• Blog
  • About
  • Speaking
  • Books
  • Mobile Education & Training
  • Professional Services
  • Contact

Jeff Hasen

  • Blog
  • About
  • Speaking
  • Books
  • Mobile Education & Training
  • Professional Services
  • Contact

5 Ways That Brick and Mortar Businesses Need To Evolve To Cater To Mobile Users

The make-or-break holiday shopping season is upon us, spurring retailers to determine where they want to speak to would-be customers, how often, and with what messages.

If only the would-be shoppers were open to listening.

Sure, a meaningful segment of consumers are still reachable via mass mediums like television and print, and others do their purchasing on a desktop and brands and retailers get to them with ads and targeting. However, more and more live in a world of self-sufficiency, powered by a mobile device that provides everything from product information to the ability to read reviews. Mobile devices even enable a customer to “showroom” and find something offered by a competitor just as he or she is spending time in one retailer’s aisle.

How important is it for businesses to reexamine their definition of differentiated customer service to cater to the ever-increasing “self-sufficient” mobile shopper?

Very.

According to a report released by the Consumer Electronics Association, more 58 percent of shoppers who use mobile devices indicated that they prefer to look up information on their devices while shopping, rather than talk to store employees. This was especially true among men and shoppers aged 25-44.

Nearly two-thirds (62 percent) of mobile shoppers perceived the information they gather via their mobile device as more beneficial than the information available in-store via product displays or sales literature.

What is a retailer to do?

Through conversations with mobile and business pioneers interviewed for my new book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion (www.artofmobilepersuasion.com), there are five ways that brick-and-mortar businesses can evolve their operations to meet the challenges of the 2015 holiday selling season and beyond.

1. Embrace the mobile era rather than curse its very existence

If you are Lowe’s, a FORTUNE 100 home improvement company and Southeastern septuagenarian, you practice what you preach and “Never Stop Improving.”

Sean Bartlett, Director of Digital Experience, Product, & Omni-channel Integration at Lowe's, led an initiative by the chain to put 42,000 iPhones into the hands of sales associates as a way to help customers get a more satisfying experience from its iPhone app.

That was no small endeavor. Lowe’s serves approximately 15 million customers a week in the United States, Canada and Mexico. With annual sales exceeding $50 billion, Lowe’s has more than 1,830 home improvement and hardware stores and 260,000 employees.

The intent was to create a virtuous circle by enabling sales people to help their customers.

Lowe’s mission of innovation continued with the introduction of “product locator” mobile technology to make shopping easier. Lowe’s customers can find over 100 million precise, in-store product locations and store services via customized, interactive maps displayed on their smartphones.

“That's obviously a big nod to the in-store experience and making it more efficient,” Bartlett said. “Our stores are generally in the 100,000 square foot range with a couple of dozen aisles that are fairly long so to the extent that we can get people to the product that they want, we're going to push for it.”

2. Personalize the experience

My sister-in-law and I both shop in REI, but we couldn’t be more different.

An ideal hike for me is a walk to a pretty, quiet area that has a running stream and birds singing. The distance is secondary and could be so short that I can still eyeball my car in the parking lot.

My sister-in-law is a former triathlete and still is more active than 95 percent of people half her age. She hikes for full days.

I want REI to provide the basics so I don’t get mosquito bites or an itty-bitty blister. My sister-in-law wants to know how and where the hiking shoes were made, and whether they will withstand heavy use.

In-app, in-store and through messaging from REI that we may both opt-in to receive, each of us expect to be treated as individuals, not as part of some homogenized customer database.

3.  Rethink very the concept of customer service

In such retail establishments like REI, the human touch will always be emphasized. The company’s famed Green Vests know more about varieties of kayaks, climbing walls, and the like than one could possible imagine. And that has been a differentiator. Now REI looks at mobile devices as a complementary customer service tool.

