Category Archive: 'Online Retail / Interactive Merchandising' Category

Ecommerce News Feed

by Andy Lloyd
Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

As a company exclusively focused in online retail it is important for our employees to stay abreast of the latest developments in the industry. One problem we ran into was asking all our employees to subscribe to a variety of news sources. Some had RSS feeds, some news came via email and others you had to remember to visit their site regularly.

To ensure everyone at Fluid is on top of the latest ecommerce news an engineer created an aggregated news feed from a variety of the leading industry publications including Internet Retailer, Ecommerce Times, Clickz and Storefrontbacktalk.com. People at Fluid love it so much, we’re making it available to our customers, partners and anyone else that is interested. If there are other ecommerce news sources you access regularly please let us know and we’ll do our best to add them.

If you’d like to subscribe, please use the link below. If you run into issues let us know (some sources come through better than others) and we’ll try to clean them up.

Brand Ownership and Marketing

by Andy Lloyd
Thursday, March 6th, 2008

An interesting article ran in this month’s issue of Stores Magazine that talked about The North Face’s interactive marketing efforts, specifically the work they have done with Google Gadgets and Google Gadget Ads (more on that in a later post).

The spirit of what The North Face is doing is something a lot of brands are considering and is captured by the following quote from Kent Deverell, a founder of Fluid, “…in the last year and a half, with the rise of social networking, consumers are becoming content-creators themselves. The new paradigm is to get people involved and allow them to own the brand.” Scary stuff. But is there really an alternative?

Conversations about your brand are going to occur online, like it or not. Postive or negative. Isn’t it better to facilitate the conversation than sit idly by while it swirls around you? The North Face has been forward looking in many ways. By embracing the convergence of professional content, user generated content and product merchandising in their WWW and widget strategy they show they are continuing to engage brand advocates in new and interesting ways.

We look forward to more exciting ideas from Sarah Gallagher and her team!

Quantifying the ROI of Designing for the Customer Experience

by David Hogue
Monday, January 28th, 2008

Estimating the value of design, particularly customer experience design, and the potential impact on conversion rates and revenue has always been difficult. It often requires making comparisons to past quarters or past years or simultaneously running different versions of the same site (e.g., traditional A|B testing), and it can be complicated by marketing campaigns and changes to advertising techniques and budgets than can alter the flow of traffic to a site.

The clever folks over at Teehan + Lax, a user experience consultancy based in Toronto, Canada, decided to gamble with $50,000 dollars of their own money to test a theory: companies that invest in customer experience design will have better revenue, greater customer satisfaction, and therefore perform better in the stock market. They selected 10 companies that are known for the use of experience design on their sites and held their stocks for 365 days, then they looked at the value of their UEX portfolio relative to the broader market indices. Their portfolio did very well:

“In the 365 days we owned our stocks the value of the portfolio increased 39.37%. This outperformed the major indexes (NASDAQ 18.09%, S+P 9.47%, NASDAQ 100 26.81%, NYSE 14.67%).”

Designing for the customer experience is not just for the good of the customer, it is also for the good of the company. Designing great customer experiences definitely has measurable value.

http://www.uxmag.com/strategy/327/investing-in-ux

Fluid Goes Social

by Andy Lloyd
Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Today Fluid announced the immediate availability of Fluid Social, which allows retailers to offer the same level of interactivity and control in social networking widgets and Google Gadget Ads as they have over the merchandising on their own site. While there have been a recent flood of announcements about retailers deploying widgets to social networking sites this announcement is notable in that this is the first productized offering that allows merchants to publish and update gadgets as they see fit, using the same visual assets and interactive technologies that they use to merchandise their own site. No longer will merchants worry about a gadget that was embedded months ago featuring products that are no longer in stock. They are in complete control of both the featured content and products.

The specific implementation for The North Face is available for users to embed as a Google Gadget and is also being served to highly targeted snowsports sites in the Google ad network. The gadget offers a mix of brand experience - a fresh snowsports-focused video each day that is user contributed or one that features The North Face’s athletes - and interactive shopping. While shoppers watch a video they can explore The North Face’s Defy line of snowsports gear, including the ability to interact with the products.

At Fluid we believe this merging of compelling brand content and merchandising is one of the under-utilized opportunities available to retailers and branded manufacturers. Allowing brand advocates to enhance their own personal pages with this content is a win-win for consumers and brands. We have already heard a range of great ideas from our other customers for how they plan on using our tools to extend the reach of their brands beyond their online stores in unique and brand appropriate ways and we can’t wait to hear more.

The North Face snowsports gadget features a fresh video every day.

The North Face gadget features a fresh video every day.

Shopppers can explore The North Face's Defy product line while watching the video, without leaving the site they are visiting.

Shopppers can explore The North Face’s Defy product line while watching the video, without leaving the site they are visiting.

It is possible to interact with the products from within the gadget or Google Gadget Ad.

It is possible to explore The North Face’s products from within the gadget using Fluid Retail’s interactive components.

Apple

by Kent Deverell
Friday, October 19th, 2007

Apple has rolled out a wonderfully innovative and deceptively simple approach to search on apple.com. As you begin to enter your search term a dropdown window appears below the search box with recommended matching results. As you continue typing, the results list dynamically updates with a refined list of results that most closely matches what you are typing.

There are never more than eight results, and each is accompanied by a clear title, brief descriptive text and either a product image or recognizable icon (a green plus sign in a white circle for support topics, for example). It’s instantly scannable and completely non-intrusive. Most importantly, the performance of the search is impressive. Over a DSL connection it updates in nearly realtime, just a split second behind what you are typing. There is a rarely a lag, and good thing because the experience would fall part if there was.

If you hit enter at any time, you get dropped into a typical search results page, but that was hardly necessary. For 90% of the search terms I tried I was able to find what I needed without ever leaving the homepage. Combine that efficiency with a compelling, quality visual presentation and you have incredibly satisfying customer site interaction experience.

Quite possibly one of the best site search innovations since parametric filtering.

Oli Lookbook

by Kent Deverell
Friday, October 5th, 2007

At the recent Shop.org conference we got a look at an interesting new outfit builder put together by, Oli a retail fashion site in the UK:

http://www.oli.co.uk/

They have really done a nice job with interaction design here. The Look Book bar is anchored to the bottom of your browser window and stays with you as you navigate the site. Every item in the catalog has an “add to look book” link, making the process for adding items fairly smooth, although a visual confirmation an item has been added to your Look Book would be a plus.

Upon opening the Look Book you enter a full screen environment that is intuitive and easy to use. Just drag-and-drop items from the Look Book strip into a work area and you are ready to go. Of particular note is the ability to scale individual product images so you can actually build a visual representation of an outfit with the correct proportions. The ability to add an entire outfit or collection to your cart at one time is another nice feature. Importantly, price and product detail information moves with the product and is available at any time.
The one thing that doesn’t work is adding individual items to your cart. The “buy” link is hidden behind an “i’ information button - not obvious enough. It would also be better if you could browse and add items to the Look Book while in workspace mode as opposed to having to go back to more traditional catalog browsing.

Overall, nice job.

– KD