Article

10min read

Customization and Personalization: Two Sides of the Same (Millennial) Coin

Whether you believe Millennials are narcissistic, ‘special snowflake’ generation or an economically squeezed, misunderstood cohort, most agree they deserve a marketing strategy all their own.  Digitally savvy, uncompromisingly mobile, participants in the sharing and gig economies, owners of ‘networked selves’…Millennials’ formative experiences are distinctive enough to warrant a closer look when trying to understand their consumer habits.

This is where we come to our double-sided coin: customization and personalization.

Strategies that have come into their own since the advent of the internet, customization, and personalization are perhaps two of the best marketing ideas that Millennials actually respond to. Here’s why:

First: Let’s Define Customization and Personalization

To the untrained ear, customization and personalization sound more or less the same. In fact, they refer to two distinct processes. (Also, if we’re getting technical, we really should refer to our first term as ‘mass customization’.) First identified in 1987 in the book, Future Perfect by Stan Davis, ‘mass customization’ has come to mean, “the process of delivering wide-market goods and services that are modified to satisfy a specific customer need.” Distinct from mass production – mass customization’s homogenous, less evolved precursor – mass customization allows consumers to assemble their own, unique product according to their particular tastes and needs.  Think of picking out colors, patterns, and designs to craft your very own Nike shoe or Burberry coat. It’s still branded Nike or Burberry – but it’s also distinctly you. Mass customization is a practice driven by the consumer that allows them to become ‘co-producers’ with the brand of their own uniquely personal product and is a process that must be reproduced at scale by the company.

Burberry Bespoke
The high-end brand Burberry launched their mass customization option, Burberry Bespoke, in 2011.

Source: The Wall Street Journal

Personalization, on the other hand, is a marketing strategy driven by the company, based on consumer data, that aims to create personalized, or ‘one-to-one’ communication with a single consumer or consumer segment. We might date the idea back to the 1993 book, The One to One Future, by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers. When you receive an email that uses your first name in the subject line or see product recommendations algorithmically chosen ‘just for you’, or if a website’s homepage changes to reflect your past purchase history, location or gender…you’ve experienced personalization. The company in question is trying to create a hyper-relevant message designed specifically for you, in the hopes that it will cut through marketing noise to grab your attention and bring you through the sales funnel.

Sephora personalization
Our client Sephora saw a 16% increase in transactions after personalizing their website according to whether visitors were loyalty card members or not

Customization Deep Dive

There is a premium on individuality, especially with millennials and gen Z. The customization thing is like the ‘you but better’ movement, but almost the reverse. It’s like ‘this thing but better, because it’s about me.’

–  Jackie Chiquoine, Racked 2016

You can certainly see the similarities between the two strategies. Both aim to make consumers feel uniquely understood and marketed to as individuals. Both put a high value on self-expression and personal tastes and experiences. Both create the illusion that consumers are being given bespoke treatment and have a one-on-one relationship with the brand. And both, in a way, involve the consumer as a co-producer of value – for customization, it means relying on their predilections to craft the product, and for personalization, it’s sharing their data (unbeknownst to them or not) to create personalized marketing messages.

You can see how those who dramatize Millennials’ navel-gazing tendencies certainly favor these two strategies for targeting them. But customization and personalization also speak to Millennials’ ability to see right through traditional marketing, their distracted viewing habits (customization and personalization more easily grab attention), and their penchant for social networks.  Burberry, for example, savvily allowed anyone to share their customized Burberry creation on social networks, even if they couldn’t actually afford to buy the product.

Burberry share my design
Even if the consumer can’t afford their £1,295 creation, note the ‘share my design’ buttons on the bottom right: they can still express themselves through their customized creation – and promote the brand – on social networks.

Source: Luxury Society

Why Does Customization Work?

If we want to dig a bit deeper as to why customization techniques work – for Millenials or anyone else – Customer Experience Psychologist Liraz Margalit has a few ideas. She explained to TechCrunch that two general principles are at stake: “I Built It, Therefore I Own It”, and “I Own It, Therefore It Is Superb”.

“I Built It, Therefore I Own It” refers to the idea that participating in the elaboration of an item – even virtually, as on a website – leads to a sense of ownership of that item. In Margalit’s words, “The opportunity to take part in a process and influence the end result promotes emotional attachment that leads to psychological ownership, the feeling that something is “mine” even without legal ownership.” She then referred to work by Dan Ariely and his so-called ‘Ikea Effect’, which shows that people put a higher value on objects they have actually worked to produce.

Similarly, “I Own It, Therefore It Is Superb” refers to the Endowment Effect or the finding that, “consumers value an object more once they have taken ownership of it.” Margalit talks about a study at Cornell University in which students favored objects they had ‘owned’, even for a short time, over those they had never had a claim to.

