Drive conversion Archives | Bazaarvoice Wed, 04 Sep 2024 16:21:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.1 How to be a creator marketing superhero https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/bazaarvoice-com-blog-creator-marketing-superhero/ Wed, 07 Aug 2024 09:08:46 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=53158 The following article is based on a webinar hosted by Siddhartha Saxena, Sales Director at Bazaarvoice, and Nisarg Shah, Co-founder and CEO at Affable, on new technology designed to help you master creator marketing. Watch the demo here.

This one is for any agency producer, social media coordinator, or other marketer who’s ever had to wrangle together a creator campaign. Because WOOF.

You guys are superheroes.

Only you know how much time and manual effort it takes to find the right creator or influencer, with the right follower demographics, who aligns with your brand (you only have to sift through 300 million globally, no big deal). To manage outreach, contract negotiations, and content reviews — especially with multiple creators. To track performance and budget utilization, and respond to changing conditions on the fly.

It’s worth it, because your creator gave your campaign the relatable, authentic voice it needed. But yeaaah — it was a lot of work.

Well? We have good news, y’all.

We’ve been working on something specifically for you: a new way to streamline how creator campaigns are managed, trimming up to 80% from your typical time spent. It’s smart and tech-driven, designed by marketers just like you and powered by AI. It’s end-to-end for the whole campaign. Given its capabilities, it’s almost shockingly easy to use. And best of all, it’s going to let you hang up your superhero cape for a while.

(Not that you need to tell your coworkers. It’ll be our little secret.)

Meet Bazaarvoice Affable.ai.

What the right creator can offer your brand

But first, a quick refresher. With all of the tools in the marketing tool belt, you might wonder why we place such a high premium on creators. Especially if the above is true and, traditionally, their campaigns were so work-intensive.

The answer is that creators bring a lot to the brand partnership table. More than you might expect. And it’s all measurable.

Trust

Trust has always been a crucial factor in consumer decision-making, but perhaps never more than today, with ad fatigue on the rise and Gen Z skepticism of all things slick and branded. According to recent studies, 69% of customers trust recommendations and insights from influencers, friends, and family over information directly from brands. It’s all about authenticity and relatability, and transparency — and creators are simply better at those things than brands are. By partnering with creators who align with your brand values, you can enhance your brand’s credibility and foster deeper connections with potential customers.

Reach

Influencers and creators have cultivated their own unique audiences, often consisting of highly engaged and loyal followers. These audiences can offer brands access to new communities and demographics that they might not reach through traditional marketing channels. Collaborating with on-brand creators allows you to extend your reach beyond your current customer base, introducing your products or services to a wider audience and unlocking new opportunities for growth and brand recognition.

Conversion

81% of consumers report that social posts from influencers, friends, and family members drove their interest in a product or service over the past year. Moreover, 67% of shoppers now rely on UGC for shopping inspiration and fact-finding, and a big piece of this is influencer content. This shows how powerful creators can be when it comes to influencing purchase decisions and consumer behavior.

Innovation

Creators aren’t just content producers; they are also innovators and trendsetters. Involve them in your content supply chain, and you can benefit from their fresh perspectives and creativity. Partner with them on product development, and they can offer valuable feedback on your designs. Bring them in on marketing strategy, and they can introduce innovative, inspiring creative concepts and storytelling techniques. However you use them, it’s an invaluable POV: an outsider perspective, but one who knows how to prime their audience.

It’s imperative, then, that you find the right creator. And this is how you can remove the barriers and streamline the process to reach and collaborate with the people you need.

The Affable.ai platform

Affable.ai is an innovative, end-to-end creator marketing platform developed by Bazaarvoice and Affable. It features first-to-market AI technology designed to help you discover, collaborate with, track, and measure creators and content. Here’s a look at what the platform can do for you.

Discover creators with real relevance and influence

Creative listening solution: Affable.ai provides a powerful creative listening feature that lets you track and monitor the brands you support across every social media platform. This feature captures all the content that creators are posting about the brand, allowing you to gather valuable metrics such as reach and impressions. With this data, you can assess the performance of your campaigns and understand the impact of your content on different audiences. Moreover, you can use the same capabilities to track competitors, giving you insights into industry trends and strategies that can inform your own marketing efforts.

AI-Powered creator discovery: The platform’s AI search engine is a game-changer in creator discovery, offering advanced capabilities for finding the perfect creators for your brand. Utilizing cutting-edge image analysis and over 20 advanced filters, you can identify creators whose style and audience align with your brand’s objectives. Once you have a list of potential collaborators, Affable.ai allows you to compare engagement rates, follower counts, industry relevance, demographic information about followers, brand affiliations, and posting frequency. All essential information when deciding who will best amplify your brand message.

Make collaboration and communication a breeze

Frictionless collaboration and oversight: Finding the right creator is only the beginning. Developing an open, effective working relationship is equally important — and whole lot easier when Affable.ai is facilitating it. The platform provides tools for leaving notes, giving approvals, and managing feedback, ensuring clear communication throughout the campaign process. If you’re an agency, it even allows brand clients to review and leave notes, so all parties can collaborate in a single place.

One-click (or less) communication tools: Effective communication is essential for maintaining strong relationships with creators — but literally nobody wants to spend their day emailing, especially if you’re managing multiple creators at once. Affable.ai simplifies the process with template emails and automated follow-ups. These tools allow you to communicate efficiently with your creator army, saving time and reducing the manual effort required to manage creator interactions.

Track campaigns with no more manual monitoring

Comprehensive content and campaign tracking: Where many creator campaigns sink or swim is with the marketing team’s tracking capabilities. Affable.ai lets you monitor the number of content pieces created, track embedded link clicks, and maintain a content library of everything produced during the campaign. At a higher level, the platform also provides a detailed campaign overview, displaying information about all engaged influencers, budget, media coverage, engagement metrics, estimated reach, estimated impressions, and estimated media value. Taken together, all of this data helps you stay informed about the progress and impact of your campaigns, assess what’s working, and find where improvements are needed.

Measure performance: Don’t let your campaign investments go unnoticed

AI-driven sentiment analysis: Every creator marketing analytics platform gives you a quantitative survey about how your campaign performed: that’s table stakes. But Affable.ai adds to this offering qualitative insights. By analyzing follower post comments using AI-driven sentiment analysis, the platform goes beyond numbers to provide a deeper understanding of how your content resonates with audiences. With this qualitative feedback, you can refine your messaging and approach, ensuring your campaigns effectively engage and connect with your target audience.

Ready to try it out?

Like we said at the beginning, that’s a lot of functionality for one platform — and a lot of legwork we’re ready to handle for you. But don’t take our word for it: you can request a demo and try Affable.ai for yourself. And see how super-powered marketers like you are taking the creator game to new heights.

Request a demo

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Reviews that influence purchases: How user-generated content drives sales https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/reviews-that-influence-purchases/ Sat, 27 Jul 2024 01:16:58 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=53009 Ever been on the fence about buying something online? A solid review likely swayed your decision—perhaps more than your loyalty to a brand or advice from family.

In-store shopping offers a sensory experience: testing throw pillows for comfort or trying on a pair of shoes to see their size. Reviews from fellow online shoppers are the closest thing to a “real-life” shopping experience. 

Shoppers simply trust content from other shoppers—more than they trust a brand’s marketing message.  

Bazaarvoice surveyed 2,400 Influenster community members who also identified as rewards program members of a large American retailer whose top-selling items include beauty products, clothing, and household essentials. Overwhelmingly, 87% of these shoppers agree that the trust for user-generated content (such as reviews, photos, and videos) surpasses branded content (such as product descriptions and imagery) on PDPs. 

Highlighting UGC builds trust and credibility, driving more confident purchases. Authentic reviews can be powerful, but which ones drive the most conversions? 

The power of photos and text 

A stunning product image taken in a sterile studio won’t convince a consumer to hit “Add to cart.” They’re looking for something more human. 

The perfect PDP prioritizes UGC. At this large American retailer, 47% of shoppers say “photos with text reviews” influence their purchasing decisions, followed by “star ratings” at 25%. 

Photos shared by real shoppers offer context for the product, providing a realistic depiction beyond the brand’s polished presentation. 75% of shoppers want to see the product in a real-life context. Think of a couch in someone’s living room rather than a heavily curated photoshoot.

Photos also serve a vetting purpose. 54% of shoppers say user-generated photos reassure them that the reviewer is real. Additionally, half of shoppers agree that photo reviews prove people are actually buying the product, adding legitimacy to their purchasing decision.

Quantity counts  

There is power in numbers. Shoppers depend on reviews for guidance, and the more evidence of past experiences, the greater influence on their purchase decisions.

Have you ever second-guessed buying a product online because it had no reviews? Many consumers (25%) won’t consider a product credible until it has 10-25 reviews, while only 11% will trust it with 1-10 reviews.

It matters how many of those reviews actually contain a photo. Ideally, most shoppers want to see 5 (19%) or 10 (19%) user-generated images before considering a product credible. 

Most shoppers prefer reviews that are 3-4 sentences (61%) or at least one sentence (24%), rather than a lengthy paragraph or one-word opinions. Similarly, user-generated videos are best when they are relatively short and to the point, ideally lasting 15-30 seconds (55%). 

Shoppers value frequency 

You may have a tried and true product that has stood the test of time. It has a proven reputation for quality and popularity among customers. Even if nothing about that product has changed, shoppers trust recent reviews more than old reviews. 

Up-to-date reviews are perceived to be more relevant. Imagine discovering a new restaurant in your neighborhood. You find it on Yelp, but it only has 3 reviews from 5 years ago. You might wonder if the food has changed or if the restaurant is still open.

Similarly, online shoppers seek reassurance from recent feedback. 73% of consumers agree that recent reviews are more reliable than old ones. 

They are less confident in reviews they perceive as outdated. 44% of customers say the sweet spot for review recency is 1-3 months, followed by 3-6 months (30%) to feel most confident in a review. 

Top ways to earn reviews    

How can your PDPs snag these coveted reviews? Let the shoppers guide you! Here’s how to get them talking: 

  • Offer incentives or discounts (81% find this effective)
  • Prompt users in your brand/retailer app (42% find this effective)
  • Send review request emails (37% find this effective) 
  • Follow up with a reminder text (29% find this effective)

Try these actions: 

  • Ask customers to feature photos of products in action 
  • Suggest reviews of 1-4 sentences 
  • Encourage reviews for products lacking feedback 
  • Encourage reviews for products with aging feedback 

Reviews wield immense influence, even surpassing advice from family and friends. 89% of shoppers consult reviews before buying, compared to 63% who seek advice from relatives.

Empower your customers to share their experiences and guide like-minded shoppers. Prioritize solid reviews on your PDPs to build trust, enhance credibility, and boost sales.

Interested in optimizing your strategy from initial consumer contact to loyalty? Watch an episode of Growth Gurus, with Christine Lee, VP of Global Retail and Bazaarvoice and Robelle Mancilla, Director of Site Merchandising and Operations at Sam’s Club.

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Your new playbook for crushing the conversion game https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/new-playbook-for-crushing-the-conversion-game/ Mon, 24 Jun 2024 04:37:52 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=52544 The following article is based on a webinar hosted by Bhavik Gandecha, Solutions Consulting Manager at Bazaarvoice, and Angeli Rodriguez, Senior Client Strategy Manager at Attentive, on ways e-commerce managers can maximize conversion potential. If you like, you can watch the webinar here.

