Archive for August, 2010

Too much information?

August 17, 2010 9:56 am by AnnaClark

Online researching has changed the way we shop

By Anna Clark

Be it organising my friend’s hen (bachelorette) weekend, or choosing a new mobile phone, I always seem to have something I’m researching.

These days, with so much information at our fingertips I usually spend lots of time researching to find ‘the best deal’ or ‘the best product’, but I sometimes find myself getting so involved with the minutiae that I get to the point of just wanting whichever one ‘will do’.

The issue for me nowadays is that there is almost too much information available, and it can be contradictory.  When attempting to choose a new phone recently, I read official reviews, looked at websites that compare the network coverage, and asked my friends who I deemed experts…and came up with conflicting opinions.  Perhaps the learning here is that what is good for one person, isn’t right for another.  This presents a challenge for online review sites: wouldn’t it be better if you knew that the person writing the review was ‘like you’, or if you knew they didn’t have an ulterior motive?

Inevitably, if you look for long enough, there’s always a horror story.  And somehow even if there is only one negative review among a whole host of positive ones, that has a stronger impact than the multiple good reviews.  Just one negative review can cause anxieties to creep in, and can take the edge off the excitement about your new purchase, or your next dinner venue. 

At risk of sounding like a luddite, in choosing a restaurant for the hen do, I ended up going out and looking at the restaurants in the area, chose the one I liked the look of, and then went out of my way to avoid reading reviews because I didn’t want to be put off!

We know from our Roper Reports Worldwide 2010 data that 55% of consumers globally spend quite a lot of time researching brands before making a major purchase, and while at times I feel all this information makes the decision process harder, it’s clear that in general, the availability of information nowadays has changed the way consumers buy.

So what about the future of reviews and researching purchases?  Often reviews can seem out of date by the time you read them, so are real-time reviews the way we’re heading?  And will tools become more sophisticated, pre-empting your search and sending you the latest reviews direct when you start looking at a product, or only giving you reviews from people who are similar to you?

Either way, this availability of information and reviews is set to continue growing, making it an issue companies must take into account.  With tools enabling consumers to make their views heard, keeping them happy is more important than ever, and companies need to ensure they deal with any complaints swiftly, and effectively, to prevent that one bad experience being the one people hear about. 

Authentic Commercial Conversations

August 9, 2010 11:22 am by Diane Crispell

Clarks Sunbeat Sandal (tan)

By Diane Crispell

Were you ever talking to someone when all of a sudden you thought – maybe even said out loud – “Gee, I sound like a commercial”? It happens to me reasonably frequently, most recently when I was extolling the virtues of my favorite sandals.

I’m probably more aware than the average consumer of these conversations because I’m involved with market research. But even when people don’t think about it, they’re having lots of commercial-like conversations every day.
 
When I have my “sound like a commercial” moments, it’s usually followed by the thought, “If only a brand marketer could hear me now…,” partly because it’s always nice to overhear people saying good things about you but mostly because it can be terrifically useful. The odds of that happening in real life are pretty minimal, however.
 
The Internet provides a way to “overhear” brand conversations, by reading online reviews of products and services and getting involved with social media networks, among other tactics. These are useful sources, but they don’t capture the random and unplanned one-on-one personal conversations that are critical to word of mouth.
 
How critical are they? According to the recently released Roper Reports® Worldwide 2010 survey of more than 32,000 people age 15-plus in 25 countries, 43% of global consumers say that the last recommendation they made “just came up naturally in the course of conversation,” as opposed to being a proactive recommendation or the result of a specific request for advice.
 
Many commercials aim to replicate these happenstance real-life conversations. The venture is fraught with peril, and some succeed better than others. Good acting and well-written scripts are critical, not because consumers will believe these are authentic conversations, but because the more natural the execution, the more likely it is that consumers will think, “Gee, that sounds like something I would say.”
 
P.S. In case you’re wondering, I love my Clarks sandals, not because of any advertising I’ve ever seen, but because the first pair I bought turned out to be the most comfortable shoes I’ve ever put on my hard-to-please feet. The lesson being that good products naturally generate word of mouth. Where marketers take things from there is up to them.