Title: Understanding Customer Needs and Online Behaviour
1Understanding Customer Needs and Online Behaviour
2Error in Assignment 1 instructions
- Question 2c
- It should read
- Your operational margin seems a bit low. If you
increase it to 60 from 50, what impact does
that have on the Average Order Contribution and
the CLTV?
3During this class we will be looking at
- How customers make buying decisions
- Model for customer decision making
- Market research methods to understand customer
needs
44 steps to successful marketing strategy
Understanding customer needs and online behaviour
(market research, data mining, web analytics)
Formulate a strategy to fill needs
Implement effectively and efficiently (web
usability, stickiness, advertising, search engine
optimization, email marketing, pricing,
distribution, product development)
Build trusting relationships with customers
5Customer-Centric Marketing Process 3 elements
Marketing Research Marketing Strategy and Tactics
Focus for this week
Customer Relationship Management Sales Force
Management and Customer Experience
Database Marketing Acquire/Up-Sell Cross-Sell
6Benefits of Internet Marketing Research
Quickly gain crucial market intelligence
Act upon first-mover advantages
Stay afloat in a fast-paced environment
Reduce market research costs
Many more
7Model for customer decision making what do we
need to know about our customers?
- What starts the process? Source of input? Role of
past experience? Friends make input? Advertising,
catalogues, email? - Source of information friends, media, web,
store? Active Search? How much time? Where to
shop? Store, catalogue, web? What to learn?
Products / technology / user experience / trends? - Compare products? Role of price / quality?
Evaluation criteria? Need to touch and feel?
Impact of brand and trust? - How do buyers gain confidence? Special offers?
Security / privacy assurance needed? Guarantees /
refund policy? Need push to action - close sale? - Word of mouth to friends / community? Lifetime
service? Relationship contract? Delivers promised
value?
Initiation
Awareness / learning
Decision
Buy
Post purchase
8Popular Uses of Marketing Research
How to segment the market?
Who are mycustomers?
What is the price elasticity?
Conjoint Analysis
Customer Identification
Discrete Choice Modeling
MarketingResearch
Whendo theypurchase?
What are the growth trends?
Buying-Habit Studies
Environmental Studies
Opinion Research
Competitive Analysis
Who are my competitors?
What do they like?
93 main sources of data that e-marketers use for
research purposes
- Internal company records
- Secondary data
- Primary data
10Source 1 Internal Company Records
- Non-marketing Data
- The accounting department generates data about
sales, cash flow, marketing expenses - A firm introducing a new product on its Web site
wants immediate feedback on its sales. - Sales Force Data
- sales force automation software, allows
representatives to input results of sales calls
to both prospects and current customers - Customer Characteristics and Behavior
- Web Analytics, Clickstream analysis and Data
Mining - complete customer profile from all touch points
11Source 2 Secondary Data
- When are they used?
- Need specific information not available in
company or partner databases, - Need information that can be collected more
quickly and less expensively than primary data. - But
- They may not meet the e-marketers information
needs, because they were gathered for a different
purpose, - The quality of secondary data need to be checked,
- They are often out of date.
- Internet provides easy access to secondary data
about environmental factors and trends.
12Source 2 Secondary Data
- Marketing intelligence Marketers continually
scan the firms macro-environment for threats and
opportunities. - What type of information do marketers need?
- Demographic trends,
- Competitors,
- Technological forces,
- Natural resources,
- Social and cultural trends,
- World and local economies,
- Legal and political environments.
13Source 2 Secondary Data Publicly Generated Data
- Most Canadian and U.S. agencies provide online
information in their respective areas. Stats
Canada - Many global organizations, such as the
International Monetary Fund (www.imf.org) are
also good sources of data. - Most universities provide extensive information
through their libraries, and many faculty post
their research results online. - Industry- or profession-specific information is
available at the sites of professional
associations such as the American Marketing
Association. - Most of this information is free and available to
all Internet users.
14Source 2 Secondary Data Privately Generated Data
- Company Web sites provide a great overview of the
firms mission, products, partners, and current
events. - Individuals often maintain sites with useful
information about companies as well. - Sites that provide statistics etc relating
specifically to Internet markets such as the
ClickZ Network and Jupiter Research - Large research firms put sample statistics and
press releases on their sites or offer e-mail
newsletters. (eg. Forrester) - Infomediaries firms that monitor a number of
media sources, presenting selected resources to
users either by pushing material to the users
desktop via e-mail, or by allowing users to
pull it from a specially tailored Web site. - Free source is Google Alerts
15Source 2 Secondary Data Online Databases
- Commercial online databases contain publicly
available information that can be accessed via
the Internet. (fee based, such as Dialog) - Thousands of databases are available online, some
free, some subscription-based - News,
- Industry data,
- Encyclopedias,
- Airline routes and fares,
- Yellow Page directories, etc.
16Source 2 Secondary Data Competitive
Intelligence
- Competitive intelligence (CI) analyzing the
industries in which a firm operates as input to
the firms strategic positioning and to
understand competitor vulnerabilities. - 40 of all firms regularly conduct CI activities
- Some sources of CI
- Competitor press releases,
- New products,
- Alliances and co-brands,
- Trade show activity,
- Advertising strategies.
