Personalization is where it’s at for e-commerce
Tuesday, August 21st, 2007Meanwhile, over on E-Commerce News…
Joe Lichtman is making some very valid points about personalization and e-commerce. He points to a report from Gartner that says brick-and-mortar merchandisers are personalizing inventory for their locations—’down to sizing and color choices’, and asks a rather reasonable question:
What struck me most about this report was that merchandisers in the offline world are personalizing their strategies in spite of the serious constraints working against them: supply chain complexity, marketing costs, shelf-space limitations and the like. Yet retailers are doing it. So, why do online retailers — who face none of these limitations — still struggle to present a truly personalized, dynamic shopping experience for each and every shopper?
Why indeed? He provides one answer to his query pretty much immediately:
Freed from supply chains, printing costs and shelf space limitations, online retailers’ product catalogs have ballooned. With widely expanded catalogs comes the challenge of presenting the right products and merchandising messages at the right time to each shopper.
What he could have said is, ‘Freed from supply chains, printing costs and shelf space limitations, e-commerce retailers have tried to become all things to all people.‘
The thing is, the Internet is pretty much the only place where a company can get away with trying to please everybody. Joe turns to Amazon as an example of a company that’s doing the right thing to tailor the customer experience:
Just as offline merchandisers are thinking in a customer-centric mindset, Amazon has created a complete customer-centric experience by building — in a sense — a micro-store for each and every customer… Everything about the Amazon experience is dynamic — not static — and becomes more personalized the more you shop.
Joe’s lesson is this: the only way you can please everybody is to please each person individually. A catalog of ten million items that you’re forced to wade through is not fun. A catalog of ten million items that pulls up the three items you’re likely to care about—now, that’s impressive.
What do you think? Should e-tailers be focused on delivering a dynamic, personalized experience? Or should it be up to each of us to find what we’re after?