Said Jeff Klonowski, REI’s ‎Director, Digital Retail - Mobile & Business Development. “When you look at the loyal users, say someone who has the retailer's app, in our case REI, based on preferences and what the customer has opted in to receive, and say we create some sort of in-store mode which a lot of retailers are looking at for their mobile app to work when someone is in the physical retail store, based on what the customer has opted in for that may be relevant based on that behavior.

“Then you are saying, ‘OK, you popped into the REI app in store. Here's a feature set. And by the way, you did look at this item, here's where it's at in the physical store. Do you want more information or can we lead you to it?’”

4.  Stay on the right side of the privacy line

Different types of information elicit different levels of sensitivity among Americans, according to a report by the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project.

Social security numbers are universally considered to be the most sensitive piece of personal information, followed by health information and content of phone conversations.

Media tastes and purchasing habits are among the least sensitive categories of data.

Still, there is a creepiness factor at play when an advertiser or retailer reaches out to someone with information that the recipient views as invasive.

There was large disagreement among those I interviewed about where the line is. Some thought reaching out to someone in store the day after that person viewed an item online is fair game. Others thought it becomes creepy if the outreach spans too much time.

The prevailing opinion was for businesses to practice a policy that falls well short of the invasion line.

5.  Rework the definition of fulfillment

Amazon has led the product delivery evolution, bringing such options as same-day delivery to only raise the expectations of many consumers.

The wise brick and mortar retailers will provide choice, even going so far as facilitating curbside pickup and alerts to opted-in mobile users when an item like a bicycle is built and is ready to go to its new home.

Conclusion

Smartphones make customers smarter. We’re not going back in time. The winning retailers will find ways to use the mobile device as a tool for better engagement that will drive loyalty and sales. Those who aren’t as successful will be as slow as I am in the latter half of my “strenuous” hikes.

Tagged with Lowe's, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, REI.

November 20, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 20, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Lowe's
  • The Art of Mobile Persuasion
  • REI
  • Post a comment
Comment

Serving The Self-Sufficient Mobile User

These days, it seems like the consumer has as many choices as you will find in an 11-story department store. That is, if you can still locate such an expansive retail location.

In one important way, the modern-day consumer is like those who have come before. In good economic times, we fill our closets with more shoes, shirts and jeans—whether we need them or not—and everyone from the customer to the business is happy. In the rougher patches, such as the recession that lasted from 2007 to 2009, sales drop and silence descends on retail sites: you could hear a pin drop in near-empty brick-and-mortar stores and malls.

Of course, e-commerce upended many brick-and-mortar business models. Only the strong and forward-looking survived. And now mobile devices have brought new consumer capabilities and expectations. Product reviews are a click away. Show-rooming is the norm: a consumer puts his or her hands on a product in a brick-and-mortar store, only to make a purchase—likely from a competitor, at a lower cost, that includes free shipping—on a handheld device.

That last move—the ordering on a mobile phone without the help of a clerk or the touch of a salesperson—is indicative of a significant shift toward consumer self-sufficiency. Many mobile users want nothing more than to do it all themselves. According to a report released by the Consumer Electronics Association, more 58 percent of shoppers who use mobile devices indicated that they prefer to look up information on their devices while shopping, rather than talk to store employees. This was especially true among men. And shoppers aged 25-44.

Nearly two-thirds (62 percent) of mobile shoppers perceived the information they gather via their mobile device as more beneficial than the information available in-store via product displays or sales literature – or sales people.

What is a retailer to do?

“There's never going to be one answer for all. Each one of the retailers, and the experiences that they want to deliver, and the types of customers that they have coming through the door, vary greatly,” Ryan Craver, former Senior Vice President, Strategy, of parent company Hudson’s Bay, told me in an interview for my new book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion -- artofmobilepersuasion.com.

“If you take a Lord & Taylor or Macy's, under the Hudson's Bay Company umbrella, customers are coming in the door because they know of promotions. They want to come in very quickly. They know exactly what they are looking for. They tend, though not all of them, to expect less of a customer service model and more of a self-sufficient model.”

But then there are the luxury brands, like Nordstrom and others.

