This is a sample taken from the 22698 Internet Retailer: Top 500 Guide. Internet Marketing Conference/Exhibition pages accessible below. You are currently viewing information organised by Author.
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M Is For Multi-channel
Description: Macy’s goes national, online and off, with the twentysomething shopper in its sights
Gem of an Idea
Description: Bella of Cape Cod moves the Tupperware house party to the web
RedEnvelope pushes out efficiency-focused CEO
Description: RedEnvelope has a hip name derived from the Asian tradition of giving gifts in red envelopes, and an array of high-end gifts it offers through its web site and catalogs. What it does not have is a history of making money or a growth rate as fast as that of Internet retailing as a whole. And, as of last month, it no longer has a CEO.
Where does the web team belong?
Description: Chains redraw their organization charts as they pursue cross-channel initiatives
The new obstacles to e-mail delivery
Description: Challenges to e-mail delivery now focus on the sender and not the message. Retailers have to adopt new strategies to ensure a sparkling reputation.
Google and PayPal collide at the checkout
Description: The search engine giant crashed PayPal’s payments party with financial incentives to retailers and a tie-in between Google Checkout and AdWords. But some merchants are wary of Google, and PayPal is rallying support for its Express Checkout with the aid of parent eBay and Google arch-rival Yahoo.
Keep In Touch
Description: Three watchwords for e-retailers outsourcing their contact centers: monitor, measure and motivate
Let’s talk
Description: Once seen as a customer service option, live chat has become a sales tool
Customer Service
Description: Making an online connection
The Right Staff
Description: How the right personnel with the right skills make a web site rise above the pack
In Stock
Description: A growing trend toward giving suppliers a real-time view of store inventory
Finding Help
Description: In search engine marketing, finding the right partner is key
The Reshipping Scam
Description: How public-private cooperation led to cyber-busts in Nigeria
The Struggle for Profitability
Description: An investment of $1,000 in Amazon.com in May 1997 when the online book retailer went public was worth $39,000 eighteen months later in December 1998. When software retailer Egghead Inc. closed its stores in 1998 and adopted an Internet-only selling strategy, its stock price surged from $5.37 a share to $20.80.
Pricey and perishable, online supermarkets struggle to deliver on their retail promise
Description: One of the great perceived differences between American and European cultures is that Americans spend less time than Europeans shopping for food. While Europeans go to the market several times a week, goes the conventional thinking, Americans make one mega-trip every seven days.
The Details
Description: New generation of web analytics enables retailers to dig deeper into data—more easily
Can We Talk?
Description: With some trial and error, online retailers find the payback in live chat
A Marketing Geyser
Description: E-retailer blogs aid branding, marketing and search, as long as they stay on message
Persona-lizing a site
Description: Personas take web marketers beyond what they think they know about customers and into shoppers’ heads and hearts
Make a new plan, Stan
Description: Strategic plans enable e-retailers to act, not react
Birds of a Feather
Description: Giving fans a forum can pay off for retailers seeking new ways to build traffic and sales
Retail Romance
Description: Husband and wife docs are back in school, this time studying the intricacies of Internet retailing
Designing the Future
Description: Wal-Mart hires a TV star to craft the creative side and user experience of Walmart.com
Burning Down the Housewares
Description: Mel Ronick refuses to get crushed by the giants and takes a gamble: tear down bricks and mortar
Shall I compare thee to a...
Description: An abundance of comparison shopping sites gives consumers numerous paths to aid buying decisions
Saving the Trees
Description: E-catalogs vie for online space with new imaging and shopping features
Geek Pride
Description: It’s 2006, but some e-retailers find compelling reasons to build their systems rather than buy.
Don’t Call Us...
Description: Jaduka combines the web and conventional phones to help e-retailers better reach shoppers
Ticket to success
Description: Travel sites are harnessing the web’s power to further transform their industry
With only a few flaws in its online makeup, Clinique is still fun and easy to shop
Description: For those of us who love department store cosmetics, but can’t stand crowds or aggressive salespeople, there used to be but two choices: Brave the cosmetic counter frenzy or venture into the world with a bare face.
Five steps you can take today to reduce abandoned shopping carts
Description: If you put one hand in hot water and the other in ice water, and I ask you to describe how you feel, you would be perfectly correct in saying, “On average, I’m warm.” But a much more accurate response is that one hand is hot and the other is cold. In much the same way, many electronic marketers mistakenly assume there’s an “average user” who typifies a site’s entire customer base. Let’s say you determine that your “average” customer logs 2.3 page views per visit and spends $12.50 per purchase. In fact, averages give you very little information to act on.
