with EDI and E-Commerce Integration of bar coding and EDI in order to tracking materials as they move from one company to another Integration of new types of tracking into Internet-based materials-tracking systems: Optical scanners and bar codes: help track movement of materials Radio Frequency Identification Devices (RFIDs): Small chips using radio transmissions to track inventory. RFIDs read much more quickly, with higher degree of accuracy than bar codes 58 Instructions for your Final presentations 59