“You go to the higher end—the Bergdorf Goodmans of the world and the Saks of the world—those have some promotional customers, but the majority of their customers have an expectation of a high level of service, a personal shopper level of service, where they are engaging with a person,” Craver said. “A personal shopper is providing them with feedback on what they are trying on and offering additional suggestive selling.

“The stores that have a customer who is coming in very quickly and looking for self -sufficient service—they will be the ones that adapt quickly to the new approaches. The Saks of the world—they won't rely on it in the same way, but they will need to provide something.”

If you are Lowe’s, a Fortune 100 home improvement company, and a Southeastern septuagenarian, you practice what you preach: “Never Stop Improving.”

Sean Bartlett, former Director of Digital Experience, Product, & Omni-channel Integration at Lowe's, led an initiative by the chain to put 42,000 iPhones into the hands of sales associates as a way to help customers get a more satisfying experience from the brand’s iPhone app.

The intent: to create a virtuous circle by enabling sales people to help their customers, who had already made mobile a big part of their daily routine.

And to make the self-sufficient mobile user get value from the humans in the store. Some took him up on the proposition. Others still prefer the no-talk way of shopping.

(article first appeared on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2015/11/10/serving-the-self-sufficient-mobile-user/)

Tagged with Lowe's, Lord & Taylor, Ryan Craver, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

November 13, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 13, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Lowe's
  • Lord & Taylor
  • Ryan Craver
  • The Art of Mobile Persuasion
  • Post a comment
Comment

Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - By Using Meerkat, Politicians Show They Can Live and Learn

Maybe politicians can live and learn. As you may know, Republicans have been slow to use mobile to engage constituents and to raise funds, not to mention post tweets (22 approvals were reportedly needed before a Mitt Romney campaign tweet could go live in 2012). 

So it’s notable that early GOP presidential hopefuls, including Jeb Bush, are using the new video app Meerkat. Meanwhile, Ted Cruz is using SMS to mobilize voters and raise funds.

Apple Store employees are reportedly being trained to give fashion advice for the Apple Watch launch. I guess that we’ll hear things like, “Wear lots of blue with a big logo on your shirt.”

WhatsApp messages sent every day now exceeds the number of standard texts.

Home Depot’s mobile app helps customers find 35,000 SKUs when visiting a store. Lowe’s has a similar program.

In the U.S., TNS projects 28% will use mobile to buy online in 2015, up from 22% in 2014.

Advertisers will spend $3 billion in the U.S. this year trying to get you to install mobile apps, per eMarketer.

Only half of app makers spend any money on security: IBM.

New York Giants coach Tom Coughlin has an iPhone but only knows how to text. "I don't trust the lady in GPS. Don't trust her."

75% of traffic for Pinterest comes from mobile: eMarketer.

In 2002, no one sent videos/photos via text message in America. In 2013, more than 10 billion were exchanged monthly: CTIA.

App Yik Yak has built geofences around 100,000 high schools in the United States to clamp down on cyber-bullying.

85% of the world's transactions are still made with cash: MasterCard.

A network of Bluetooth beacons will soon guide the blind through the London Underground: Wired.

HTC will give you a new One M9 smartphone if your M9 cracks or falls into the can.

Mobile video is 6.5X more effective than mobile display, per new research from the Mobile Marketing Association.

Tagged with Jeb Bush, Mitt Romney, Meerkat, Ted Cruz, WhatsApp, Lowe's, Home Depot.

March 29, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • March 29, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Jeb Bush
  • Mitt Romney
  • Meerkat
  • Ted Cruz
  • WhatsApp
  • Lowe's
  • Home Depot
  • Post a comment
Comment
MLP_hero.jpg

Takeaways For Marketers From Mobile Marketing Forum

MLP_hero.jpg

Home improvement and mobile are as matched as a hammer and nail, and other takeaways from the just concluded Mobile Marketing Forum in New York:

On the heels of a presentation by Lowe’s at the last Mobile Marketing Association get-together in San Francisco in January, Home Depot detailed its own measureable progress in engaging shoppers and selling more stuff through mobile devices.

