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How to Join the Online Conversation: Part 2
BY Andrea Learned | 11-21-2000
So
you've nipped your web site corporate-speak in the bud, re-evaluated
the reasons people visit your site, and discovered where the conversation
is breaking down. Congratulations! You've moved to the head of the
class, from a one-way monologue into the realm of informative and
exciting discourse.
To further
engage your customers in conversations with you (and with each other
about you), there are a few more things to consider.
Make
the conversation and the customer experience a priority. In
these days of fizzling dot-coms, the customer experience may be
the critical piece in creating online longevity. In a recent
article by Rob McEwen of M2K, he suggests that hiring or creating
a position for a chief experience officer to focus on that aspect
would be wise. If you've got someone continually re-examining and
adjusting the consumer touchpoints of your brand -- product demos,
customer service, and sign-up times, for example -- your customers
will notice and thank you by sticking around.
Honor
your visitors' time. Whether or not you are honoring your visitors'
time could easily form the basis for a thorough web site review.
After all, they are busy people just like you and appreciate when
their time is valued. So, in addition to the usual web design and
navigation/usability concerns, consider these:
- Ask
(only) once, and remember.
- Tighten
up copy, and don't bury the good stuff.
- Create
easy, short sign-up forms. (Let me join your program in 60 seconds
or less.)
- Test
and time all sign-ups, downloads, automated emails, and exits
to get the customer's true experience.
- Give
people a one-click way to send your idea to someone else.
- Keep
looking for ways to take steps out of any online process (for
example, registration, e-commerce, or customer service requests).
- Offer
email "coaching series" on topics that can be best digested over
a few days.
- List
the top-three reasons people come to your site, and incorporate
those priorities into your home page and content presentation.
Continue
the conversation. Once you've tweaked some of the above, it
will be up to you to continue the conversation by staying in touch
and giving visitors incentives to return. An opt-in newsletter or
email list is a wonderful way to stay in touch and continue interacting
with your customers. Give them a good reason to sign up, provide
just the information they desire, and show them you're listening
by responding to their questions, thanking them for comments and
building their suggestions into future product developments or newsletter
topics.
Keep
thinking "conversation," and resist the temptation to self-promote
through your follow-up communications. Rather, fill these communications
with solid information, hard-to-find tips, timesaving resources,
relevant links, and special offers your customers will truly appreciate.
Expand
the conversation. Remember that 1970s Fabergi shampoo commercial
("You tell two people, and they'll tell two people, and so on, and
so on...")? The most powerful conversations and interactions are
those that happen between your customers. So get people talking
with each other about your brand.
In "EVEolution,"
Faith Popcorn notes that "the strongest route to your customer may
not be a straight line." Connecting your customers to each other
connects them to your brand, so provide ways for them to converse
and form bonds among themselves. One great example of this from
the world of author as product is the site for the readers and/or
fans of Rebecca Well's novel, "Divine
Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood."
Author
Seth Godin outlined another way to expand the conversation in his
recently published book, "Unleashing the Ideavirus." The general
concept is that you can tap into your customers' personal network
by providing something so provoking, important, profitable, funny,
horrible, or beautiful that they are compelled to share it.
One ideavirus
that has achieved epidemic proportions is the Vindigo product, a
PalmPilot-enabled directory of restaurants, stores, and entertainment
venues in major U.S. cities. Palm users have been happily infected
with Vindigo, a free and easy-to-spread
virus. They can just pull out their Palms on the corner of Amsterdam
and Broadway in New York City, for example, and with a quick click,
Vindigo guides them to whatever they seek, sorted by distance and
including ratings.
Now there's
something to talk about.
©
2001, ClickZ, Inc., all rights reserved, used by permission of ClickZ.
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