17Source 2 Secondary Data Competitive
Intelligence
- The Internet simplified CI
- Competitive marketing strategies observed on
competitors Web sites - Web sites linked to competitors pages type
linkcompanyname.com in search tools. Why are
these sites linking to my competitor and not to
me? - Third-party, industry-specific sites can also
provide information about competitive activities.
Company profiles for public firms are available
in the SECs online EDGAR database investment
firm sites. - User conversation e-mail lists, newsgroups,
blogs (eg. re BMWs)
18Source 3 Primary Data
- Primary data information gathered for the first
time to solve a particular problem. - When secondary data are not available managers
may decide to collect their own information. - They are more expensive and time-consuming to
gather than secondary data. - They are current and more relevant to the
marketers specific problem. - They are proprietary, therefore unavailable to
competitors.
19Source 3 Primary Data Internet-Based Research
Approaches
- The Internet is increasingly being used for
primary data collection. - Why? Declining cooperation from consumers using
traditional research approaches. Telephone survey
refusal rates 40- 60. - Increasing number of consumers online
- inexpensive and quick method
- In North America, over 70 of all research firms
use various online methodologies.
20Main Internet-Based Research Approaches
- Online experiments
- Online focus groups
- Online observation
- Usability testing
- Online Survey Research
- E-mail surveys
- Web surveys
21Online Experiments
- Experimental research attempts to test
cause-and-effect relationships - Marketers can easily test alternative web pages,
banner ads, or promotional offers - A firm might send e-mail notification of 2
different pricing offers (with a link to the
website), each one to a different set of
customers - By tracking the click-through rate it will be a
simple matter to track which pricing offer has
the better pull
22Online Focus Groups
- Focus group research
- A qualitative methodology that attempts to
collect in-depth information from a small number
of participants. - Used to help marketers understand important
feelings and behaviors prior to designing survey
research. - 15- 30 of advertising agencies and market
research firms use the Internet to conduct online
focus groups.
23Online Focus Groups Advantages and disadvantages
- Advantages over traditional focus groups
- The Internet can bring together people who do not
live in the same geographic area. - Because participants type their answers at the
same time, they are not influenced as much by
what others say. - Quicker and less expensive to operate than
offline versions. - Disadvantages
- Nonverbal communication is lost online.
- The authenticity problem Without seeing people
in person, it is difficult to be sure they are
who they say they are (need to verify respondent
authenticity).
24Online Observation
- Observation research monitors peoples behavior
by watching them in relevant situations. - Online it takes the form of monitoring consumer
chatting and e-mail posting through chat rooms,
bulletin boards, mailing lists and blogs. - on the company site and on 3rd party and / or
public sites
25Usability Testing
- Web site usability studies to watch users as they
click through the firms Web site - Subject and observers sometimes in the same room,
sometimes watch through one-way glass - Subjects usually given specific tasks
- Observers can pinpoint site design and usability
problems
26Online Survey Research
- E-marketers conduct surveys using 2 main methods
- Sending questionnaires to individuals via e-mail,
- Posting a survey form on the Web
27E-Mail Surveys
- To prepare an e-mail survey, an organization can
- Draw a sample of e-mail addresses from its
database, - Purchase a list,
- Gather e-mail addresses from the Web or Usenet
newsgroups. - Select a specialized representative group to
research to control who gets the questionnaire. -
- The researcher can send e-mail reminders to
participants who have not yet responded response
rates are just as high for e-mail surveys as for
traditional contact methods.
28Web Surveys
-
- Many companies post questionnaires on their Web
pages. - Purpose
- Gather statistics about a sites visitors (e.g.
Web site registration forms) - Required, or not required?
- More formal survey research on a particular topic
- Response rates to online surveys are as good as
or better than surveys using traditional
approaches, sometimes reaching as much as 40.
29Web surveys - advantages
- Fast and inexpensive
- Instantaneously worldwide delivery of
questionnaires, - No cost for postage or an interviewer,
- No printing, collating, and mailing time,
- Those who complete the questionnaires do so in
the first three days, - Easy to send multiple reminders if using e-mail
invitations. - Can be very low cost or no-cost eg. Zoomerang has
a basic service for free, and a subscription
service for 599 USD - Web surveys reduce errors
- Technique reduces the complexity and time
involved for respondents, - Respondents enter their answers - eliminates data
entry errors when converting answers from paper
questionnaires.
30Web surveys - Disadvantages
- Sample representativeness and measurement
validity - No ability to draw a random sample
- Researchers cannot generalize results to the
entire population being studied. - Online research entails several measurement
issues - Different browsers, computer screen sizes, and
resolution settings researchers worry that
colors will look different and measurement scales
will not display properly online. - A comparison study between telephone and online
surveys found that online users were less likely
to use the two extreme scale points on a
five-point scale.
31Technology-Enabled Approaches
- The Internet is an excellent place to observe
user behavior - The technology automatically records actions in a
format that can be easily, quickly, and
mathematically manipulated for analysis. - Client-side data collection (cookies)
- Server-side data collection
- Log file analysis
- Real-time profiling (tracking user Clickstream
analysis) - Data Mining
- These techniques did not exist prior to the
Internet. - They allow marketers to make quick and responsive
changes in Web pages, promotions, and pricing. - We will look at these techniques in detail next
week