Among the learnings:

  • Home Depot’s mobile-optimized site and apps provide access to the 400,000 different product types available online – as compared to the 35,000 in physical stores.
  • About a third of Home Depot’s traffic last year came through mobile.
  • Home Depot’s app has been downloaded 3.5 million times, with traffic up 60 percent because people responded to opt-in push messages.
  • Home Depot recently ran a test on Twitter and saw mobile engagement outpace desktop by 40 percent.

“The biggest challenge today for marketers is to make it exciting for consumers,” said Trish Mueller, senior vice president and chief marketing officer of Home Depot. “We’re passionate about customer service and mobile provides such an amazing way to connect with the customer.”

In January, Sean Bartlett, director of mobile strategy and platforms at Lowe’s, told us how mobile innovation has entered the 65-year-old retailer’s 1,700 plus stores with 42,000 iPhones in the hands of associates, and Wi-Fi in store to give shoppers what they desire – easy and free access to product reviews and social networks.

So, if you want to build a case for mobile, watch the home improvement efforts. …

Rules and regulations, arguably the driest of mobile topics, were discussed in committee meetings, the larger sessions, and in hallway conversations when campaigns run and contemplated were being discussed.

And with good reason. Coinciding with the MMA Forum was news of a lawsuit where a Web user sued Facebook for allegedly sending her an SMS message suggesting that she send “friend” requests to other users.

Illinois resident Darya Ivankina alleges in her potential class-action lawsuit, filed this week in U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Illinois, that the social-networking service violated the Telephone Consumer Protection Act by sending her cell phone an unwanted ad.

That law prohibits companies from using an automated dialing service to send SMS messages to people without first obtaining their consent. The Telephone Consumer Protection Act provides for damages of up to $1,500 per text message.

Facebook didn't have an immediate response.

While technological advances like Google Glass made for interesting conversation in New York, some of the most successful campaigns featured use of permission-based databases that brought value to the mobile user and the brand. …

We again heard that mobile searches create large opportunities. According to Google’s Tim Reis, 73 percent of mobile searches trigger additional action and conversions.  …

International mobile guru Tomi Ahonen reported that the average smartphone user looks at the device every five minutes – or 200 times a day. Further, he said that if one was counting full-length 160 character messages, a teenager sending 100 SMS per day would type the full text of “War & Peace” in under 7 months.

That’s a large amount of consumer interaction in any book.

(first appeared on imediaconnection.com - http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2013/05/13/takeaways-for-marketers-from-mobile-marketing-forum/)

Tagged with Home Depot, Lowe's, Mobile Marketing Forum, Facebook.

May 13, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 13, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Home Depot
  • Lowe's
  • Mobile Marketing Forum
  • Facebook
  • Post a comment
Comment

Highs and Lowe's At MMA Forum San Francisco

At the MMA Forum San Francisco Jan. 28-30 in the city where the coach with a mindset of “Never Stop Improving” replaced the successful quarterback and reached the Super Bowl, we heard from brands with the same attitude using mobile to sell more stuff.

Sean Bartlett of home improvement retail chain Lowe’s is one such example. Never Stop Improving is actually his company’s mantra, but that hardly gave Bartlett a blank check to bring mobile innovation into the 65-year-old retailer’s 1,700 plus stores.

Bartlett, who is director of mobile strategy and platforms, convinced senior management that Lowe’s would be better off if it could differentiate via the integration of mobile throughout the customer journey.

Unlike 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh, he did not replace anything or anyone – he supplemented his company’s sales and marketing programs with mobile products, services and technology smarts.

Bartlett led an effort to get iPhones in the hands of 42,000 sales associates so they could deliver a level of customer service that would combat showrooming – the employees share information with shoppers via the smartphones.

The executive built a mobile application with such transparency that it actually shows competitors’ pricing. He uses Wi-Fi in the 1,700-plus Lowe’s locations to give shoppers what they desire – easy and free access to product reviews and social networks.

