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Lecture E-Commerce - Chapter 15: E-commerce marketing (part III)

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Cấu trúc

  • Slide 1

  • Slide 2

  • The Revolution in Internet Marketing Technologies

  • 1. Web Transaction Logs

  • Slide 5

  • 2. Tracking Files

  • Slide 7

  • 3. Databases

  • Relational Database View of E-commerce Customer

  • 3. Data Warehouses and Data Mining

  • Slide 11

  • Slide 12

  • Data Warehouses and Data Mining

  • Data Mining and Personalization

  • Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Systems

  • 4.A Customer Relationship Management System

  • Generic Market Entry Strategies

  • Slide 18

  • Slide 19

  • Establishing the Customer Relationship

  • How an Advertising Network Such as DoubleClick Works

  • Slide 22

  • Slide 23

  • Slide 24

  • Customer Retention

  • Slide 26

  • The Mass Market-Personalization Continuum

  • Other Customer Retention Marketing Techniques

  • Slide 29

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In this chapter students will be able to: The revolution in internet marketing technologies, web transaction logs, tracking files, databases, data warehouses and data mining, customer relationship management (CRM) systems,...

CSC 330 E-Commerce Teacher Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan GM-IT CIIT Islamabad Virtual Campus, CIIT COMSATS Institute of Information Technology T1-Lecture-15 T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-1 T1-Lecture-15 E Commerce Marketing Chapter-06 Part -III For Lecture Material/Slides Thanks to: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-2 The Revolution in Internet Marketing Technologies Internet marketing technologies: 1.Web Transaction logs 2.Tracking files 3.Databases, Data warehouses, Data mining 4.Customer Relationship Management systems (CRM) T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-3 Web Transaction Logs  Built into Web server software  Record user activity at Web site  Webtrends: Leading log analysis tool  Provides much marketing data, especially combined with: ◦Registration forms: Gather personal data on name, address, phone, zip, e-mail, and other optional information on interest and tastes ◦Shopping cart database: captures all the item selection, purchase and payment data) T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-4 Web Transaction Logs Transaction log coupled with Registration Forms and shopping cart provides treasure of marketing information leads to answer some interesting questions such as: What are major patterns of interest and purchase? After home page, where users go first? Second? What are the interest of specific individuals? How can we improve the website, easier to use, attractive design encourage visitors to purchase? Where are visitors coming from? What they want? How can we personalize our messages etc? T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-5 Tracking Files Under this technique user’s browsing activities are tracked as they move from site to site Different types of tracking files Cookies ◦Small text file (1 kb) placed by Web site on visitor’s machine ◦Allows Web marketers to gather data stored in cookies ◦First-party cookies same domain name the user is visiting ◦Third-Part cookies serving or adware companies, marketers or spyware ◦Customers may delete cookies Implement privacy; Causing misleading analysis, wastage of efforts T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-6 Tracking Files  Use Adobe Flash software; creates cookies called Flash Cookies set to never expire (5 MB)  Used to recreate cookies deleted by user  Combined with web-bugs they can create cross-site web profiles  Beacons (“bugs”; 1-pixel graphic files); embedded in the e-mail messages  web-bugs send message to server that e-mail was opened by the users i.e the user was at least interested in subject message  1-pixel in size that contains the URL of the server other that one served the page T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-7 Databases Database:  A software application that stores records and attributes Database management system (DBMS): Software application used by organizations to create, maintain, and access databases SQL (Structured Query Language): An industry-standard database query and manipulation language used in a relational database Relational database: Represents data as two-dimensional tables with records organized in rows and attributes in columns; data within different tables can be flexibly related as long as the tables share a common data element T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-8 Relational Database View of E-commerce Customer In RDB the data generated from an e-commerce site is stored on the HD and presented to the managers of the site in the form of interrelated tables T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-9 Data Warehouses and Data Mining Data warehouse: Is a database that collects firm’s transactional/operational and customer data in single location for offline analysis by marketers and site managers Data mining: A set of analytical techniques to find patterns in data, of database or in a data warehouse, or seek to model behavior of customers, to develop customer profiles Four types of Data mining are: ◦Query-driven data mining ◦Model-driven data mining ◦Rule-based data mining ◦Collaborative filtering T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 110 Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Systems  Record all contact that customer has with firm  Generate customer profile available to everyone in firm with need to “know the customer”  Customer profiles can contain: ◦Map of the customer’s relationship with the firm ◦Product and usage summary data ◦Demographic and psychographic data ◦Profitability measures ◦Contact history ◦Marketing and sales information T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 115 4.A Customer Relationship Management System An example of CRM system for a financial services institution System capture customer info from all customer touch points and from other data sources merge the data into a single aggregated