It’s the big, holy-grail question in retail: How do you take a person who’s casually browsing for a product and convert them into a buyer?

We all know that having a good product helps. We also (should) all know that having a good product isn’t enough. Throughout the entire funnel — from awareness to consideration, purchase, and post-purchase loyalty — there are important opportunities to build trust and engagement with your brand, and prime shoppers to hit the BUY button.

For instance, did you know that 93% of your potential customers consider product reviews the deciding factor for a purchase? It’s a statistic that generally holds true regardless of differences in products, industries, and economic conditions.

User-generated content (UGC) — including reviews and social content — can have a consistently measurable impact on conversions. In this article, we’ll show you how to combine UGC with real-time, personalized messaging and analytics to craft a strategy that influences purchase decisions at every stage in the funnel. Consider this your new checklist for supercharging your conversion potential.

Chapters

  • Awareness: Building visibility and trust
  • Consideration: Rewarding shopper curiosity
  • Purchase: Making it easy to hit BUY
  • Loyalty: Fostering long term engagement
  • Beyond the funnel: Encouraging continuous improvement

Awareness: Building visibility and trust

In this initial stage in the marketing funnel your goal is to put your brand on people’s radar, and in so doing, accomplish two things: increase visibility and establish credibility.

Think broadly about where shoppers hear about you

67% of Gen Z starts their shopping search on social media. That’s TikTok, Instagram, YouTube — even LinkedIn. The customer journey doesn’t just start on your site, so make sure your brand has a presence where the potential buyers live.

Assess your reviews to make sure they’re working hard for you 

Not all review sections are created equal. Some things to consider:

  • Quality: All reviews are valuable, even the one-liners. But 75% of shoppers look for reviews of three or more sentences.
  • Quantity: Do you have enough? Going from 0 to 100 reviews has been shown to boost sales by as much as 37%.
  • Recency: 85% of shoppers consider how recent the review was written to inform their purchase. If all of your reviews are old, it’s time for a refresh.

Balance and syndicate your content mix

Shoppers are savvy enough to notice inconsistency. So make sure you have both brand and user-generated content coming to your product page or retail site. That means having a mix of both product reviews and social content, like user-generated pics of happy customers with your products.

This content mix should then be syndicated across not only your brand site but all retailer pages. We at Bazaarvoice have found that retailers report a 15-26% lift in sales after displaying this UGC.

Use email and text sign-up to prime the pump

Build a base of subscribers who are on-deck to engage with the brand and turn into buyers. Offer an incentivized sign-up experience when someone visits your site. Once the contact is in your list, you can ping them in the future, even if they only browse or abandon a cart today.

Consideration: Rewarding shopper curiosity

Once potential customers are aware of your brand, the next step is to influence their decision-making process by providing compelling reasons to choose your brand or product.

Use UGC to accommodate buyers who want more detailed information

Product reviews are an essential first step. But you can complement them in important ways. Offer a section for questions and answers alongside reviews so shoppers can ask for specific information not covered elsewhere. And make sure you respond to negative reviews: this shows you’re attentive, take your customers seriously, and know how to rectify issues (say, with a discount code).

Continue to stoke your contact list

You got a shopper to opt-in, and now they’re a contact. This is the beginning of a journey, not the end. Use email and SMS messaging to:

  • Give updates, education, and offers for your products
  • Facilitate two-way conversations between customers and staff, to help home in on the product customers want. Two-way SMS dialogue is an emerging capability that Attentive is pioneering, and it’s an exciting tool to add to your mix.

Purchase: Making it easy to hit BUY

You’ve got interested shoppers. Now it’s time to convert them into buyers. Here are some ideas for answering any lingering questions, removing barriers, and nudging shoppers over the finish line.

Keep building trust to encourage check-out

One off-note can ruin an otherwise perfect song. Make sure your product info and reviews are consistent wherever they show up, both on your brand site and different retailer sites.

Streamline your check-out process

The same social platforms that help you build awareness can be enlisted to drive purchases, either with links to your PDP or in-app purchasing capabilities. One Bazaarvoice customer recently saw a 77% click-through rate from a LinkedIn bio promotion, and an astounding 216% lift in conversions using image galleries.

Use SMS and email reminders to reduce abandoned carts

In 2023 Attentive’s SMS messaging was able to help brands recover over 2 billion carts that would have stayed abandoned otherwise. Attentive is even starting to employ AI in this space, so that reminder messages can be automated and super-personalized at the same time.

Loyalty: Fostering long-term engagement

After a purchase, maintaining customer engagement and encouraging repeat business is essential. UGC and personalized messaging are both core pieces of the lasting relationships you build with buyers.

Thank your customer for their purchase

It sounds elementary, but a simple “thank you” goes a long way. A thoughtful thank you message offers buyers instant gratification, makes them feel special, and can include educational content about how to get the most out of their product.

Ask your customer to review their product

Without this step, none of the above works. Be proactive: emailing your customer (or letting us do it for you!) can bump your review numbers by 5-9% compared to relying on your PDP or retailers to collect reviews. And adopt technology to make it easy — for instance, Bazaarvoice has developed templates that allow customers to leave reviews directly in your review solicitation email.

Think about incentives that reward loyalty and encourage future purchases

Ideally, customers who purchased one of your products are likely to do so again. Check back in with them periodically to offer new product recommendations and complimentary accessories that work with their last purchase.

Beyond the funnel: Encouraging continuous improvement

One benefit of engaging customers at all points of the funnel (aside from the conversion, obviously) is the continuous treasure trove of data about product performance and shopper behavior.

Are your products selling? Are they garnering reviews? Are they hitting industry benchmarks? Are there discrepancies between product sales and review ratings? These are crucial data points that you can turn into actionable insights. And now with AI, we can even scan reviews for common words, revealing trends about both the product and what shoppers care about.

Share this data with your product team to make improvements over time. Use it to adjust your marketing messaging and media spend, and plan new ways to deepen your relationship with new and existing customers. For brands that want to break through the noise and maximize conversions, insight-driven continuous improvement makes all the difference.

Want to learn more? Watch the full webinar with Bhavik and Angeli for an in-depth look at how Bazaarvoice and Attentive have teamed up to help brands like yours crush the conversion game.

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Unwrapping the secrets of holiday content planning https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/unwrapping-the-secrets-of-holiday-content-planning/ Sat, 22 Jun 2024 06:28:01 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=52538 The following article is based on a webinar hosted by Abi Awojobi (Brand Partnerships Director, Bazaarvoice) and Courtney Keats (Creator Marketing Team Lead, Bazaarvoice) on how to maximize holiday ROI with a full-funnel content strategy. You can watch the webinar here.

The holiday season is the biggest sales period of the year. You know it, we know it, everyone knows it. And that means a lot of marketing noise during the season.

Cutting through the chatter will rely on a smart, authentic content strategy for most brands. That means understanding your consumers’ behaviors, knowing your goals, and forging partnerships with creators who can help. In this article, we’ll look at some tips to help you navigate the festive frenzy and ensure your brand shines.

Chapters

  • Strategize to your audience: making smart timing and platform choices
  • Activating the entire funnel for the holiday season
  • A sample timeline for holiday success
  • How Bazaarvoice can help

Strategize with your audience

When it comes to holiday content planning, there’s no magic formula that works for every brand. Everything depends on what consumers are doing.

Get the timing right

You might think now is too early to start planning — but your audience doesn’t. While over half of holiday shoppers (55%) begin in October or earlier, more than a third (37%) kick off in September, and almost a quarter (23%) start as early as August! Even more shocking, a quarter (26%) said it’s never too early. The time to start planning is now.

Where Are They Searching?

Most shoppers intentionally search for holiday gifts — 42% look for specific products, and 25% search for items from particular brands or retailers. But increasingly, where they search is broadening to include social media platforms.

Younger generations, particularly Gen Z and Millennials, are the most likely to shop via social media, with platforms like TikTok becoming de facto search engines for products and gift ideas. The trend starts to fall off for Gen X and Boomers, and while your social media strategy should be geared toward younger generations, it should still be able to accommodate spontaneous shopping from the older crowd.

Activating the entire funnel for the holiday season

There’s never a more important time to have your sales funnel working hard for you. And a key piece of this is to incorporate creators and content (both UGC and social content) at every stage.

Awareness

Your goal is to grow and maintain awareness of your products while driving brand equity. Social media is built for product discovery, with almost 60% of shoppers preferring it over other awareness-driving platforms during the holidays.

Recommendations:

  • Don’t rely on branded and paid media content alone — supplement reach with creator content
  • Drive bursts of content and seed reviews by activating everyday shoppers through sampling and/or social challenges
  • Ensure you have the right content mix: 37% of shoppers consider video the most effective content format to capture their attention

Consideration

During the holiday rush, purchasing decisions can be spur-of-the-moment, so it’s crucial to quickly build buyers’ confidence. Creators play a vital role here, offering built-in audiences and trust. In fact, 35% of Gen Z shoppers seek out creator content on social media during the holidays.

Recommendations:

  • Drive consideration through themes content around holiday moments, celebrations, and seasonality: 43% of shoppers find gift ideas and trends content most appealing, followed by holiday traditions (35%)
  • Connect your brand with key consumer needs: think about all the various meanings of the holidays for people (even the not-so-cheery ones) and deliver content that fits
  • Repurpose visual assets but refine the messaging for a specific audience

Conversion

The final step is turning your interested shopper into a buyer. Two essential elements are social proof and purchase incentives. Deals are particularly attractive, with 67% of Gen Z shoppers more likely to buy when offered a discount code.

Recommendations:

  • Use content to reach consumers at key decision points to drive purchases. Reviews and product images are key
  • Optimize your digital shelf to maintain conversion throughout the holiday season
  • When you think about content mix, think about authenticity. Bad reviews are just as useful as good reviews, and a mix of negative and positive is proven to drive conversion more than all positive (which seems suspicious). 40% of shoppers look for this
  • Bonus tip: the best way to build up your reviews? Product sampling. Let shoppers get a taste of what your brand does best, and encourage them to leave a review

A sample timeline for holiday success

As we said above, the time to start planning your holiday content strategy is now. So we’ve put together a timeline to help you get started.

  • July: Outline your UGC strategy and set clear objectives and metrics. Gather your list of creators and tools
  • August: Allocate your budget and start building relationships with creators
  • September: Finalize campaign details, brief creators, and establish processes for check-ins and reviews
  • October: Launch early tactics and content, monitor performance, and engage with customers to create UGC
  • November: Feed social content to other channels to drive conversion, leveraging key shopping moments like Black Friday and Cyber Monday
  • December: Ensure continuous content flow to capture last-minute shoppers

How Bazaarvoice can help

Understanding your audience, engaging the right creators, and strategically planning your content for the entire funnel can set up a truly special holiday season that gives your brand every reason to celebrate.

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Product page optimization: A 5-point audit for your brand https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/how-to-optimize-product-pages/ Tue, 07 May 2024 16:23:28 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=26727 There were over 2.5 billion online shoppers last year and that number is only going to grow. Your product pages are an integral part of that buying journey for these shoppers, but according to Baynard Institute research, only 56% of e-commerce sites have an overall “decent” or “good” product page performance. While that might sound some alarm bells, it’s nothing a little product page optimization can’t fix.