Basically, when you customize an item, you pour a little part of yourself into it, you feel that it already belongs to you, and you value it more – and are therefore motivated to finalize your purchase, and even pay a premium.

These psychological underpinnings, in addition to Millenials’ particular need to be wrenched from constant multitasking and their penchant for self-expression, makes customization a good choice for this age bracket. Throw in the idea that co-creating a product with a brand approximates what Pine and Gilmore call ‘an experience’ (à la, The Experience Economy), and you’ve got yourself a winning hand.

Joseph Pine BBC
Joseph Pine explains how Mass Customization led to the Experience Economy – and what’s next in line in terms of virtual experiences.

Personalization Deep Dive

Millennials want a customer-centric experience in which they feel wanted and valued. Whether it is in-store or through social media channels, showing interest in these shoppers creates loyalty. In order to do this, retailers need to closely examine what they’re currently doing with customer data, and ensure this information is being utilized to deliver a more personalized in-store experience.

– Tom McGee, Forbes 2017

Ultimately, though a product strategy on the part of the company, mass customization is driven by the consumer. Especially appealing to Millennials, it’s a way of validating their own sense of self through ‘build-a-bear’ style product production.

With personalization, the onus is much more on the company to bring value and deliver meaning to the consumer audience they’re targeting.

Because of their ‘digital native’ status, and possibly due to some kind of ‘me me me’ generational fluke, Millenials are more receptive to personalization techniques. Salesforce noted in their State of the Connected Consumer report that, “Sixty-three percent of Millennial consumers and 58% of GenX consumers are willing to share data with companies in exchange for personalized offers and discounts.”

Salesforce personalization
Source: Salesforce

This is, of course, a boon for marketers, since data is the backbone of any personalization strategy. It opens up many avenues for creating relevant – and therefore high converting – experiences for consumers. Personalization strategies can go from relatively simple campaigns, like segmenting emails by industry and inserting someone’s first name into the text, to more sophisticated onsite personalization campaigns to complex multi-device operations. Finding the kinds of scenarios and messaging that will resonate with Millennials will probably take some brainstorming sessions, inspirational reads and inevitably some trial and error – and will, of course, depend on your industry and product. Here’s a quick look at what some marking executives are using for personalization efforts:

eMarketer Personalization
Source: eMarketer

Aside from the platitude of, ‘the more relevant, the better’, is there any psychological data to explain why personalization strategies lead to higher conversion rates?

The quick answer is ‘yes’ – namely a study conducted at the University of Texas that was picked up a few years ago by HubSpot. As they explain, this research admitted the efficacy of digital personalization techniques and boiled its success down to the human desire for control and information saturation.  

People naturally crave to be in control of their surroundings (and their own fate, free will…) and personalization techniques create a cherry-picked environment that feeds into that need. Bargain hunting for low-priced kitchenware from your favorite outlet? If ads for the very items you’re looking for suddenly appear all over the internet, it somehow creates a feeling of empowerment, as if in some impossible way, your wishes and needs automatically manifest.

As for information overload, this is the classic argument that contemporary consumers are exposed to a dizzyingly high number of marketing messages, far too many to ever register consciously, let alone remember or act on. Personalization strategies both (hopefully) limit the number of marketing messages a consumer is exposed to in the first place, as well as stimulate the brain to recognize these stand-out strategies, as opposed to letting them sit in the background of our consciousness.  This is the idea of selective attention or the fact that your brain will automatically pick up on potentially important stimuli – i.e. those most relevant to you.

The Takeaway

Though not the same, (mass) customization and personalization strategies revolve around people’s deep-seated desires for self-expression and recognition – as well as their limited attention spans.  Particularly relevant for the Millenial age bracket, successful customization strategies will make the consumer a co-producer of value alongside the brand, and successful personalization techniques will identify valuable data and use them to create and deploy ultra-relevant marketing messages.

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Article

8min read

The Ecommerce Conversion Funnel Survival Guide

What is a conversion funnel?

All online businesses are comprised of a certain number of steps that transform visitors into clients. With that in mind, if you’re reading this article, it’s probably because you’re interested in the thorny questions, How can I convert my visitors into clients, and, even more importantly, How can I make them loyal clients?

Whether you want your website visitors to leave their email address, download an ebook or buy your products, they’ll pass through a certain number of steps before this objective is realized. These steps make up your site’s conversion funnel.

Purchase Funnel

The idea behind the conversion funnel (or ‘purchase funnel’, ‘sales funnel’…) is the funnel metaphor: many people will land on your site, and only a small percentage will actually end up buying.

To optimize your conversion funnel, download our ebook on limiting shopping cart abandonment.

Why? Your visitors go through several decisive steps during the purchasing process, which is often described using the AIDA model: Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action.