And Bartlett is seeing business results that are justifying even more effort and dollars in mobile.

Bartlett’s insights were among the highlights at the two-day event where we moved past the maddening question of whether this is the Year of Mobile – I am rich with a dollar for every time I have heard it since 2005 – and spoke of innovation and issues that face us in 2013.

Here is more of what I remember from the show:

Chase, one of the nation’s leading banks, is not resting on its significant mobile laurels. It is continuing to build capabilities, including the ability for consumers to open checking and credit card accounts through mobile products.

An executive also talked about the customer experience and Chase’s need to move at the speed of now. 

“Mobile gives us a rapid, immediate view if something is going wrong and we address it immediately," said Russ Eisenman, head of mobile product marketing and partnerships at Chase, San Francisco.

For its part, Mercedes has gesture control and the full windshield used for connected contextual content on its roadmap.

In an era of distracted drivers, the German carmaker faced questions about whether more mobile activity in the car is wise. It sought to assure those in attendance that while new connected services in the car are coming, safety is Mercedes’ primary concern.

Another session by Google executives introduced the search giant’s enhanced ability to gather data from cross-platform users. Then, they were hit with a series of questions about privacy and whether the data will be sold to marketers. It will not happen, they said.

Meanwhile, an advertising panelist from 4D complained about the lack of transparency in mobile advertising, saying that too often buying mobile ads is like buying “mystery meat.” Happily, that comment came after lunch.

An executive from Mindshare also encouraged the hundreds in the crowd to “fail smart, fail fast."

There was significant time and attention paid to messaging with surprisingly large crowds that included major brand representatives attending Mobile Marketing Association messaging committee meetings.

Left unanswered were whether the majority of marketers are ready to deal with big data, commit to engage with a customer or prospect after a click or other mobile interaction, and spend significantly more on mobile this year than last.

We will not get there in one day or one year.

But it was gratifying to hear the unified sentiment that we would leave San Francisco with a promise of Never Stop Improving.

(article first appeared on Mobile Marketer - http://www.mobilemarketer.com/cms/opinion/columns/14700.html)

Tagged with Chase, Lowe's, MMA, Mercedes, Mobile Marketing Forum, Sean Bartlett, iphone.

February 2, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • February 2, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Chase
  • Lowe's
  • MMA
  • Mercedes
  • Mobile Marketing Forum
  • Sean Bartlett
  • iphone
  • Post a comment
Comment

What I'll Most Remember About The Mobile Insider Summit

Two massive brands shared their mobile stories this week at the content-rich Mobile Insider Summit in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. Each brand has accelerated its mobile efforts to drive sales, engagement, and loyalty.

Wells Fargo & Company, a financial services company with $1.3 trillion in assets, serves one in three households in the U.S. More than 10 percent of its 70 million customers use mobile to interact with the company for at least part of their customer journey.

This has prompted Wells Fargo, now number 26 on the Fortune 100, to make mobile part of the mix. To date Wells Fargo provides banking, insurance, investments, mortgage, and consumer and commercial finance through more than 9,000 stores, 12,000 ATMs, the Internet (wellsfargo.com), and mobile.

The approach speaks volumes about the value of mobile as a complement to all the other channels.  As Alan Gellman, SVP of Digital Marketing, put it: Stores are a critical part of building the relationships that Wells Fargo nurtures — and “mobile won’t replace them.”

By far, the most common use case for mobile is allowing customers to check their account balances. Each month, Wells Fargo receives 27 texts on average from customers using mobile. Of the 70 million customers, 21 million utilize online banking and 8.5 million use mobile to interact.

As Gellman sees it, it’s all “about the consumer, not the technology.” For this reason, Gellman implores his team to create compelling experiences and to “mobilize, not miniaturize.” That’s a smart idea since the technology should adapt to people, not the other way around.

To deliver a good customer experience every step of the journey Wells Fargo has designed “voice of the customer” programs to monitor “what are they saying, where are they saying it, and how are they saying it.” Beyond customer relationship marketing (CRM), Gellman sees acquisition and cross-selling as critical in mobile initiatives.

