Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCori Gilbert Modified over 6 years ago
1
Chapter 4 Enhanced Version Exhibit / Tables Customer Interface Chapter October 23, 2000
Amsterdam Athens Cambridge Frankfurt Hong Kong Istanbul Johannesburg London Los Angeles Madrid Manila Milan Moscow Munich New Delhi New York Paris São Paulo Seoul Singapore Stockholm Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Zurich Copyright © 1999 by Monitor Company, Inc. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means — electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise — without the permission of Monitor Company. This document provides an outline of a presentation and is incomplete without the accompanying oral commentary and discussion. COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL
2
Exhibit 4-1: The 7Cs of the Customer Interface
Context Site’s layout and design Content Text, pictures, sound and video that web pages contain Commerce Site’s capabilities to enable commercial transactions Community The ways sites enable user-to-user communication Connection Degree site is linked to other sites Customization Site’s ability to self-tailor to different users or to allow users to personalize the site Communication The ways sites enable site-to-user communication or two-way communication
3
Exhibit 4-2: Fit and Reinforcement of Cs
Business Model Individually Supporting Fit Context Content Community Customization Communication Connection Commerce Consistent Reinforcement
4
Exhibit 4-3: Performance of Lands’ End Site
5
Exhibit 4-4: Form vs. Function — The Design Context Frontier
Integrated High Aesthetically Dominant AESTHETIC/ FORM Frontier is gradually moving outward as technology advances Low Functionally- Dominant Low High FUNCTION
6
Exhibit 4-5: Aesthetic Example — KMGI.com
7
Exhibit 4-6: Functional Dominant — Brint.com
8
Exhibit 4-7: Integrated Approach Example — Patagonia.com
9
Supporting Slide 4-A Point-Counterpoint: Form vs. Function
10
Exhibit 4-8: A Framework to Understand Offering-Dominating Archetypes
Multiple Superstore NUMBER OF PRODUCT CATEGORIES Specialty Store Category Killer Single Narrow Broad DEPTH OF PRODUCT LINE
11
Exhibit 4-9: Superstore Example — Amazon.com
12
Exhibit 4-10: Category Killer Example — Petsmart.com
13
Exhibit 4-11: Specialty Store Example — Frontgate.com
14
Exhibit 4-12: Information Dominant — Business 2.0 (www.business2.com)
15
Exhibit 4-13: Market Dominant Example — PlasticsNet.com
16
Table 4-1: Drill Down - Content Archetypes vs Offering Types
17
Supporting Slide 4-B Point-Counterpoint: Is Content King?
18
Exhibit 4-14: Communities — Elements, Types, and Benefits
Elements of Community Types of Communities Member Outcomes: Participation and Benefits Just Friends Degree of Participation Cohesion Effectiveness Help Relationships Language Self-regulation Enthusiasts Need Fulfillment Inclusion Mutual Influence Shared Emotional Experiences Friends in Need Players Traders
19
Exhibit 4-15: Bazaar Example — Games.Yahoo.com
20
Exhibit 4-16: Theme Park Example — VoxCap.com
21
Exhibit 4-17: Club Example — Gillette Women’s Cancer Connection
22
Exhibit 4-18: Shrine Example — The Unofficial Dawson’s Creek Web Site
23
Exhibit 4-19: Theater Example — iFilm.com
24
Exhibit 4-20: Cafe Example — Bolt.com
25
Exhibit 4-21: Drill Down - Focus vs. Interactivity
Non-equilibrium state: Successfully-managed communities will move toward higher levels of interaction Games.yahoo.com Contact Consortium.com Bazaar VoxCap.com Bolt.com FOCUS Theme Park iFilm.com leonardodicaprio.com Trace.com Mall Women’s Cancer Connection Shrine Theater Cafe INTERACTIVITY
26
Exhibit 4-22: Personalization by User Example — mylook.com
27
Exhibit 4-23: Tailoring by Site Example - Amazon.com
28
Exhibit 4-24: One-to-Many, Non-Responding Example — theStandard.com
29
Exhibit 4-25: One-to-Many, Responding User Example — BizRate.com
30
Exhibit 4-26: One-to-Many, Live Interaction Example — Accrue 2000 Web Seminar
31
Exhibit 4-27: One-to-One, Non-Responding User Example — Hallmark.com
32
Exhibit 4-28: One-to-One, Responding User Example — Amazon.com
33
Exhibit 4-29: One-to-One, Live Interaction Example — LivePerson.com
34
Exhibit 4-30: Destination Example — NYTimes.com
35
Exhibit 4-31: Hub Example — DrKoop.com
36
Exhibit 4-32: Portal Example — Yahoo.com
37
Exhibit 4-33: Affiliate Program Example — Onhealth. com and Proflowers
Exhibit 4-33: Affiliate Program Example — Onhealth.com and Proflowers.com
38
Exhibit 4-34: Outsourced Content Example — Real.com
39
Exhibit 4-35: Meta-software Example — RUSure.com
40
Table 4-2: Drill Down - Commerce Origination vs Facilitation
Commerce Facilitation Commerce originating at a site. It is achieved through acquisition of new customers and loyalty building among existing customers New Customer Acquisition Tools include: Online advertising Banner ads at other sites URL listing in industry catalogs Sponsorships of online events or of other site activities Viral marketing Marketing with the assistance of existing customers, who pass marketing messages along to friends or colleagues Examples include marketing footers at the end of user messages, prompts inviting users to send the site URL or the output of their activity on the site to others Offline advertising Advertisements on radio, television, movie theaters Sponsorships of offline events, such as conferences on the New Economy Commerce facilitated through the intervention of a third party, directing traffic to a site. It can be achieved through affiliations and partnerships Affiliations / Partnerships How they work Home site signs up other sites in a partnership/affiliation program Affiliate sites place a link on their site that directs users to the home site In some cases, a user gets directed to a site through an affiliate while remaining in the affiliate’s URL space Participating affiliate sites receive a percentage cut (typically 5-10%) on all sales generated at the home site as a result of clickthroughs from the affiliate sites Incentives to affiliates Financial: Affiliate sites receive a percentage of the sales they generate Brand building: Being an affiliate to a well-known brand increases visibility Improved capabilities: By linking users to additional sites, affiliates can increase their breadth of offerings
41
Exhibit 4-36: 7Cs of Schwab
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.