A recent Forrester Research survey found that more people learned
about e-tailers from friends than from search engines.
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Word of mouth is one of the strongest marketing mediums
available -- so strong that some struggling dot-coms,
desperate to save advertising dollars, are begging their
customers to help spread the word about their products and services.
"Word of mouth is very powerful in terms of buying power,"
Forrester Research analyst Christopher Kelley told the
E-Commerce Times. "It can be incredibly effective."
Kelley and Michele Pelino, director of Internet marketing
strategies at the Yankee Group, agreed that word of mouth
advertising programs that offer consumers rewards for
referring friends are especially effective.
Pelino told the E-Commerce Times that Internet service providers
(ISPs) use referral bonuses "all the time" to encourage customers
to refer their friends.
However, sometimes one company's marketing tool is another
company's last-chance grab from the edge of the abyss.
Saving Webvan
In what Kelley termed a desperate bid to woo and keep customers,
chief executive officer Robert Swan of Webvan (Nasdaq: WBVN)
e-mailed customers Tuesday to ask for their support in
keeping the struggling online grocer afloat.
"Recently, many of our loyal customers have expressed their concern and
support for Webvan in the current climate of uncertainty in e-commerce,"
Swan wrote. "I'd like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who
has contacted us and to tell all of our customers how we can work
together to ensure that Webvan will emerge from this period a
better and stronger company."
Swan told shoppers that "one of the most important things you can
do is to continue to recommend Webvan."
Public Struggle
Kelley said that the Webvan e-mail was "a testament to how
public [Webvan's] struggle has been recently. He likened
Swan's letter to a desperate bid by a failing political
candidate to "round up the loyal troops to help in anyway they can."
Webvan also promised customers that later this spring, it
would be introducing Webvan Rewards as "our way of thanking
loyal customers with extra savings, enhanced delivery benefits
and priority service."
Kelley believes that Webvan's letter will bring additional
business to the company, but said that the real issue is,
"Will it drive enough to keep Webvan afloat?"
There is evidence to support both "yes" and "no"
answers to that question.
People Power
A recent Forrester Research survey found that more
people learned about e-tailers from friends than from search engines.
Online shoppers listen to their friends, according to Kelley,
because "consumers who buy online want power." When they hear
about a friend having a positive online shopping experience,
they want to replicate that experience for themselves by
shopping at the same e-tailer.
Pelino pointed out that a word of mouth campaign is
effective because of the "credibility factor." She
said that people were more apt to believe positive
comments about a site from a friend than from an advertisement.
Free to Be
Relying on word of mouth can be a good solution for cash-poor
dot-coms because it is a fairly cheap advertising medium.
Kelley said that a word of mouth campaign would provide
"more bang for the buck" than other forms of advertising.
However, he cautioned that the results of such a campaign
are "impossible to track."
Kelley also said that a word of mouth campaign would reach
a smaller audience than a television campaign that went
out to 30 million viewers. However, Pelino pointed out
that a word of mouth campaign could be more targeted than a mass
media campaign, and was more likely to reach consumers with similar interests.
Pelino cautioned that word of mouth could backfire if
an e-tailer does not have adequate customer service
and support in place. In that instance, Pelino said,
customers could tell all their friends about the
terrible experience they had shopping at a particular
e-tailer -- and the company could actually lose out on potential customers.
Power of the Press
Additionally, although the power of the people may inspire
some shoppers, the power of the press is keeping others away
with stories of dot-com demises.
Slightly more than 30 percent of respondents to a recent Forrester
survey said that they would no longer shop at dot-coms that
they knew were having financial difficulties, and 20 percent of
respondents said they were less likely to buy from dot-com pure plays.
Some dot-coms, according to Kelley, are "having a hard time acquiring
customers because of adverse publicity."
Such hurdles ultimately leave dot-coms with few alternatives.
So if a grass roots, word of mouth campaign is the last chance to
help a company survive, dot-coms are willing to take it.
Viral marketing only works if the thing itself is something that everyone wants, like free ...
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