Optimizing your entire digital shelf — your virtual store where people find and buy your brand online — is essential for providing customers with a great shopping experience. It’s how your brand shows up online, stands out from competitors, and encourages shoppers to make purchases.

Chapters:

  1. What is product page optimization?
  2. 5-point product page optimization audit
  3. Product page optimization examples
  4. Take your product pages to the next level


What is product page optimization?

Product page optimization is the process of improving all aspects of your product pages so potential customers can find exactly what they’re looking for and make informed purchasing decisions. It goes way beyond just inserting keywords and some witty copy, it’s about displaying authentic imagery, writing compelling descriptions, and using the voice of the customer.

In essence, product page optimization is about enhancing the entire user experience to make the buying process as seamless as possible.

An optimized product page is a page that first and foremost meets customer needs and achieves company goals. Traditionally, this refers to a product page designed for higher conversions and/or search engine optimization (SEO).  You also need to factor in the technical side too. Page load speed for example — nearly 70% of consumers admit that page speed impacts their willingness to buy from an online retailer. 

Think about the last time you bought something online. What did you need to know from the product page in order to make it all the way through to check out? Just the specs? No. You probably needed a lot of different information to make a confident purchasing decision. Most customers want to know: 

  • Is this product good quality or value?
  • How does this product look in real life?
  • What do other people think about this product?
  • Is there anything else I need to buy to make this product work?
  • How are other shoppers using this product?

And with only 2% of e-commerce website visits converting into a purchase, it’s clear that online merchants can do a better job of providing information and experiences that meet shopper needs. 

5-point product page optimization audit

During the recent iteration of the Bazaarvoice Summit, Brandon Klein, Senior Product Manager at Bazaarvoice (and expert on all things product page), outlined a 5-point audit for perfecting your product pages. Here’s what he recommends.

1. Product page SEO optimization

You’ve spent a lot of company time and resources optimizing your product pages for higher conversions. But that’s all for nothing if shoppers can’t actually find your product pages through search — that’s where product page SEO comes in. Brandon highlights this point in this short clip from his Summit presentation below:

Expanding on that, product page SEO is the optimization of your product pages so the content on the page is found by search engines like Google. Search engine algorithms prioritize pages that are most relevant to the search query based on criteria like keyword matches and quality content. 

Here’s some of our favorite ways to use keywords naturally: 

  • Include keywords in your page’s title tag and meta description, and make sure the page’s actual copy matches what you promise
  • Use headings to break up copy and organize your page. Try to include a keyword in at least one of the headings, but only if it makes sense
  • Include keywords throughout the page, like in product names, descriptions, and reviews 
  • Incorporate keywords into an image’s alt-text if it naturally flows with the rest of the alt-text copy 
  • Add internal links to any other related content on your site

The easiest way to boost your SEO though is by featuring user-generated content (UGC) like customer reviews, which can increase page traffic by nearly a third.

Customers writing reviews typically use long-tail keywords. So when someone else searches for the same terms found in product reviews, product pages linked with them appear in search results. Petco for example utilized UGC to boost their SEO standings and guess what happened? They saw a:

  • 67% increase in number of pages ranked organically
  • 140% increase in impressions from organic search
  • 80% increase in clicks from organic search

In total, this led to a 48% increase in revenue per visit.

Product page SEO optimization isn’t just about ranking higher on Google and getting more site visits. The main goal here is to create a better user experience and give customers the exact information and visuals they need to make a confident purchase.

2. Put UGC front and center 

We know UGC is great for product page SEO. But it’s also what shoppers want to see when they’re browsing your digital (and physical) touchpoints. According to our recent survey, 74% of shoppers say they trust UGC more than branded content on product pages, and 55% are unlikely to buy a product without shopper content to inform their purchasing decisions.

UGC works because it provides the social proof shoppers need to inform decisions. According to Sabine Kaufmann, Head of e-commerce Operations Dining & Lifestyle, Villeroy & Boch, “user-generated content is one of the most trustworthy types of content a brand could show to their customers.”

Best Buy does a great job of displaying star ratings and review counts at the top of its product pages to help customers make confident purchasing decisions. On this listing for an iPad, shoppers will see that more than 3,400 customers have reviewed the product, and it has an average rating of 4.8 stars. 

Seeing an overall positive customer sentiment right away takes some of the risks out of buying an expensive item.

When it comes to collecting this UGC, diversifying your efforts is key because you’ll need a lot. You should consider leveraging review request emails and text messages, social media sweepstakes, and community requests. The most effective method for collecting UGC is product sampling, where you provide product samples in exchange for honest reviews or images. We surveyed 6,000 sampling recipients, and of those:

  • 63% purchased the product they sampled
  • 97% purchased at least one additional product from the brand

But according to Brandon, your best bet is using a range of solutions. These different strategies can kick-start your collection efforts, ensuring a constant supply of UGC across various methods simultaneously.

3. Respond to negative reviews and proactively address product shortfalls

Customers don’t mind if you have a few negative reviews for a product. They actually prefer it. We’ve seen that products with one or more negative reviews are perceived as more authentic and have higher conversion rates than those with a perfect 5-star rating or zero negative reviews. 

People also like responses to their negative reviews too — 54% of shoppers expect a response from the company if they write a negative review. The most successful e-commerce retailers use negative reviews as an opportunity to engage with customers, and identify potential product page improvements. The latter part is something Brandon called out specially in his presentation.

Negative reviews provide insights for improving products, which you can then update your product pages with. For example, several shoppers may leave a review saying that a pair of pants they ordered in their normal size ended up being too big. This negative feedback would allow your brand to update that product’s description to include helpful language like, “for a perfect fit, many customers prefer to size down.”

Children’s toy manufacturer KidKraft are pros at this. Watch Heather Stables, KidKraft’s Director of Consumer Engagement, explain how they use customer feedback to improve products and market messaging:

After recognising insights, the brand works on product page optimization to ensure copy matches the new product updates. They’ve since seen product improvement leading to an increase in sales.

Not only does utilizing customer feedback help consumers feel empowered to make better purchase decisions, but it can also prevent future negative reviews related to product description accuracy.

4. Distribute your content everywhere

Shoppers want a seamless transition as they engage with your brand through multiple channels, whether online, mobile, or in-store. 75% of shoppers expect a consistent brand experience regardless of channel, according to our Shopper Experience Index. Taking an omnichannel approach integrates your various channels to provide a consistent brand experience, letting you interact in the most convenient way.

Not having a robust omnichannel strategy is now a key barrier to success

Ainslie Fincham, Marketing Director, Urban Barn

An omnichannel strategy allows for quick adaptation to changing consumer preferences. It lets customers switch between channels without friction or loss of service, improving customer satisfaction and fosters loyalty.

Once you have this valuable content, it’s crucial to showcase it in all the right places — on social, in ads, on your product pages, and even in-store. You can do this by working with the right content syndication partner. By syndicating your content across all digital touchpoints, you ensure that customers can see it wherever they shop, maximizing your content ROI.

5. Make social content shoppable

Lastly, but certainly not least. Making your social content shoppable is by far one of the most important ways to increase your product page optimization. Social media is often the first place most shoppers will discover your brand, with 54% of consumers saying they often discover a product or service through social media. (That number rises to 73% for 18-24 year olds!)

They aren’t just scrolling past your products either, they’re making purchases. While the younger generations are leading this charge, even a quarter of shoppers aged 65+ purchased through social last year.

50% of all shoppers have purchased products through social media in the past year. So make sure that you’re turning social content into shoppable experiences that drive sales wherever your shoppers are. 

Shoppable content tools such as Like2buy turn your Instagram and TikTok Feeds into sales channels and Bazaarvoice Galleries brings authentic visual content from social into your website for you. For example Dreams, the UK’s leading bed specialist, uses Bazaarvoice Galleries to bring social UGC into its product pages and beyond, and has since seen a 200% lift in conversion rate.

Social is a great way to curate fresh, original, and authentic content that already exists, and has been created for you. But a recurring point Brandon makes around product page optimization is that channels shouldn’t be siloed. Put your social content across all channels and encourage purchase decisions everywhere your shoppers are.

4 product page optimization examples 

Let’s take a look at some of our favorite examples of product pages that convert. Note: Your product descriptions need to be easy to digest, especially because most customers are shopping from their mobile devices. By 2025, mobile e-commerce sales will account for 44% of retail e-commerce sales in the U.S. 

Iconic London

When it comes to makeup, authenticity reigns supreme. Shoppers want to see how different shades look on people who look like them, not in heavily curated brand imagery. Iconic London knows this and so brings in carousels of visual UGC from their community right onto their product pages.

product page optimization

Why it works: 

  • The average star rating and number of reviews at the top of the page provides proof that this is a well-loved product
  • Large imagery puts more social proof front and center
  • Authentic visual UGC from real customers using the product(s) at home helps shoppers understand what the product is and how it fits into their existing skincare routine

Neutrogena

Cosmetics is a product category that really requires detailed product pages because customers can’t see or swatch the item in person. On this product page for Neutrogena’s MoistureSmooth Color Stick, the company takes a UGC-first, product-second approach.

Why it works: 

  • A prominent design element halfway down the page includes a star rating and a quote from a customer about how the product feels in real life and how it works for their skin texture
  • The gallery of social media images from real customers provides more information about how the product works in action
  • The gallery encourages customers to “Share Your Glow” by tagging Neutrogena on Instagram or Twitter to be featured on the website
  • The “Most Helpful Reviews” callout highlights one positive and one negative review that other shoppers have found useful

Nourison

Buying an area rug online can be a challenge because it’s difficult for shoppers to understand how it will look and feel when it arrives. Rug brand Nourison helps ease customers’ minds by incorporating a lot of great UGC on its pages. 

how to optimize product pages

Why it works: 

  • A gallery of social photos shows how customers have used this rug in their actual homes 
  • The brand encourages future customers to share how they styled their rug at home by posting a picture on social media with the hashtag #Nourison
  • The page displays the average rating for the product and number of reviews at the very top to signal that hundreds of others have bought and loved this rug
  • The company uses short but detailed product descriptions and includes specs that tell customers where this rug would be best in their homes (a heavy-traffic area vs. a less-trafficked area)

Under Armour 

Our last example is a product page for an Under Amour shoe. The brand uses several tactics to help shoppers choose from the hundreds of shoes on its site. 

Why it works: 

  • Shoppers get a complete, 360-degree view of the shoe, so they know there won’t be any surprises when they receive the product 
  • Shoppers can filter reviews by rating, athlete type (casual or avid), size, and locale to see reviews that are more personalized to how they may be using the shoe 
  • When a shopper starts to scroll on the page, the “Add to Bag” CTA becomes a sticky banner so customers can quickly put the item in their cart once they’ve made a decision 

Take your product pages to the next level

Product page optimization may seem like a tedious task, but in the end, it will be well worth it. If shoppers have all the information they need to make a successful purchase, you’ll set yourself apart from your competitors and see much higher conversion rates across your digital shelf.

