Step 2 - Informed Customers - Page 9
January 15, 2001
The next step in this personalization scheme is building
collaborative personalization. Since ACME already keeps records
of everything everyone has ever bought, this one should be
simple to implement.
This method involves deciding what and where you want to put the
collaborative info. One good start would be to place customer
recommendations, or "Customers that bought this lawnmower also
bought..." type suggestions. Providing a comparison model would
also be very helpful.
For example, let's look at a typical customer visit. A customer
comes along who needs a new lawnmower — but has no idea which
model or features he needs. The customer navigates their way to a
particular product page. Along with the description and price
information, the page also displays a list of things other
customers bought. Since most people don't buy more than one
lawnmower at a time, this list will most likely be things like
"lawnmower blades" or "fertilizer," so this feature isn't very
helpful for this user.
Next the customer sees an "Add this to my Comparison cart." This
feature would add products to a session object, for instance. The
user could then be provided a link that lists the features side-
by-side of all items in the comparison cart. This is very simple
to build, and adds enormous customer benefits, especially if you
combine this feature with customer recommendations.
The customer is still not sure, however, so let's provide one
more collaborative feature. Let's examine the items in the
shopping and comparison carts. If we notice any similarities
between the products, then we can provide the user a descriptor
comparison feature. This could be a link from the comparison page
(or could be incorporated into that page), that simply provides
descriptions for major or common features along with comparisons,
i.e. "This model has 10 horsepower vs 5 for the other model, but
horsepower above 7 is really not necessary."
Note: The author claims no knowledge of lawnmowers, so
please forgive him if he quotes inaccurate numbers. In no way
should my advice be heeded for buying lawnmowers!
Now the customer is more informed and is more confident adding
one item to their shopping cart, and proceeding through checkout.
Let's move to the last step.
Step 1 - Making Customers Happy - Page 8
Everything you Need to Know About Personalization: Part 2 - Page 6
Step 3 - Checkout - Page 10
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