E-commerce Link : Get Personal
Deliver relevant, personalized content and offers to increase lifetime customer value
August 2009 By Ken BurkeCustomer Segmentation Delivers Relevant Content
Let’s look at a hypothetical merchandising director at a midsized apparel retailer who is working on next month’s marketing strategy. Last month, the director sent a standard e-mail to all customers in the company’s database. The message was titled, “Hot New Summer Looks.” While this resulted in a short-term boost in site visits, the resulting sales were disappointing.
For most merchants, the first step to improving results is to divide customers into specific, well-defined segments. After using a customer segmentation engine, the merchandising director now has a list of three segments: 1) price-sensitive shoppers who tend to buy discounted items; 2) browsers who have never bought; and 3) loyal customers who tend to buy the latest merchandise at full price.
The next step is to design and develop e-mail messages that will resonate with each group. For example, the message for price-sensitive shoppers could inform them about the coming month’s sale items. For browsers, offering a special discount for first-time shoppers would be appropriate. And for loyal customers, giving them an exclusive sneak peek at the latest merchandise would make them feel appreciated.
It is also important to fine-tune messages before distributing them. This can be done by developing variants of each main message and testing them with a subset of customers. For example, 10 percent of price-sensitive shoppers would receive a free shipping offer, while another 10 percent would receive a $10 savings off a purchase of $50 or more. The message that has the best test results would then be delivered to the remaining 80 percent of customers in that segment.
Additional segmentation can reinforce messages with a more relevant shopping experience. Customers from each segment should be dynamically taken to landing pages that best fit the e-mail offering.
Once the customer places an item in the shopping cart, recommendations should shift from cross-sells to upsells by offering products from related categories.
Targeted marketing can continue after the purchase by including personalized recommendations in the order confirmation e-mail. Or, if the customer abandoned the purchase, a message could be sent a few days later, highlighting the item and offering a limited-time discount. For customers who complete the order, follow-up offers can include time-sensitive related items.
For example, one retailer that sells garden seeds and equipment may offer tomato plants and early planting fertilizer in early spring. Four weeks into the growing cycle, the retailer can follow up with tomato cages, pruning tools and tomato-oriented fungicides.
Gaiam and Peruvian Connection See Results
By delivering relevant merchandising and content, Gaiam, a leading lifestyle media company, and Peruvian Connection, a leading seller of women’s apparel, have successfully increased the lifetime value of their customers.
For Gaiam, personalization across the path to purchase increased conversion rates by 10 percent in the first week over its manual recommendations. Revenues also increased by 15 percent.
Peruvian Connection uses product alerts to deliver information to customers who are most interested in receiving updates. With this approach, the company increased e-mail conversions by an impressive 350 percent.
Segmentation, personalization and dynamic merchandising are essential for success in retail e-commerce today. New tools make the transition to strategic targeting and merchandising easier, and will deliver meaningful results to retailers who adopt them.
Ken Burke is chairman, founder and chief evangelist of MarketLive Inc., an e-commerce technology services provider based in Petaluma, Calif. He can be reached at ken@mmlive.com, or visit www.marketlive.com/sitereview.




Social Media ROI
Email Marketing that Works (2nd Edition)