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E-Commerce – customer focus Attracting and keeping customers » Issue: security, trust Legal issues Personalisation Adverts Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 1 Customers are different! Consumer types » Individual consumers » Organizational buyers Goal of shopping » Pragmatic: buy something useful, cheaply » Hedonic: have fun Personality » Impulsive buyers—purchase quickly » Patient buyers—make some comparisons first » Analytical buyers—do substantial research before buying Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 2 Consumer Behaviour Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 3 Prentice Hall, 2002 Consumer Satisfaction Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen Prentice Hall, 2002 4 Security/Trust Security/trust » Will the company actually deliver the correct product in reasonable shape, in a reasonable time, at correct price » Will the customer pay up (is the credit card stolen, will it be repudiated) Technical aspects Human aspects: Focus here on trust Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 5 Trust in physical shops Experience: shoppers trust shops they’ve used before Appearance: shoppers trust store that look reputable Complaints: easy to complain, shop can’t hide Transactions are simple Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 6 On-line trust What makes you trust an e-commerce shop? Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 7 On-line Trust Experience: I trust Amazon because I’ve used them before » Reputation: because my friends use them » Very important with e-shops Appearance: do I trust Amazon because they have a nice website??? » Less important than with physical shops » Marketing helps Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 8 On-line trust Complaints: Harder to complain since don’t know where shop is Transactions are complex because of delivery » Where many e-shops mess up Third-party: do I trust Amazon more if another web site says good things about Amazon (???) Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 9 Does Amazon Trust Me? Amazon trusts me because » Experience: I’ve always paid Amazon before » Reputation: I’ve used other companies and always paid up » Marketing: Amazon threatens nasty things to customers who don’t pay up Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 10 Trust We know how trust is established in physical shops. We are developing mechanisms for establishing trust in e-shops » Partially technology, but psychology and sociology probably matter more » Lack of trust mechanisms is barrier to new e-shops Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 11 Legal Issues: Tax In USA, one driving force behind early e-store success was less tax » Because of a tax loophole, sales tax (VAT) was not charged on e-commerce sales Automatically gave price advantage to e-commerce sites! Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 12 Legal Issues: Intl E-Commerce In theory, e-commerce means sites can sell globally In practice, difficult because of different tax rules, regulations, customs, etc » More common to set up subsidiaries in different countries, as Amazon has done Lack of global legal/regulatory framework hinders ecommerce Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 13 Personalisation E-Commerce sites can treat customers differently » Offer recommendations, special deals » Personalise web site » Adjust prices In theory, “personalised shop” one of the great benefits of e-commerce Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 14 One-to-One Marketing Build a long term association Meeting customers cognitive needs Customer may have novice, intermediate or expert skill E-loyalty—customer’s loyalty to an e-tailer costs Amazon $15 to acquire a new customer costs Amazon $2 to $4 to keep an existing customer Trust in EC Deterrence-based —threat of punishment Knowledge-based —reputation Identification-based —empathy and common values Referrals – Viral Marketing Personalisation… Personalisation - Marketing Model “Treat different customers differently” Prentice Hall, 2002 Personalisation “Process of matching content, services, or products to individuals’ preferences” Build profiles – N.B. Privacy Issues Solicit information from users Use cookies to observe online behavior Use data or Web mining Recommendation Build profiles » What has X bought? » What has X looked at? » Demographics: age, gender, etc Recommendation » Rules: If X buys Harry Potter 6, recommend HP 7 » Data Mining: Other people who bought Harry Potter also bought Lord of the Rings » Collaborative: X’s overall buying profile is similar to Y, so recommend whatever Y bought Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 18 Data Mining searching for valuable information in extremely large databases Automated prediction of trends and behaviors Example: from data on past promotional mailings, find out targets most likely to respond in future Automated discovery of previously unknown patterns Example: find seemingly unrelated products often purchased together Example: Find anomalous data representing data entry errors Mining tools: Neural computing Intelligent agents Association analysis - statistical rules Web Mining - Mining meaningful patterns from Web resources Web content mining – searching Web documents Web usage mining – searching Web access logs Recommendations If done well, perceived very positively » Real benefit, not just marketing spam » Credit-card companies have done this well – Have the most purchasing data? Data privacy issues » Can Visa sell data about you to Amazon? » Spyware to track all of your web browsing? Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 20 Personalise Web Sites Let customers create their own “shop front” focusing on their interest Adjust appearance (eg, for visually disabled, or strict Muslims) Doable, not huge success Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 21 Personalised Pricing Companies would love to be able to charge people different amounts for the same product » Airline seats, cars, etc » Full price for people who are keen, in a rush, don’t care about money » Discount for choosy/finicky Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 22 Personalised Pricing Amazon, etc have tried this, but customers hated it. So has gone “underground” for now. Technology permits this, but society’s expectations does not allow it Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 23 Advertising E-Shops (and other sites) can make money via advertising » Google makes billions from its “sponsored links” » Amazon has adverts as well Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 24 Web Advertising Conventional advertising focuses on visual appeal Less successful on web » Flashy animated banner adverts are a nuisance and distraction Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 25 Targeted adverts Web allows relevant adverts to be associated with a web page » Google sponsored links based on search » Amazon could display different adverts for sci-fi and romance novel Very effective if done well » So Web sites can charge more for targeted adverts Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 26 Web adverts Initially treated like TV adverts, put huge effort into flashy multimedia banner ads Now focusing on simple targeted adverts instead Advertising models cannot be blindly moved from TV to web » need new models! Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 27 E-Commerce Summary Initially tried to make e-shops similar to high street shops. But » Need different business model » Trust issues much more important » Need appropriate legal framework Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 28 E-Commerce Summary Sometimes technology really helps » Recommender systems, targeted adverts Sometimes technology works but society doesn’t like it » Differential pricing Dr. Ehud Reiter, Computing Science, University of Aberdeen 29