With the rise of digital, product page optimization has become critical for consumer attention and conversion. Watch our full on-demand masterclass outlining the 5-point audit for optimizing your product pages, covering key topics like organic search, social commerce, user-generated content, and insights.

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Community commerce: A guide for brands and retailers https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/community-commerce/ Fri, 03 May 2024 13:00:53 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=27861 Are you one of the millions of people who has viewed the #AerieREALpositivity video on TikTok — and possibly purchased Aerie clothing to take part in it? If yes, you’re definitely embodying the #TikTokMadeMeBuyIt trend — but also showcasing the content marketing power of community commerce

Community commerce, or content commerce, refers to entertaining content on platforms like TikTok, that also happens to feature products and connects viewers to brands. Thousands of brands are already benefiting from community commerce and there’s plenty of room for yours to join that list.

TikTokkers spend about 3% of their month on TikTok(!), giving ample time to spontaneously discover new brands. And they’re not just discovering brands, they’re buying from them too.

Last year, consumers spent $6.2 billion on TikTok and it recently became only the 5th app to ever gross $10 billion revenue. So if you haven’t jumped on the community commerce trend, here’s an overview of what it is, and why you should incorporate it into your marketing strategy. 

Chapters:

  1. What is community commerce? 
  2. How to get started with community commerce
  3. Community commerce strategies 
  4. Community commerce examples
  5. Win community commerce with social commerce

What is community commerce? 

Community commerce is a type of word-of-mouth marketing driven by creators, characterized by entertaining, compelling content that features products or brands. Also referred to as content commerce, community commerce is embodied by the #TikTokMadeMeBuyIt hashtag, which has 7.5 million posts and literally billions of views at the time of writing.

A shopping journey that might have taken 19 days before now takes 19 seconds

Ajay Salpekar, Head of Beauty & Personal Care, TikTok Shop

It works like this. You open up TikTok and stumble upon something on your For You page, and you’re inspired by it. You realize this cool new product exists. So you buy it right there in the app. A shopping journey that might have taken 19 days before now takes 19 seconds! Hear Ajay Salpekar, Head of Beauty & Personal Care at TikTok Shop expand on this below.

Shopping has always been a social- and community-driven event. But it’s shifted from shopping with a handful of friends at the local mall to TikTok and other social media platforms with virtual communities, composed of billions of members. 

Now creators — anyone with a phone and TikTok account! — are posting about your brand, adding hashtags, and tagging your products. And the key part is shoppers are discovering these products. 79% of users have discovered new brands through TikTok.

Through community commerce, you have a unique opportunity to build deeper connections with consumers by leveraging creators and their communities. You have a shot at authentically reaching a vast network of users looking for new things or discovering things they didn’t even know existed.

The rise of community commerce is rooted in the acceleration and widespread adoption of social commerce — the buying and selling of products on social media and everywhere social reaches. Social media has disrupted the purchase journey, which is now led by spontaneous discovery and inspiration, and no longer follows the traditional path.

How to get started with community commerce

During the recent Bazaarvoice Summit, Ajay Salpekar (reminder: Head of Beauty and Personal Care at TikTok Shop) talked about content commerce in the age of TikTok, where he outlined his recommendations for brands looking to join the community — whether enterprise level or a smaller team. Here’s his five main priorities for brands that see success:

  1. Be willing to experiment. In Ajay’s own words, when it comes to nailing shoppable content, “brands who have a learning mindset or a learner’s mindset tend to do better a lot faster.” By that he means you need to actually be open to testing and implementing new features and journey paths, and have an analytical mindset that can guide you on what’s working and what isn’t
  2. Relinquish control. One of the hardest aspects of getting started with community commerce is taking a step back and allowing creators to create in your name. Let creators create — they’re the experts after all! Besides, 67% of TikTokkers say they feel closer to brands that post humanized, unpolished content
  3. Partner up with a mix of creators. Creator content is the lifeblood of community commerce but every creator will suit different needs. The mega and celeb creators will have a massive reach for building brand awareness, but tend to see lower engagement. Whereas micro-influencers are fantastic at building authentic, relatable content for their niche audiences. To catch that full myriad of shoppers, work with a good mix of both
  4. Develop a holistic content plan. For the brand stewards out there, don’t stick to one content type. Build out your content supply chain with a mix of in-house, agency, and branded content. Don’t just assume one type will work best, use all of the above. And coming back to point #1 above, down the line you can use analytics to decide where to lean into more
  5. Don’t work in silos. The final point Ajay makes is an important one — media is still a brand’s greatest amplifier. Community commerce hasn’t changed that. The expertise of agency, brand, marketing, and e-commerce teams all apply but most teams still work in silos. In reality, brands see the most success in the content commerce world when they all partner together for shoppable content

Community commerce strategies 

Social media continues to be a source of inspiration, where consumers learn about new products. The social media community drives product awareness, purchase consideration, and conversion. And it doesn’t just apply to younger generations like Gen Z either! A common misconception, as research shows.

So, it’s no longer enough for brands to simply have a social media presence. You need to engage with consumers, tell a story, and establish your brand as likable. That’s where community commerce comes in. Here’s how.

1. Put authenticity on display 

Community commerce works best when brands and consumers share a sense of belonging and emotional connection. By blending community, entertainment, shopping, and brand messaging, you can inspire authentic but unique product discovery and influence purchases. 

Authenticity is crucial in community commerce. Even the cool kids with sleek branding need to jump down a level or two. On Instagram, you may add highly stylized photos to attract attention, but that doesn’t work on TikTok.

Community commerce is about being real. It’s a chance for your brand to be its authentic self — whether that’s silly, playful, or vulnerable. 

2. Entertainment drives action 

On platforms like TikTok, users don’t want to be advertised to. Instead, they’re looking for unique experiences that are fun and entertaining! Whether it’s a game, funny dance, or a quirky contest or challenge, let your creativity run wild and jump on the latest trends.

Consumers want to discover new content that comes to life — and they don’t care if that content also contains products or showcases brands. That’s the beauty of community commerce content.

Remember when Ocean Spray, the 90-year-old brand, got a big boost after a viral TikTok video a few years back? It showed a man lip-syncing the Fleetwood Mac song “Dreams,” while riding a longboard and swigging the brand’s cranberry juice. 

The more entertaining you are, the more authentic you are. Low-cost airline are well known for this and have amassed a massive following on TikTok with their funny vids.

@ryanair Is your friendship worth €8 #pascal #nicolascage #ryanair ♬ original sound – ghoulia

Their content gets people talking. And more buzz means higher awareness and product discovery, which translates to purchases and consumer engagement. 

3. Tap into creator- and user-generated content  

We’re in a a creator economy. With TikTok’s reach growing, the best way to reach these consumers is by partnering with creators and influencers who are already on the platform. Working with creators (NB: a mix of different types!) will drive awareness of your brand and help you come across as more relatable.

Let your everyday fans be your creators, too. Encouraging user-generated content (UGC), such as videos of consumers using your products, heightens the authenticity factor. Most consumers appreciate the chance to get creative and engage with their favorite brands.

Over half (53%) of shoppers identify themselves as UGC creators, according to our research, and 70% are happy to share their social content with brands when asked.

This approach will help you build new communities. Just encourage everyone to use hashtags related to your brand and product sector, like #beauty or #fashion. Community commerce content is quick to create. TikTok was designed to make content creation easy and expensive, and videos can be uploaded within minutes.

4. Make your content shoppable 

All of the above is pretty superfluous if users can’t purchase directly through the app. Remember, as consumers are watching funny dance or outlandish challenge videos, they’re discovering new products and being inspired to purchase. 54% of TikTok users have purchased a brand after seeing it on the platform. That’s the spirit of community commerce and why #TikTokMadeMeBuyIt has billions of views. But they can’t do that if your content isn’t shoppable!

TikTok Shop, for example, lets brands link their Shopify product catalogs, which will show up in the Shopping tab on your profile. Other e-commerce platforms, like Square and OpenCart, will be on board soon. You can also add product links to videos that feature your items. 

And link-in-bio solutions such as Like2Buy make all of your TikToks (and Instagrams!) shoppable without leaving the app.

5. Amplify your message beyond social

Social media shouldn’t be restricted to social! Towards the end of his Summit presentation, Ajay went on to explain that brands that do really well with media on TikTok are the ones that partner deeply with creators, and then very quickly turn on the taps for their media spend to amplify the messages that work well for the brand.

That means syndicating your creator content to everywhere else your shoppers are. Think product pages, emails, paid ads, and even in-store! Getting your content in front of shoppers everywhere they are means purchases can happen anywhere, anytime, instantly. Your bottom line will thank you for it.

Community commerce examples 

Brands are tapping into community commerce, energizing their customers, and driving sales in the process. Here’s three examples of community commerce in action.

Benefit Cosmetics

Benefit Cosmetics is a global beauty brand that decided to partner with TikTok Shop for their launch of Fan Fest Mascara, which was their biggest launch of the year. It was an exclusive launch with TikTok Shop, and they were the first brand to go live for 24 hours.

@gabriella__andrea @Benefit Cosmetics Fan Fest Mascara 9/10✨🫶🏻 • @Charlotte Tilbury magic cream & setting spray @loréal paris usa lumi glotion @Estée Lauder double wear foundation @tarte cosmetics sculpt tape & pressed powder deep tan (its broken lol) @e.l.f. Cosmetics @elfcosmetics monochromatic blush stick & lip stain @Milani berry amore blush & lip oil @maccosmetics @maccosmeticsusa stufio fix pressed powder @Laura Mercier loose setting powder @NYX Professional Makeup brow pencil @L.A. Girl Cosmetics lip liner @Too Faced an ancient highlight, bronze, blush palette im obsessed with! @Gisou hair oil @Gucci bloom perfume • #grwm #trending #gucci #guccibloom #makeuphacks #benefit #benefitcosmetics #fanfest #fanfestmascara #benefitfanfestmascara #benefitfanfest ♬ hits different speed up – elly

Since launch, they’ve had over 500 videos made featuring Fan Fest, with upwards of 63 million views. But more importantly, sales of the Fan Fest Mascara even outpaced their own e-commerce site with 48,000 units sold.

Maybelline 

In an effort to boost its brand image and emotional connection with Gen Z shoppers, Maybelline worked with TikTok beauty creator @jessica.eid_ and others to promote its Lash Sensational Sky HIgh Mascara and other products. The overall campaign brought in:

  • 20 million impressions
  • 553,000 engagements
  • 20% increase in sales

Not only that, but the mascara went viral, with a 49% increase in sales during the week of the promotion and a 190% increase month-over-month. The mascara also sold out on Ulta Beauty’s website four times over. 

American Eagle

Apparel brand American Eagle partnered with TikTok star Addison Rae on the #InMyAEJeans back-to-school branded hashtag challenge in 2020. The campaign asked TikTok users to make a video with American Eagle’s song while wearing their favorite jeans from the brand.

Using the hashtag #InMyAEJeans for a chance to be featured in a duet with Rae. After the campaign, American Eagle had:

  • 432,000 TikTokkers making 800,000 videos
  • 7 billion views for the campaign

In another campaign, American Eagle’s Aerie line saw its OFFLINE crossover leggings sell out multiple times after TikTok influencer @hannahschlenker posted a video about them to her more than 800,000 followers. The video went viral, attracting nearly 900,000 likes. 

