Archive for September, 2009

You’ve just decided to buy a new car (yes, we know there’s a recession, but let’s pretend anyway). Think of all the steps you’ll follow before, during and after you’ve bought the car, and you’ll see your experiences have phases:

Eeny, meeny, miny, mo

You gather as much information across the different car brands as you can, until you decide on Car Brand X.

Okay, tell me more…

You start getting to know Car Brand X, probably taking different models for a test drive, until you know exactly what you want – down to the colour of the seats.

I’ll take it

The sale is made. You fill in forms, organise finance, and arrange for delivery.

Will they look after me?

Getting your car serviced will bring you in contact with Car Brand X again. Together with your day to day driving experience, these interactions will influence whether or not you buy another car from Brand X.

Psst…

Depending how step 4 goes, you’ll tell your friends, family and acquaintances about your experiences, and the cycle may start all over again.

These steps form part of a widely acknowledged customer life-cycle.  You can read more about this here.

But cars aren’t our game – good online experiences are

Your online channel needs to be thought of in terms of these steps too.

They need to choose you

Are you making the most of your digital channel to be top of mind when potential customers are comparing products?

  • Do you perform well in search engine results?
  • Do you market your company and products equally effectively across email, social networking and paid online advertising models?
  • Are these efforts well integrated into your website from inception through to completion of the sale?
  • Are you driving offline marketing to your online channel?

Make the benefits clear

Your web channel has to give potential customers the right information, in a format they can understand.

  • Does your website communicate well to people who don’t know about your industry and specifically your products?
  • Do you present your products in a way that is transparent and allows for easy comparison to your competitors?
  • Do you help people match their needs with your products?

Sign, seal and deliver

Ideally, you’ll want to close the sale online. But if that’s not the nature of your business, your web offering has to at least provide the means for them to get in contact with the right people for what they want to do.

  • Are you tracking the online sales process and monitoring its effectiveness?
  • Are you optimising this process when you see a step that is ineffective?
  • Are you using all the tools that the online environment gives you to help close sales like online chat and integration into mobile technologies?

Consistently show them you care

Ensure your online channel brings all the benefits of web-based customer service to your business.

  • Are you driving customers to your most cost-effective self service channel – the Internet?
  • Can customers service themselves online, or are you still relying on email-based service request and fulfilment?
  • Do you do regular customer testing on your self-service content and functionality to ensure that it delivers on customer needs?

Let them build your reputation

Help your customers tell their friends how great you are.

  • Do you invite and participate in public communication with your customers through blogs and online forums?
  • Are you making the most of social networking opportunities like Twitter and Facebook?
  • Do you make use of referral campaigns and competitions?

 

When customers have a good online experience, everyone is smiling

A good (online) experience with your brand means everybody wins. Your customers will feel they’ve found a brand they can trust, and you will have their loyalty and a bigger customer base. Loyalty means an almost-captive audience when you launch a new product or service, which in turn means (you guessed it): more sales.

Make sure your online channel is all your customers want it to be

Umlungu can help you at each step of your customers’ lifecycle and make your online channel be all it can be. Talk to us to find out how.

John Rheinfrank, Shelley Evenson, and others developed a model of the ideal “experience cycle” as they worked on a usability design strategy for Xerox in the 1980s. This experience cycle has revolutionised thinking about the processes customers go through when they interact with suppliers or producers (in other words whoever sells to them). Instead of having a funnel-like structure which focuses on making the quick sale (as the traditional sales cycle has), the experience cycle aims at building long term relationships with customers and servicing them every step of the way.

Umlungu’s latest newsletter is about how the experience cycle can be applied to your online offering. (If you missed it, you can read it here.)

To learn more about the differences between the traditional sales cycle and the customer experience cycle, read this article by Evenson and Hugh Dubberly. Look out for a very interesting example of the cycle in relation to Apple.

Carl Roberts

15.09.2009

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Umlungu recently designed and built a new website for the renowned sculptor Carl Roberts. This is one of the projects of which our creative team is particularly proud, since it posed several design and content challenges. But ultimately, we like what we did with it. And thankfully, so does Carl. Check out the website here.