Other Gellman gems:

On mobile and security: Gellman notes his company understands its duties go beyond what is regulated. “It’s about what’s right for the customer.”

On chasing the newest technologies that some call ‘shiny objects’: Gellman challenges his marketers to reveal “what’s the value-add.”

On mobile advertising approaches: Gellman says mobile is efficient and effective, because it offers “cheap CPC (cost per click) and high impact on awareness.” But there is a catch: “it can’t totally be measured.”

Lowe’s looks at mobile

Equally compelling was the viewpoint shared by Sean Bartlett, Director of Mobile Strategy and Platforms for Lowe’s. By way of background, Lowe’s is the second-largest home improvement retailer in the world and number 54 on the Fortune 100 list. Lowe’s serves approximately 15 million customers a week at more than 1,745 home improvement stores in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

Bartlett’s view on mobile products and services centers squarely on the value it delivers. Questions top of mind must be: “Is it compelling, and is it incremental?”

A recent initiative by the chain has put 42,000 iPhones into the hands of sales associates as a way to help customers get a more satisfying experience from the iPhone app. It’s all about creating a virtuous circle by helping sales people to help their customers, who have already made mobile part of their daily routine. The outcome is a solid relationship. At a deeper level, this can strengthen the ties between the customer and the retailer and boost involvement and interest in the MyLowe’s loyalty program.

Bartlett has been in his position for just 18 months, but the change in mindset is significant. While Bartlett calls the early mobile efforts by his company successful, he reveals the company is “blowing it up” to start again with a new focus on the experience.

It’s all about using mobile to be more friendly and personal. As Bartlett put it: “Mobile is the evolution of the experience economy.”

How I See It: The theme of the conference was “mobile first,” a phrase generally attributed to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who proclaimed it at the 2010 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. The words referred back to the requirements to design user experiences with mobile in mind. Since then the phase has regrettably become the rallying cry for some in the industry who just want marketers to spend on mobile first. That’s nothing more than hype.

As I wrote in my Mobilized Marketing book, it’s really “sell more stuff first.” Mobile may, or may not, help a marketer get there. Gellman and Bartlett are among those in the industry wise enough to know that the what — the business objective of moving products and services — remains the same. Mobile has simply changed how brands can achieve this.

(article first posted here http://www.mobilegroove.com/mobile-insider-summit-takeaways-marketers-need-to...

Tagged with Lowe's, Wells Fargo, iphone.

August 24, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 24, 2012
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Lowe's
  • Wells Fargo
  • iphone
  • Post a comment
Comment

Jeff Hasen

Mobile CMO and Author
  • Blog
  • About
  • Speaking
  • Books
  • Mobile Education & Training
  • Professional Services
  • Contact

  • Jeff Hasen
    RT @jeffhasen: The post-COVID 19 digital & #mobile experiences consumers value most - my new post on gaps between services custome… https://t.co/GjVD6TRgmM
    Oct 5, 2020, 7:39 AM
  • Jeff Hasen
    The post-COVID 19 digital & #mobile experiences consumers value most - my new post on gaps between services custome… https://t.co/GjVD6TRgmM
    Oct 4, 2020, 12:14 PM
  • Jeff Hasen
    RT @harrison3: "About half of us don’t trust public spaces ... And that’s not changing any time soon. But there’s more bad news. T… https://t.co/2hlqn64NVt
    Oct 1, 2020, 5:24 PM
  • Jeff Hasen
    RT @MattLockmon: My friend @206andrew is looking for a community specialist to work on his team and manage @tableau's community hub… https://t.co/10Evg95bhS
    Sep 30, 2020, 12:36 PM
  • Jeff Hasen
    RT @wearesinch: COVID-19 has changed the rules of mobile engagement - maybe forever. We just released our brand new report reveal… https://t.co/xSyg5PO600
    Sep 29, 2020, 7:52 AM

Powered by Squarespace.  Content is for demonstration purposes only.