Win community commerce with social commerce 

Social media offers the potential to reach billions of people and an infinite number of communities. Engaging these consumers depends on creating fun, entertaining content that shows off your products in an authentic, meaningful way. 

Brands are already demonstrating the benefits of community commerce on TikTok. These strategies can help you kickstart your own community commerce strategy — so that you can foster emotional connections with shoppers that inspire them to get to know your brand and make a purchase or two.

And that’s only the beginning. Want to turn social content into shoppable experiences that drive sales wherever shoppers are? Read The ultimate guide to social commerce conversion to discover how.

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The creator economy: Definition, benefits, and trends https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/the-creator-economy/ Wed, 01 May 2024 16:59:47 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=28628 Your brand is no longer yours. Creators have increasing influence over other consumers’ purchase decisions, and your brand is what they say it is. But that’s not a bad thing! In this creator economy, brands can harness the amazing potential of bringing more creator- and user-generated content into their content supply chains.

The creator economy market size is already valued over $100 billion and predicted to reach half a trillion dollars by 2027. 🤯 This shows how shopping is evolving, what people think about authentic voices, and how the people that most influence shoppers’ lives has changed. 

Let’s take a look at what the creator economy is, why creator content is valuable, how brands can leverage the creator economy, and the current and upcoming trends we’re seeing in the market.

What is the creator economy?

First, let’s define what a creator is. Content creators are people who produce and share material (think videos, blogs, photos, and social media posts) to engage and influence their audience. Often, they collaborate with brands to promote products and services.

So when we talk about a creator economy, we mean an ecosystem of brands, audience-shoppers, and creators who monetize their content through sponsorships, brand partnerships, merchandise sales, and direct audience support. Brands leverage these creators to reach targeted audiences, boost engagement, and drive marketing campaigns.

This is really changing how we think about what content is, and how you get your message to audiences that were never before possible. Some stats to put the creator economy into perspective:

  • There are over 300 million global content creators — these creators are typically operating on at least two platforms
  • 51% of advertisers will be significantly more focused on creator ad spending in 2024
  • The creator economy is expected to grow to $480 billion by 2027 — up from $250 billion in 2023
  • Brands are anticipating increasing creator content budgets by 25% in 2024
  • 39% of consumers watch more creator content now than the year prior

This shows how quickly the creator economy is being legitimized. For example look no further than Addison Rae, one of the most popular influencers out there, who just starred in a Super Bowl commercial. It’s a huge opportunity for your brand to work with creators!

And one quick note: you might hear “creators” and “influencers” used interchangeably, but they’re really distinct. Influencers are trendsetters who can convince people to buy things. They might be celebrities, or just folks with lots of followers on social media. Creators, on the other hand, make the actual content (videos, photos, reviews) that can grab shopper attention. Can a creator be an influencer? Absolutely — if their content influences a purchase decision.

Benefits of the creator economy

The digital space is competitive and it’s getting harder to reach audiences purely with digital ad spend. Working with creators gives you an opportunity to connect with consumers, with more relevant and cost-effective content.

Hear Bazaarvoice’s own Global Head of Community Growth & Engagement, Terry Hurlbutt, outline some of these opportunities below in this short clip from her Bazaarvoice Summit presentation on creator economy trends and social shopping strategies.

Expanding on from Terry’s expertise, let’s look into other benefits of the creator economy.

Boost authenticity

Creators build their brand(s) on making genuine connections with their audiences. They’re bringing their followers into their success, pitfalls, and even their stories of vulnerability in their daily lives. And that builds real connection. A connection strong enough that when they do offer a product, even in a paid partnership, their audiences are still really interested in learning more about the product their favorite creators share with them.

100% of shoppers we surveyed have purchased products based on a creator’s recommendations, which circles back to that trust that the creator has built with their audience. If you follow someone who posts daily and you enjoy their content, you’re more inclined to go and get a product they enjoy.

So there’s a real authenticity (and sales!) boost when you partner with creators.

More relevant content

By its nature, the creator economy makes content more relevant to shoppers. What’s so helpful here is that this user-generated content, content created by creators, helps consumers see how products look in a “real world” setting versus branded content, which still has a place but doesn’t necessarily show you that same real-world experience. 

We tend to see higher engagement when visual UGC is integrated with branded content. According to our research, the majority of shoppers want to see both branded photos (83%) and shopper photos (76%) to make a confident purchase on product pages.

There’s also the amazing opportunity for creator content to help you increase your audience engagement and reach. Shoppers are more likely to follow their favorite brands. And so the more creator content you have in your social mix, that’s more likely to pay off because they’re already following you on social. 

Keep up with content demands

We need a lot of content.

Everyone working in the creator economy realm and social sphere knows how much time and effort is spent really trying to beat those pesky algorithms and stand out in a crowded social marketplace.

Over 500 hours of content is uploaded to YouTube every minute, 34 million videos uploaded a day on TikTok, and on Instagram there’s over 66,000 photos uploaded per minute. By comparison, those couple of pieces of branded content you upload per week aren’t even a drop in the ocean.

Rather than increasing investment to produce more content in-house, partner with creators who can pack your content supply chain with a steady flow of authentic content for you. Tapping into existing communities of creators like the Influenster community ensures your brand benefits from an always-on source of fresh content.

The creator economy will continue to evolve, such is the nature of working in the social. It’s important to in the loop. With that, as experts in the creator partnerships space, these are the latest creator economy trends we’re most excited about!

Brand storytelling 

Do you ever find yourself a little worried sometimes because social media algorithms are just too good? Let’s say you’re a parent so you check out an account talking about parenting hacks. The next thing you know your whole Explore page is full up of parenting hacks and ideas.

Your Reels are full of tips and tricks for parenting, cooking, and staying organized in the midst of child-rearing. Whether it’s through memes or people sharing their tough moments of the day, they really resonate with you. You feel grateful for that connection. They make a significant impact on your life, and you’re deeply thankful for them.

This is brand storytelling in action. These trends that speak directly to your audience’s personal experiences and connect them to your brand. The power of social media and the creator economy recognizes the diverse voices and perspectives that contribute to your sense of community.

Video content

First it killed the radio star, now video is coming for your static images. 89% of consumers want to see more videos from brands this year. What video does that static images can’t is really show shoppers your products actually in use. Whether it’s how to build something, how a jacket looks in motion, how to assemble something, etc. Video provides a whole new avenue.

Let your analytics decide for you whether static images or video works best, but between IG Reels and TikTok’s boom, video is a trend that can’t be ignored for much longer. TikTok shops intend to grow the business 10x this year, hoping to get to about $17.5 billion revenue, so video provides commerce opportunities also.

Livestream shopping

Another potentially lucrative angle for the creator economy is livestream shopping. Still in its infancy, it’s one of the most closely followed industry trends. Already big in China and other parts of Asia, livestream shopping has been gradually making its way stateside and consumers are taking note.

Livestream shopping provides brands with a new, engaging way to get products in front of shoppers — who can purchase them instantly! 

How brands can succeed in the creator economy

Do you want to work with creators but you’re not sure where to start? Or maybe you’re experienced with influencer outreach and need a refresher? Here’s the best practices to follow.

Work with the right creator(s)

Not every creator will be the right fit for your brand. When you’re choosing creators to work with, influence (reach, engagement, brand values, and audience relationships) is more important than just their number of followers — 72% of consumers don’t actually care about follower counts and smaller audiences tend to see higher engagement anyway.

There’s a lot of different creators out there who may have smaller follower counts, but who will align more closely with your brand, and would make more impact. The priority should be finding creators who align with your brand values and style, and letting them go and create.

@bazaarvoiceofficial 📣 PSA: leverage the Creator Economy! Let creators create in their own authentic style💃 #socialmediaweek #smw #smm  #creatoreconomy @adweek ♬ Taste It – TELL YOUR STORY music by Ikson™

Lean into the expertise of your creators. You’re partnering with them because they know exactly the best way to connect with their audiences. And because they put out content every day, they have their finger on the pulse of what works best.

When you reach out to them, just be very honest and clear about what you’re looking for and what your expectations are. Working with high-quality, brand-safe creators is really important. Tools like Bazaarvoice affable.ai can help you find, identify, reach out to, and manage relationships and campaigns with these creators on a long-term basis.

Pick the right platform

TikTok is an entertainment platform first and a social platform second. So be entertaining. Brands can reach new audiences by engaging with this form of entertainment. A good example is Prose. The hair care brand went outside of their traditional creator demographic and partnered with a comedic TikTok influencer to endorse them, and they reached a whole new audience through this.

And large gaming communities already exist, which provide a natural platform for digital expansion.

For example, clothing giant Gucci teamed up with Rook Vanguard, a creator for online game platform Roblox. Together, they built the Gucci Garden Experience which allowed users to explore various boutiques of virtual items.

Use your everyday creators

Regular people are creating every day. If you have a phone and an Instagram account, you’re a part of the creator economy. Which is why at Bazaarvoice, we always advise that the most effective change you can make is using this user-generated content from everyday people.

Not only is UGC considered more trustworthy and influential, it also supports stronger brand storytelling as we mentioned earlier. Something a lot of brands struggle with on social media. Storytelling with UGC naturally leads to the community because you’re highlighting end users, and oftentimes those who were not paid, but just simply love your products.

And UGC doesn’t just tell a story, it drives sales too. 54% of shoppers say they’d be more likely to buy a product on social media if they could click the post and get product info right on the platform. Before, if you scrolled past a t-shirt you liked on Instagram, you’d then have to Google the brand and try and find the t-shirt manually. Now though, with an effective social commerce solution, shoppers can go directly from app to checkout. No fuss!

Sharing community content helps grow your social media presence and builds positive relationships with your customers. Leading to better advocacy, repeat customers, and increased sales. Creator-generated content is out there, you just need to go out and find it.

Have a budget

When you’re just starting out with creator outreach, budget can be as big or small as you want. It just depends on what you’re ready to do from an investment standpoint. If you’re treating it more like a pilot, maybe try to look for five, six creators and learn from that.

But there’s no benchmark answer. It depends on where you are in your creator marketing cycle and also just what your overall marketing budget for the year is. But 75% of brands and retailers spend over 60% of their budget on branded content — free up some space and costs with UGC creators.

Sample your products

If you want everyday shoppers posting content about your brand (reminder: you do!) you need to get your products in their hands. Product sampling is how you do it. A hyper-targeted product sampling campaign ensures you:

  • Launch products with a bang by collecting reviews and imagery from your community pre-launch
  • Give life core products by generating fresh reviews
  • Learn valuable customer feedback to improve messaging and identify new market opportunities

Getting started in the creator economy

In the consumer-to-consumer era we’re living in, it’s creators who are your new storefront. They’re not only creating original content, but they’re influencing other shoppers. Consumers no longer rely on content or marketing from brands, they rely on authentic UGC created by their fellow shoppers. That’s what’s going to influence them to make a purchase, not you.

The creator economy is not a passing trend, it’s essential for the success of your business.

The first step to getting started with the creator economy is to leverage UGC, and those who are creating it. But not all content is created equally. You’ll want to make sure you find the right creator(s) for your brand and team up with a platform that can combine the power of creators with social commerce solutions.