  • Attention. This is the first step of your conversion funnel. You attract visitors by increasing your site’s visibility in the hope they’ll get to know your products.  You’ll achieve this thanks to ads, social networks, content marketing, etc.
  • Interest. Once you’ve attracted visitors to your site, the real work begins. You have to spark interest in your products. How? Relevant content, attractive visuals, and special offers are good ways to start. The idea is to entice engagement between you (the website), and your visitors, who probably don’t know you yet. Suggesting they subscribe to your newsletter is another good way of building interest.
  • Desire. This next step involves creating a relationship of trust and the desire to buy. The idea is to create a reassuring and relevant environment that will help pull your prospect further and further along the sales funnel. Personalized, interesting email campaigns will help you: you can offer special promotions, case studies or client testimonials that reassure your visitors and make them want to take action.
  • Action. This is the heart of the matter, the final, crucial step of your sales funnel. By this step, your visitors have passed through the conversion funnel and have begun engaging with your brand (they’ve downloaded something, subscribed to something or even called someone). Now, your goal is to convince your prospects to convert by purchasing something or completing another desired action. You’ll want to keep your payment pages clean and simple, only displaying relevant, convincing information that will help turn your prospects into clients.

Because the end goal of your ecommerce site is to convert, ecommerce professionals use the sales funnel to analyze how well a site converts visitors into clients at each step of the process.

Why is a conversion funnel useful?

A conversion funnel is a very powerful tool that’s easy to put in place that allows you to understand what problems your visitors bump up against the buyer journey, and how to fix them.

Let’s take a look at this:

Fitzroy's Flower London

On this London flower delivery site, half of the products shown on the right have a display issue: it’s impossible to see or click on the CTA ‘buy’ – this isn’t good!

The idea behind using a conversion funnel is to better understand the steps that a visitor to  your website has to go through:

  • What pages have problems?
  • What is the conversion rate of each step?
  • How many people leave the site after one, two or three steps?
  • What step or page has high drop off?

By analyzing these issues, you quickly get a better idea of the strong and weak points of your site.

Even better: you know what step(s) you have to work on in your sales funnel to get more orders, emails or inbound calls.

By taking a look at your conversion funnel, you’ll see that only a very small percentage of your visitors will actually get to the last step (‘Action’). That’s why even small changes at each phase of the sales funnel can greatly increase the number of your conversions. You can use A/B testing to test and measure the effects of these modifications.

How can you measure and improve the performance of your conversion funnel?

At this point, you’ve understood the importance of the conversion funnel in ecommerce. The goal behind analyzing the conversion funnel is to improve conversion rates on your site (and therefore to increase sales), all the while analyzing visitor behavior to limit drop off at each stage of the sales funnel.

Depending on the kind of site you want to analyze, you can establish conversion funnels of varying size.

Decathlon
A wide funnel is a good choice for a product-oriented ecommerce site that wants to have a global view of how visitors navigate the site from the home page up to the basket, like on the above Decathlon site.
Tunnel de conversion pour Ebook
A narrow funnel is a good idea for sites that don’t have many pages (and therefore fewer steps) or for sites that only want to analyze one single step of their buying process, like in the above example of a (French) gardening site that also proposes an ebook.

In general, there are many best practices that can help you make your conversion funnel smoother and increase sales.

The main idea is simple: Make the customer journey as easy as possible and get rid of any roadblocks that stop your prospects from converting or from abandoning their cart.

Be clear and simplify navigation

A complicated or unclear navigation hinders conversions. Your visitors should be able to intuitively find what they’re looking for, and be guided through the sales process. This means highlighting useful links and sections of your website and deleting secondary or even useless sections.

Payplug
On PayPlug, navigation is clean and the value proposition is simple: ‘try’ or ‘find out more’

Avoid information overload

Information overload is information’s worst enemy. Try to order the information you present to your visitors by importance. Concentrate essential information at the beginning of a visitor’s navigation, and let the really curious ones dig for more info deeper in the site.

H&M Home
On H&M Home, information is classed according to a few categories so a visitor can easily get their bearings: they can choose how they want to explore products and ignore categories that aren’t relevant to them.

Offer help

Many visitors like to ask a few questions before finalizing their purchase, and an even larger number of visitors don’t finalize their purchase because they couldn’t get help at the right time. Putting in place services or a help desk type of chat can help increase conversions while reassuring your visitors.

HubSpot chat
Even when there isn’t anyone to man the ship, HubSpot makes sure there is always a chat option open on their site so that eager visitors can ask questions and get quick answers.

Highlight reassuring elements

‘Social proof’ is a powerful tool for improving conversions. Putting up client testimonials, client ratings or reviews can reassure visitors as to the legitimacy of the site that they’re on, which can have a big impact on increasing conversion rates.

Trello references
Trello displays a lot of well-known references on their home page. This reassures prospects and creates a feeling of trust.

To go even further with the optimization of your site, read our advice about limiting card abandonment.