To reward and keep top-notch online personnel, the rewards must be financial and personal
Description: In order for an e-commerce company to succeed, one of the most important ingredients is qualified and experienced technical personnel. Today’s recruitment market is a virtual battlefield on which human resources departments from competing companies use benefits packages, salaries, signing bonuses and stock options to lure the people that make things tick.
The State of the Industry: The Next Evolution
Description: Throughout e-retailing’s existence, one of the leading distractions has been the industry’s blatant disregard for profitability. During the industry’s boom period, retailers, primarily those of the pure-play variety (but some multi-channel retailers also participated) spent money like it was growing on trees. Long term, this behavior did little to propel the industry forward, while raising red flags about e-retailing’s long-term potential as a viable distribution channel.
A lot of fish are swimming by the lure; it`s up to merchants to get them to bite
Description: The Internet is about change. And nothing has changed more in the last 12 to 18 months than the competitive online environment. Online merchants must adopt new methods to keep visitors coming back and—even more importantly—making repeat purchases. When the Internet was new, consumers flocked to the Web just to see what was available. Now there are thousands of online merchants all trying to capture the consumer’s attention and dollars.
Using automated e-mail keeps Borders.com`s stafffing under control
Description: Tuller says artificial intelligence is at the core of the product, and Brightware’s origins in a pioneering AI company are critical to its success. As Tuller puts it, AI may be a major strategic asset for Brightware, but “it’s also one of the bigger challenges of the marketplace, because AI falls in and out of favor.” So Brightware would rather talk about more efficient customer service.
Challenge and Response
Description: Spam filters change the marketing game, but a little creativity can beat them
What’s The Fuss?
Description: Learning to live with the new rules of the e-mail marketing game
New Rules
Description: The four new principles of direct marketing, courtesy of the World Wide Web
HTML vs. Text
Description: Marketers can create beautiful e-mails, but sometimes functionality trumps prettiness
The Missing Metric
Description: Whether a web site is successful depends on the definition of success
Why we recognize retailing`s online leaders
Description: Every year at this time,
Chains ignore the web at their peril
Description: As I examine the ranks of the largest e-retailing businesses, I am always struck by an inescapable reality: The chains that dominate retailing in stores do not boast a similar hegemony on the web. Only 20 of the top 50 e-retailing businesses in the U.S. based on annual sales, as ranked by
Keeping abreast of the evolution
Description: Good business magazines evolve. That’s because the industries they cover evolve. As our readers know,
Our 2003 Buyers Guide: Market Barometer
Description: The 2003 Internet Retailer Buyers Guide—the fourth edition of this annual e-retailing shopping guide—is by far the most robust we have produced. It sets new records in the number of vendors listed (515), the number of distinct product and service categories (57) included and the number of paid listings (110). Indeed, expressed in total dollars, paid listings in this year’s guide are up a stunning 39% from last year. Not bad for a recession economy.
Internet Retailer`s E-Retail Online Surveys
Description: The primary asset of a magazine publishing enterprise is its base of subscribers--who they are, what they do, and how loyal they are as readers of the publication. By any measurement,
Search Engine Marketing
Description: An e-retailing winner with room to grow
E-Retailers loosen the purse strings
Description: Anyone walking the Exhibit Hall at the Internet Retailer 2006 Conference & Exhibition in Chicago last month noted the obvious: e-retailers are anxious to improve their web sites by acquiring more advanced e-retailing solutions. The 70,000-square-foot Exhibit Hall featured booths of 186 e-retailing solution providers and was easily the largest display of technology in the history of web-based retailing.
Busy just doesn`t describe it
Description: Anyone who’s ever been involved in organizing a major industry conference knows how frantic things can get a few weeks before the show. There are hundreds of details that need to be managed in a short period of time. Everything must come together by show time—everything—the speakers, presentation materials and conference notebooks, signs, audio-visual equipment, recording and registration systems, conference badges and tickets, food and beverage items, show decorations, tote bags and inserts, room drops, exhibit booths, Internet links, bus shuttles to the conference, magazine distributions, trade show guides, stickers for drawings (I can’t elaborate) and even singers and musicians. Yet, in addition to providing a lot of very practical information about taking your retail web site to the next level of performance, we are planning to have some fun at Internet Retailer 2006 Conference & Exhibition in Chicago on June 5-7.
In Full Swing
Description: Through innovation and investment, the Top 300 lead the way in the maturing online channel
A new era for Internet Retailer
Description: As a senior editor of Business Week in 1982, I wrote a cover story on the networks that were linking ATMs of different banks. It was a revolutionary idea. Consumers could now get on-line access to their bank accounts at any ATM. The barriers erected against convenience by bankers’ hours and government prohibitions against national branching were bound to come down and soon a generation of consumers would think of banking as an electronic experience.