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How to create a 5-star personalized customer journey https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/how-to-create-a-5-star-personalized-customer-journey/ Tue, 16 Apr 2024 16:23:34 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=51388 This is a guest post by Bazaarvoice partner Monetate, a leading provider in personalization technology. Here they’ll talk through how they work with one of our shared clients, The Exchange, to create a 5-star, personalized customer journey.



Did you have a chance to attend the Bazaarvoice Summit 2024?

If so, then we hope you had the chance to catch an amazing presentation from our client, Army & Air Force Exchange Service, aka The Exchange. Both Monetate and Bazaarvoice have the honor of working with The Exchange.

At Monetate, we work closely with their team to provide personalized experiences and relevant content for their customers shopping at their online store at shopmyexchange.com.

During the Bazaarvoice Summit, Shane Binion, E-commerce Marketing Manager, The Exchange, shared with attendees how his team is leveraging Monetate Personalization to build personalized experiences for active military, retirees, veterans, their families, and other personnel across the entire customer journey.

We’re proud to play a role in helping The Exchange to make the customer journey easier and more personalized, featuring trusted information from other shoppers when making purchases online.

Here we’re going to talk about The Exchange’s mission and how we support them in their endeavor.

Chapters:

  1. What is the customer journey?
  2. Why personalization matters for the customer journey
  3. How to serve up personalized content
  4. The impact of personalization on The Exchange’s customer journey

What is the customer journey?

The customer journey encompasses all the experiences customers undergo while engaging with your company and brand. Rather than focusing solely on isolated transactions or encounters, it captures the entirety of the customer experience.

In essence, it’s the series of steps a shopper takes to them becoming a customer. Optimizing the customer journey through personalization provides a better shopping experience, which leads to more purchases — personalization can increase revenue by up to 15%. For example, let’s look at The Exchange.

Why personalization matters for the customer journey

Serving an eligible customer base of 33.4 million shoppers worldwide, The Exchange is the US Department of Defense’s largest retailer.

The Exchange provides goods and services for the Army, Air Force, Space Force, Navy, Marines, and the Coast Guard. If you’ve ever been on a military base, then you might be familiar with PXs and BXs – The Exchange operates those locations too.

Their website features goods and services from top brands, including Nike, Graco, Disney, Lego, The Home Depot, Lego, Samsung, and more. All purchases are tax-free, feature exclusive military pricing, and 100% of The Exchange’s earnings support the military community.

For Shane Binion and his team, they use automated personalization and product recommendations to provide a superior user experience when shopping online.

When it comes to an e-commerce strategy, the following initiatives are important to The Exchange:

  • Build and maintain trust and loyalty in a highly competitive retail environment
  • Deliver on customer expectation of personalization when shopping online
  • Serve dynamic product recommendations depending on where the customer is on the site or in the sales funnel

Just how do they accomplish these e-commerce and personalization goals?

How to serve up personalized content

It’s important for The Exchange to provide the most personalized and smoothest experience for every customer across the whole shopping journey. Shane and his team use personalized content in several different ways to serve their customers.

First, it’s important to note that only active military, veterans, their families and other military personnel past and present can shop on The Exchange’s website. Therefore, to shop, customers have to login as members.

What makes this shopping experience unique is that The Exchange has a wealth of first-party data about each customer. By the nature of their business, they know who their customers are, their location, their military branch, and more.

Here’s how this data, alongside Monetate Personalization, leads to personalized content.

Branch specific banners

Thanks to first-party member data, The Exchange knows what branch of the military their customers belong to. Therefore, they can serve products by branch – Army, Air Force and Space Force, etc., for a truly customized shopping experience.

Weather specific banners

Are members expecting rain? Snow? Cold temperatures? With geolocation from Monetate, The Exchange knows where their customers are located and what the predicted weather forecast is for their region.

For customers expecting stormy weather, The Exchange serves targeted banners promoting rain gear. For regions expecting snow and cold weather, customers see banners promoting winter gear.

The banners are scheduled to start appearing two days before the predicted weather situation, giving members time to purchase umbrellas, coats and other supplies to prepare for the weather conditions.

Become a military star

Another service provided by The Exchange is the Military Star credit card. Thanks to customer data, The Exchange knows which customers have the credit card and who does not.

For customers that don’t have the Military Star credit card, they’re served with a promotion to sign up, increasing the number of members to get the credit card.

Testing web banners

As any marketer and merchandiser can tell you, testing is important and necessary when building out the customer journey online. With Monetate, you can continue to experiment and build out your findings for refinement.

The Exchange leveraged Monetate to test whether placing “Story Elements” above “Shop By Category Elements” would end up increasing customer engagement and the depth of the customer drive.

But what The Exchange found is that this theory only worked for Patio, Garden & Garage, where placing “Story Elements” above “Shop By Category” resulted in a boost in average order value by +13%.

For all other categories results were flat, suggesting that customers tend to respond better to “Shop By Category” being higher up on the page.

The Exchange also conducted some tests around their homepage banner.

They felt their current style was too cluttered and distracting. They wanted to test whether a new banner that would take the visitor to a PLP (product landing page), featuring multiple CTA banners would be more effective and result in more clicks.

But what The Exchange found was that the metrics between the two experiences were flat. Customers responded to the complex banner the same as the simpler banner. Armed with these findings, The Exchange can keep refining the UX and customer journey on the website and impacting key metrics.

Product recommendations help customers find what they love

The Exchange has also done some incredible work in product recommendations leveraging Monetate.

They currently have 10 containers that are live and expanding. They also target both new and returning visitors, with trending items and actively promote cross sell items towards the end of the conversion funnel. On top of that, they’re even working on building a Deal’s Page to recommend sale items to help customers get a great deal.

As we discussed earlier, The Exchange honors the individual military branches customers belong to when shopping online. This strategy also rolls over into product recommendations, with The Exchange targeting various product recommendations based on branch of service.

One other fun example is how The Exchange leverages product recommendations and sports fandom. The Exchange has a Fan Shop where sport items, like team jerseys, are recommended to shoppers based on their team preferences.

The impact of personalization on The Exchange’s customer journey

Through working with The Exchange and with Shane and his team, Monetate has been key in helping the team to deliver success.

In 2023 alone, the team delivered 53 million personalized experiences, influencing 7.1% of revenue. Shane and his team also launched 104 digital experiences through the Monetate platform. So far, in 2024, The Exchange is on track for even more growth, delivering 4.8 million personalized sessions in January alone, influencing 4.4% of revenue.

We look forward to our continued work with The Exchange as they continue their personalization of the customer journey. Eager to hear more? Watch Monetate and The Exchange’s full on-demand Summit session right here.


We’re better together. Interested in becoming a Bazaarvoice partner? Apply here!

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The guide to increasing conversions with retargeting marketing https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/retargeting-marketing/ Fri, 29 Mar 2024 10:51:16 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=51095 Only 2.4% of e-commerce website visits end in a purchase. So basically if your e-commerce website came with store associates to ask, “Can I help you find anything today?” over 97% of responses would be something along the lines of “No thanks, I’m just browsing.” That doesn’t mean that the majority of your audience is uninterested — just that they’re not ready to buy yet. One of the best ways to convert these casual browsers into buyers is via retargeting marketing.

You’ve been served retargeting ads before, some more effectively than others. Some sites (not naming names, Amazon) love to retarget you with ads for items you’ve already bought. These ads are useless when the item they’re showing is one you (hopefully) won’t need to repurchase soon, like a toaster or a pair of headphones.

But sometimes, you see that cute top you were waffling over, or those pants you love now come in another color…and they’re on sale. 

retargeting marketing
Amazon retargeting with unnecessary recommendations

This is the kind of retargeting you want your company to do: the kind that reaches high-potential buyers with info that will convince them to convert. Campaigns that can do this are a great option for online retailers, especially small and mid-sized outfits. They have a fantastic ROI and can help you increase sales among newcomers as well as returning customers.  

Okay, but what if you’ve never done retargeting marketing before? It may seem like a big world to jump into, especially given the looming changes to third-party cookies. But you don’t need to feel overwhelmed. Here’s how to sell your boss (or your boss’s boss) on green-lighting a campaign — and how to launch and administer it so their investment proves itself worthwhile. 

Chapters:

  1. What is retargeting in marketing?
  2. Three benefits of retargeting marketing
  3. Elements of a good retargeting ad campaign
  4. How to get started with retargeting marketing
  5. Win at retargeting marketing with contextualization


What is retargeting in marketing?

Retargeting marketing campaigns exist to reach out to prospects who have already shown interest in your company or products in the hopes of convincing them to buy. The clue’s in the name.

As a marketer, you probably know the rule of seven. This guideline tells us that most customers need to encounter a brand at least seven times before making a purchase. It’s a concept that was born pre-internet but has been reaffirmed multiple times in the digital age.

Retargeting helps your brand reach that magic number by tracking your online visitors across the web to serve them branded ads. You can use retargeting for display ads on any website or to reach your prospects on social media. 

And now that the modern e-commerce funnel has changed (read: collapsed) and purchases can happen anywhere at any time, retargeting marketing increases your chances of driving purchases even further.

Preferably, these ads call back to a shopper’s interactions with your brand and products. Even if your target doesn’t click an ad, seeing it will increase their familiarity with your brand while keeping their shopping (sorry, browsing) experience top-of-mind.

The idea is to build enough trust and remind your would-be buyers about your products enough times to finally earn that sale. 

Three benefits of retargeting marketing

Anyone can launch and benefit from a retargeting marketing campaign. However, the upsides are especially big for small and mid-sized retailers. National and multinational brands have more to spend on marketing and, therefore, have a much easier time staying top-of-mind with audiences.

Retargeting marketing allows your small brand to do more with less and reach niche audiences much more easily.

1. Generate (targeted) awareness for less

Because people typically need familiarity with a brand before they choose to buy, merchants have to do a lot of work upfront to woo potential customers. Large brands can plaster the web (and the physical world) with ads and other buzzy marketing campaigns. Smaller brands simply don’t have that luxury.

Retargeting allows you to build awareness on a budget by focusing on a narrower (and high-potential) audience. When you spend money to retarget people who have heard of your brand and products at least once, you’re speaking to an audience that’s already somewhat engaged.

You’re not spending money on thousands of views that won’t result in any interest, you’re being smart with your ad spend to find those who already are. 

2. Easily promote new items or collections

A successful product launch requires significant investment in marketing. As with your awareness campaigns, using retargeting allows you to make a smaller investment without losing your chance to make a splash. 

Done well, retargeting allows you to segment your audience by behavior and/or interest. You can use your existing retargeting lists to pinpoint would-be buyers who are most likely to care about a new product.

For instance, shoppers who have previously looked at women’s activewear might want to know about those new yoga pants in stock. Those who have been browsing your phone cases might be a good target for ads sharing your stylish new power banks.

3. Increase customer lifetime value (CLV)

You don’t have to limit your retargeting efforts to prospective customers — why not reach out to those who have already bought from you to see if you can entice them to return? You can share a new product as mentioned above or maybe to let them know your company’s having a sale. If you sell items that need to be replenished regularly, maybe showing a new series of ads every other month will remind them and bring them back to your store.

Retargeting gives you a way to do personalized marketing on a small scale and effectively reach audiences who are likely to make a purchase. 