database system Applying OLAP analyze the customer activities and behavior to determine profitable or non profitable customer 1- T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 16 Generic Market Entry Strategies  Figure 6-11, Page 391 Both new and traditional firms face a basic choice of click and bricks and clicks when entering e-commerce marketplace T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 117 Generic Market Entry Strategies New Firms ; Quardent & 2; First Movers; started with the 1st Q; enjoyed monopoly; (Amazo eBay etc.) But for most of firms, it was short lived; due to limited resources, lack of experience; Successful big players done two things; blocked the competition increased their audience Another possibility with new firms was to mixed play (Q2) established bricks and clicks along with clicks most of the firms survived by establishing their joint venture and alliance with already established big traditional players offering them on-line presence Gained financial backing and experience T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 118 Generic Market Entry Strategies Existing Firms ; Quardent & 4; Fast Followers; Traditional Firms having significan cash flow and funds to support their e-commerce venture (Barnes & Noble, Rite Aid) Followed the suits of successful first movers by establishing their websites as independent firms making use of their existing resources and experience The most common strategy of existing firms were to extend their business online in addition to the traditional firms from the very beginning (Q4) (LL Beans, WalMart) Today most firms are opening with mixed bricks-andclicks strategy with a hope of success T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 119 Establishing the Customer Relationship Firm chooses a market entry; needs marketing strategy for establishing relationship with customers: Advertising networks Ad server selects appropriate ad based on cookies, Web bugs, backend user profile databases, user profile, user behavior Best known advertising network is DoubleClick.com Big companies like Google and Microsoft are purchasing these companies for further establishing their online advertisement business (Google purchased double click $ 3.1 Billion Advertising exchanges Auction ad slots over many advertising networks, by sharing the revenue with web sites usually called web publishers (Google, yahoo, eBay) 1T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 20 How an Advertising Network Such as DoubleClick Works T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 121 Establishing the Customer Relationship Permission marketing: Market strategy in which companies obtain permission from customers before sending them information or promotional messages Affiliate marketing: One website agrees to pay another website a commission for new business opportunities it refers to the site Amazon has more than millions participants site called associates which receive around 15% on sales their referral generate T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 122 Establishing the Customer Relationship Viral marketing The process of getting customers to pass along the company’s marketing messages to friends, family and colleagues Blog marketing Blogs are based upon personal opinion therefore are ideal for viral marketing Google AdSense is a major Blog Marketers Social network marketing Driven by social e-commerce ◦Social sign-on ◦Collaborative shopping ◦Network notification ◦Social search (recommendation) T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 123 Establishing the Customer Relationship Social marketing and wisdom of crowds Large aggregates produce better estimates and judgments, e.g., ◦“Like” button ◦Folksonomies ◦Social tagging Mobile platform marketing Local marketing Brand leveraging Using the power of an existing brand to acquire new customers for a new product or service T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 124 Customer Retention Mass marketing: Based on national media messages aim at a single national audience with a single national price Direct marketing: which is based on direct mail or phone messages and aimed at the segment of the market with little price variations (special offer to loyal customers) Micromarketing : which is aimed at geographical units (neighborhood, cities) or specialized market segment with the first form of true database marketing T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 125 Customer Retention Personalized, one-to-one marketing Segmenting market on precise and timely understanding of individual’s needs Targeting specific marketing messages to these individuals Positioning product vis-à-vis competitors to be truly unique Personalization Can increase consumers sense of control, freedom Can also result in unwanted offers or reduced anonymity T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 126 The Mass Market-Personalization Continuum  Figure 6.13, Page 407 T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 127 Other Customer Retention Marketing Techniques Customization Customizing product to user preferences Customer co-production Customer interactively involved in product creation Customer service FAQs Real-time customer service chat systems Automated response systems T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 128 Chapter 12 B2B E-commerce: Supply Chain Management and Collaborative Commerce T1-Lecture-15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 129 ...T1 -Lecture- 15 E Commerce Marketing Chapter- 06 Part -III For Lecture Material/Slides Thanks to: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc T1 -Lecture- 15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan... response systems T1 -Lecture- 15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 128 Chapter 12 B2B E-commerce: Supply Chain Management and Collaborative Commerce T1 -Lecture- 15 Ahmed Mumtaz... data element T1 -Lecture- 15 Ahmed Mumtaz Mustehsan Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc 1-8 Relational Database View of E-commerce Customer In RDB the data generated from an e-commerce site

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