Elements of a good retargeting ad campaign

A retargeting marketing campaign isn’t guaranteed to work just because you’re reaching out to customers who have recently expressed interest in your brand. Your ads still need to speak to your audience’s needs and desires and reach them in the right place and at the right time.

Keep your campaigns effective by following these criteria.

Highly specific ads

Retargeting campaigns aren’t just about reminding people your brand exists. It’s about reminding people why they were interested in your brand to begin with. That’s why these ads typically feature products rather than generic brand imagery or content.

The more your ad speaks to a target’s reason for visiting your site in the first place, the better chance it has of achieving its desired goal — to bring them back so they’ll complete the purchase. Display the exact item(s) your target viewed, products within the same category or that share a use case, or items you know are popular among the demographic your target is part of. 

Specific ads give viewers a concrete reason to check out your site again, and when they come to your store with that reason in mind, they’re more likely to make a purchase.  

Coordinated landing pages

This is a must-have for any ad campaign, and it’s no different in the world of retargeting marketing. Your ads are specific, so your landing pages must be, too. 

Ads that tout the product someone was looking at but then bounce them to your homepage will leave a bad taste in your audience’s mouth by wasting their time. They know what they are after — so take them straight to it, explain the benefits, and make the purchase easy to complete

Adequate longevity

Retargeting campaigns aren’t one-and-done. You’re looking to slowly build up familiarity with and trust in your brand. That means you should expect and want your audience members to view your retargeting ads more than once. You’ve caught them during a decision period, and you want to keep reaching them as they weigh your brand and product against other options.

The length of the decision period varies from product to product — someone who’s looking for a new TV is likely to spend more time browsing reviews than someone who just wants a fun new accessory for their summertime socializing. 

One thing to keep in mind is how often during the decision period a person sees your ads. Especially if they’re likely to spend a lot of time considering different options, constantly bombarding them with ads is more likely to annoy them than to win them over.

Most brands set frequency caps on retargeting ads for this exact reason, so no one feels like you’re following them around incessantly. 

Smart targeting

Retargeting ads are meant to go after potential buyers, but not everyone who visits your site is one of those. Don’t let these campaigns exceed their usefulness by casting too wide a net. 

For example, targeting everyone who hits your homepage will mean a lot of money spent on people who looked around and decided your brand didn’t match their needs. The same goes for targeting someone who spent ten seconds on a product page before bouncing. 

Make sure your retargeting marketing is aimed at individuals who have engaged with your brand. What that means may vary based on your industry and typical customer behaviors, but typically, it involves interacting with a product page by looking at product details or reading reviews, visiting multiple pages on your site, or signing up for an account. 

How to get started with retargeting marketing

Sold yet? If not, we’ll wait while you refresh yourself on the small percentage of buyers who actually make a purchase on any given visit to your e-commerce store. If yes, we hope you’re ready to get started — because jumping in doesn’t have to be a big deal. 

Don’t be afraid to start small with retargeting. Your initial campaigns can help you gather data and prove the effectiveness of the method. Here’s how to launch your very first one. 

Add a retargeting pixel to your website (and start gathering customer data)

The very first step in launching a retargeting campaign is finding ways to identify your audience so you can find them elsewhere online. You’ll want to add the Google Remarketing Tag and Facebook’s Conversions API to your site. 

Note that Google’s retargeting tag may not be helpful for long. In response to customer demands for more privacy (and governmental pushes for the same), third-party cookies like the tracking pixel are being phased out. Google is already blocking them for a small percentage of browser users and testing new advertising tools and techniques on that population. The company is still refining its new ad offerings, but it seems traditional cookie-based retargeting won’t have an analog in this new system. 

Therefore, you need to get something a bit more stable than a browser cookie. Facebook’s Conversions API is one example of a tool that will outlast this change — other sites may or may not release their own. You can take matters into your own hands by convincing visitors to sign up for your email list or share their phone number for text message marketing purposes.

Once third-party cookies are gone for good, customers’ contact information will be the best, if not the only, way to retarget them.

You can retarget ads through multiple platforms: Google Display Network, the Google SERP, and social media sites, including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and TikTok. (Note that the latter two also have their own retargeting pixels for you to install if you choose to use these platforms.)

The setup for each site is a little different, so we’ll let them explain best practices to you. 

For now, you may simply need to follow the steps on each site to set up your third-party cookies. However, if the option is available, we recommend you get used to uploading your email lists. You’ll have to start doing it someday, so why not build the foundations for your next-gen retargeting efforts now? 

As a plus, you can start learning how to best segment these audiences when cookies aren’t doing all the work for you.

Segment your audience by behavior and preferences

Personalized ads tend to work better, and the best way to personalize retargeting ads is by looking at what your customers do on your site. Of course, this type of retargeting marketing may become more time-intensive once third-party cookies are fully out of the picture. Still, let’s talk a little bit about what this kind of retargeting can do.

Even if your store has a very narrow niche, your shoppers likely came to the site looking for a specific item or type of product. The more you know about what they were after, the better; you can reach them with retargeting ads that promote the product or product category they were browsing. Ads that understand your audience’s needs will, of course, do a better job of bringing them back to your site.  

However, this type of retargeting requires the ability to track each user closely and then transmit their browsing data to an ad server, which will become much harder when third-party cookies are no longer allowed. It may be easier to build retargeting ad campaigns around your most popular products — the ones that your visitors are more likely to have looked at or at least know about.

You can then break out these ads by demographic, so you have a campaign aimed at millennial women, one for Gen Z women, one for millennial men, and so on.

Finally, sometimes audience behavior isn’t just about what they view on your site, it’s about how far they get in the customer journey. A person who browses your site for ten minutes has a different relationship to your brand than one who makes an account, and that person needs a different approach than one who put some items in their cart but then decided not to buy. 

To recap, here’s the ways you can segment your audience (and tailor ads accordingly):

  • By product viewed: Serve ads that show the exact product(s) a visitor viewed on your site. This reminds viewers of the item they liked while building brand awareness and trust. 
  • By product category: Serve ads that display the same type of products (for example, women’s going-out tops or healthy snacks) a visitor viewed on your site. This keeps your brand top-of-mind for any shopping your audience wishes to do in the same area.
  • By audience demographic: Serve ads that speak to the various market segments you serve, whether that’s different generations or just “people who like running” vs. “people who like swimming.” These ads promote the demographic’s most-bought items to invite audiences to get in on a trend with your brand.
  • By onsite behavior: Serve ads that target the most engaged customers — those who abandoned their carts (or, if your site has the capability, those who favorited items or added them to a wishlist). Use this campaign to remind shoppers of the items they almost bought and invite them to come back and finish the purchase.

Of course, there’s multiple ways to dice up audiences within each of these options. Choose one to get started with, and try different methods of targeting (or different types of ads) to see what works best. Or save time and work with a contextualization partner who can segment for you based on AI-powered insights.

Convince on-the-fence shoppers with UGC-based ads

Now, it’s time to create the actual ads! You’ve likely seen retargeting ads that follow you around the web with product pictures. They’re noticeable because of the familiarity, but this format doesn’t bring a lot to the table in terms of convincing audiences to give you a second look.

Ads that feature user-generated content (UGC) stand out and have a better chance of connecting with your audience. Imagine if, instead of seeing that set of dinnerware displayed against a white background, you saw an ad that showed the dinnerware in use at a fantastic party. Or, if the ad used reviews to tell you previous buyers thought it was “sturdy enough that you don’t have to worry about putting it in the dishwasher, despite the decorations.” 

These authentic product experiences can only be found in UGC, and they do a lot more to build trust because they show that other people trust you, too. 

Choose or create landing pages for your retargeting campaign

Whether you’re using existing pages as the target of your ads or creating new ones, make sure the content of the page matches what people saw in the ad. If your retargeting campaigns feature one item, you can probably just link audiences to that product page. Just make sure it’s easy for them to buy the item once they get there.

However, if you’re featuring more than one item in your retargeting ads, consider linking to a collection or product category.

The other option is to create a unique landing page with the item(s) you featured and a streamlined checkout — in other words, to save shoppers the hassle of doing the add to cart > visit cart > check out dance. You may see more conversions from this type of page, especially if you target it toward people who spent a long time on an item’s product page or denoted their interest in some other way. 

Either way, think about including UGC on your landing page as well. We’ll assume you already have reviews turned on, but do you share product videos or images, including the one(s) you used in your ad campaign? Showing that media again will make the interaction feel more cohesive and remind users why they clicked on your ad in the first place. 

Set your budget for your retargeting campaigns

You don’t have to spend a lot on retargeting campaigns to be successful. It’s possible to start off with just a few dollars a day when you’re only looking to reach a very small number of people. If you’ve never done retargeting marketing before, we recommend starting small. Retargeting tool AdRoll suggests smaller retailers can launch a campaign with around $50 per day

If even that’s a difficult sell to make, it might help to remind stakeholders that your budget will determine the quality of the results and data you gather. You shouldn’t build a campaign off “insights” you gathered from ten or twenty people. Likewise, hitting a larger number of people for a very limited amount of time (say, a week or two) is unlikely to show results because retargeting is about repeated exposure to your brand and products. 

Marketers who face budget constraints may consider limiting ads to one platform — try starting with your best-performing social site if you’re in this situation. You can also set frequency caps to make sure you don’t pop up in any one person’s feed too often. This allows you to keep the scope small without hampering your ability to retarget a good number of visitors. 

Track important retargeting metrics

The most important metrics in a retargeting campaign are your click-through rate (CTR), conversion rate, and cost per conversion. You may track other data points as well to help you understand how many touches it takes to convince a target to return to your site and how many people come back even if they still aren’t ready to buy. But these are the big three.

  • Click-through rate tells you how effective your ads are. You can compare your CTR across platforms to see which method is the best for reaching consumers, and across campaigns to see which ads are enticing the most customers to return to your site
  • Conversion rate tells you how many of those clicks result in a sale. This is where you get the ROI from your retargeting marketing efforts, so you want to make sure you have these numbers on hand to prove your experiment is working!
  • Cost per conversion helps you understand how efficient your ad campaign is. It helps you understand how retargeting ads perform compared to your other (non-retargeting) campaigns. This is another number that can work as justification to support continued retargeting efforts

Of course, not all retargeting campaigns result in someone clicking the ad and making a purchase — they may return to your site on their own accord after viewing a certain number of ads. While this behavior can’t be directly attributed to your ads (at least right now), keep track of when this happens. 

You may find your ad campaigns correlate with changes like a smaller gap between first visit and eventual purchase, visitors needing fewer site visits before they make a purchase, or other behavioral indicators that your ads are making a difference. 

Win at retargeting marketing with contextualization

The magic of retargeting marketing is that these ads directly respond to consumer actions, making personalization easy. You’re addressing a warm lead instead of trying to nurture a new one. Of course, this means you have to retarget your audience soon after their visit to your site.

Retargeting campaigns can’t be set up as a response to consumer behaviors, they have to be prepped and ready to deploy as soon as an individual shows sufficient interest.

You don’t have time to waste when setting up your retargeting marketing. Even if the first ads aren’t perfect (and when are they ever?), it’s more important to reach people while your brand and products are still top-of-mind. So, don’t let hesitation hold you back. Get started with a limited-scope retargeting campaign that uses UGC you’ve already gathered. Then, watch those customers who are “just browsing” come back and engage further with your brand. 

Retargeting is all about serving personalized ads based on user behaviors. Watch our new on-demand masterclass How contextualization is transforming online shopping to learn more tips that will boost your retargeting (and other marketing) campaigns. 

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The benefits of social shopping across different industries https://www.bazaarvoice.com/blog/the-benefits-of-social-shopping-across-different-industries/ Mon, 25 Mar 2024 09:51:38 +0000 https://www.bazaarvoice.com/?p=50981 What were once weekend mall trips are now social media scrolls. With Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and other social titans rolling out social shopping practices, the thrill of discovery and the joy of buying can happen within a single platform. Anywhere with phone service, at any time.

That’s pretty great for customers. But it’s also a huge opportunity for your brand. The average social media user spends 2 hours and 23 minutes a day on social platforms — that accounts for over a third of every minute spent on the internet. Because you now have the chance to engage with your audience in a more meaningful, direct way, you can turn literally every one of those minutes into a potential moment of conversion. 

Chapters:

  1. Why does social shopping matter for brands
  2. How brands in different industries win with social shopping
  3. Access the full benefits of social shopping

Why does social shopping matter for brands

Social shopping addresses a shopper pain point by making it easier for people to connect with what they want to buy. Where social commerce focuses more on selling, social shopping focuses on research and purchases, and improving the whole shopping experience.

Our Shopper Experience Index, an annual report into consumer behavior, tells us that there’s no more debate about the importance of social media and shoppable content. Here’s why:

  • Social media is the new search engine. Across the board, 58% of people are discovering products on social platforms. And before hitting the ‘buy’ button, 50% of shoppers are digging deeper, using social media to research their finds
  • Young adults are leading the charge. Nearly three quarters (73%) of 18 to 24-year-olds find their next purchase through social media. It’s their mall, their catalog, and their wishlist, all rolled into one
  • Buying is the new liking. With 50% of consumers making purchases directly through social media in the past year, the “double tap” has taken on a whole new meaning
  • Voice of the customer is key. 78% of consumers feel more confident in a purchase when they view shopper content — that includes creator-, influencer-, and user-generated content

In short, social shopping allows you to meet your customers where they are and where they increasingly prefer to find, research, and buy products. 

How brands in different industries win with social shopping

At Bazaarvoice, we have the pleasure of working with brands across every industry under the sun. We’ve helped beauty, CPG, and hardware companies tap into the magic of social shopping and user-generated content (UGC), lift conversion rates, and increase average order value.

We learned a lot from helping our customers. Here, we distill the most important lessons and fascinating case studies to help you.

Health & beauty

The health and beauty industry thrives on visual appeal. Social media platforms are the perfect stage for brands that fall into these categories. They can showcase their products in action, with vibrant images and videos that do more than sell — they tell a story. 

UGC plays a starring role here. Rich visual content from customers offers authentic glimpses into real-life results and applications (e.g. is the eyeshadow patchy? Does this foundation look good on a complexion like mine? Is this shampoo the key to becoming the star of the live-action Tangled remake?). 

This authenticity is key in an industry where trust and transparency are as important as the products themselves. And if people like what they see, shoppable posts make it easy to click and buy on the spot, turning inspiration into action in mere seconds.

The Body Shop

The Body Shop, a decades-long player in the beauty industry, wanted to enhance its online customer experience. In the words of Indar Chanicka, the brand’s Vice President of E-Commerce, “we set out to fully utilize our social content to drive engagement and use it as a tool to educate customers through their purchasing decisions. We want customers to (…) see the actual products and their benefits through the experiences of real customers.”

social shopping
The Body Shop implemented social media UGC into their product pages using Bazaarvoice Galleries

To accomplish this goal, The Body Shop integrated social media UGC directly onto product pages. The results? A 28% conversion rate on product pages and a 13% increase in average order value

Iconic London

Iconic London is a shining example of how brands can bridge the gap between social media inspiration and e-commerce action. First, they recognized the disjointed experience between social platforms and their website. Then, they set out to create a seamless journey that maintained the authenticity and engagement of social media while guiding customers smoothly to the checkout page

social shopping
With Like2Buy, Iconic London effectively bridges the gap between social media discovery and action

Iconic London implemented Like2Buy, a tool that turns your Instagram pictures and videos into informative, directional, or shoppable posts. This approach allows customers to transition from social media to the website without feeling disconnected. 

By coupling UGC, Instagram, and Like2Buy, Iconic London was able to increase conversion rates by 126% and lift average order value by 11% in just 12 months. 

Apparel & accessories

Trying on clothes is a pretty important part of the shopping experience. How else will you know if that pair of jeans fits just right? In the context of e-commerce, apparel and accessories brands have found a savvy way to bring the fitting room to their audience, right through their screens. 

Social media brings fashion shows to every feed. Each scroll is an opportunity to show off the latest and greatest trends, pieces, and styles in action. 

Once again, UGC proves to be a valuable ally. Just like with beauty products, it offers a front-row seat to real-life product demos. Authentic, diverse, and oh-so compelling, this type of content turns everyday customers into the stars of your show, modeling the clothes in their own unique styles and settings. 

Isabella Oliver and Baukjen

Isabella Oliver and Baukjen acknowledge the value of showing their clothes on different bodies. The brand embraces visual UGC to enrich the virtual try-on experience and make online shopping feel as personal and engaging as visiting a store.

Their strategy is simple yet impactful: a monthly hashtag contest encourages customers to share their #BaukjenStyle, turning the competition into a curated display of real-world fashion. 

Isabella Oliver and Baukjen uses the hashtag #BaukjenStyle to curate UGC on social media and displays the content on their website with Bazaarvoice Galleries

Bazaarvoice Galleries then takes these snippets and places them on product pages to create a digital window display that’s both beautiful and relatable. The feedback speaks for itself, with customers expressing newfound confidence in their purchases, inspired by seeing the clothes on bodies just like theirs. This confidence translates into tangible results: a 120% increase in conversion rates and a 10% lift in average order value.

We love Isabella Oliver and Baukjen’s approach because it proves that, in the online fashion world, the best way to know if those jeans fit just right is by seeing them in action.

Home improvement

In the home improvement sphere, the phenomenon of social shopping introduces a dynamic where the aspirational is instantly attainable. Instead of just sources of décor ideas, platforms like Instagram and Pinterest become marketplaces where inspiration seamlessly leads to transactions. 

And with a little help from UGC, facilitating this transition becomes easier. Shoppers don’t have to hesitate before buying because they don’t know whether that chaise longue would look good in their homes. You already have a library of relatable content showing them it will.

Dreams

Dreams took their success to new heights with UGC. The brand spotlights their bed frames, sofa beds, and furniture through the lens of real customers’ homes. The #mydreamsbed social media campaign (sensing a #theme here?) showcases customer-inspired bedrooms but also serves as a testament to the power of community in shaping brand perception. 

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Dreams launched a social media hashtag campaign to collect rich UGC that now populates their website

With high-quality, scroll-stopping images populating their homepage, Dreams has created an engaging first impression that draws customers deeper into their product range. Their strategic use of UGC has led to a 200% increase in conversion rate and a 62% rise in average order value

But perhaps more interesting is how the influx of customer photos has informed Dreams’ own creative direction. Octavia Benham, Dreams’ Head of E-commerce, explains how UGC inspires the team and helps them craft their own content. ”Previously, our own product images didn’t look very lived in, but we changed that based on the UGC content we were getting,” she says.

Consumer electronics

Let’s face it: the more expensive the purchase, the more we rely on other people’s opinions and the longer we consider handing over our money. Such is often the case for consumer electronics, where the price tags tend to be heftier and purchases less frequent.

Given social media’s role as the hottest rising star in consumer research and purchase, there’s an opportunity for brands in this industry to share social proof and nudge people towards purchasing in one fell swoop.

Midland Radio

Midland Radio, a leader in two-way communication devices, recognized the untapped potential of showcasing UGC to enhance their digital presence and boost customer engagement. The brand successfully curated UGC from Instagram, Facebook, and other social channels to enrich their site’s content and make it more relatable.

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Midland Radio uses Like2Buy to provide a seamless social shopping experience

The results speak volumes: a 143% increase in conversion rate and a 27% increase in average order value. But Midland Radio’s approach didn’t stop with collecting and displaying UGC. With tools like Reveal, Showroom, and Like2Buy, they also enhanced their Instagram strategy, making it easier for followers to transition from browsing to buying. 

Food & beverage

Being able to taste a product on social might be a little ways down the road. Thankfully, humans have other senses that food and beverage brands can appeal to. When done right, visuals can almost convey flavors, aromas, and textures (drink if you’ve never “eaten” with your eyes!) 

Social media is the perfect place for storytelling. Food and beverage brands can get creative with their shoppable posts by sharing recipes that feature their products or partnering with food influencers and UGC creators who show the goods in action (yes, this does include eating said goods. There’s a reason mukbangs are still a popular type of content — some people just enjoy seeing other people eat. It is what it is).

T2 Tea

T2 chose to stir up their social shopping strategy with UGC and shoppable posts. They partnered with Bazaarvoice to amplify brand presence and cultivate a digital environment that mirrors the communal and sensory nature of enjoying a steaming cup of tea. 

T2 uses Instagram shoppable posts to allow shoppers to buy as soon as something looks appealing

“Our aim is to create a community of tea lovers,” said Sally Lennox, Head of Digital at T2. “UGC is a way for us to embrace our customers by hearing their unique perspectives and displaying that word-of-mouth content on our digital screens. It provides such powerful social proof when customers can see that others are loving our products.”

T2 celebrates its fans by capturing and posting social media UGC on its home and product pages with Bazaarvoice Galleries. The brand also implemented Like2Buy and shoppable posts on Instagram so browsers can immediately access the products that catch their eye.

Consumer packaged goods

The landscape of consumer packaged goods (CPG) is a competitive one, with direct-to-consumer (DTC) companies increasingly taking over a share of the market. Building trust and signaling safety is thus becoming more and more essential. 

Many CPG brands are turning to social media to push educational content highlighting how real people use their products to make their lives better/easier/more fabulous. And if there’s a direct path to purchase right there in the posts? That’s the cherry on top.

MAM

Understanding the concerns and desires of parents who want the best for their little ones, MAM UK harnessed the power of social proof. So the brand leveraged real-life experiences and endorsements from satisfied parents to reassure potential customers. 

To amplify their UGC strategy, MAM implemented social commerce solutions, effectively completing their full-funnel marketing approach. Bazaarvoice Galleries allowed MAM to curate and display authentic social photos and videos from advocates, creating beautiful product galleries on their website. 

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MAM uses Like2Buy for a quick and painless social shopping experience

The strategy made their products more relatable, which translated into engagement and profit — more precisely, a 258% increase in time on site, a 108% increase in conversions, and a 58% increase in average order value

Access the full benefits of social shopping

Social shopping isn’t a fad — it’s the new normal. And if you have the right tools and the right partners, there’s no reason why you won’t be able to adapt and thrive. 

Dive into the world of social shopping with the ultimate guide to social media conversion for more actionable tips on how to create captivating shopping experiences that impact your bottom line.

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