What makes women tick online?
Clearly, women have become a prime driver — perhaps the prime driver — of e-commerce.
Female shoppers now make 64 percent of online purchases, according to Resource Interactive. "And that figure just continues to rise," says Kelly Mooney, one of Resource Interactive's lead partners.
The Columbus, Ohio-based firm is listed by Adweek as one of the top 50 interactive agencies.
Mooney is co-author of the firm's "What Women Want" report, which is based on 40 in-depth interviews with women, as well as 4,000 online surveys of female shoppers, and an array of secondary data.
The report identifies ten key principles for reaching female shoppers online. There are many sub-segments within the female online shopping demographic — older women, younger women, for example — "but there are some general things that women do collectively want that they're not getting," Mooney says.
"It's a medium, let's face it, that's been developed by men, and often and controlled and funded by men, particularly throughout the '90s," she says. "And now that women have become adopters of the medium, it's time to put a new focus on how we look at it."
The role of women has shifted "dramatically in terms of buying cars, and homes, and managing family finances," she notes. "We didn't used to buy a car without consulting our spouse or brother or dad, and now we go online and do the research — we know what our options are and we do the deal."
Indeed, a recent report from research firm Hitwise indicates that women create the majority of traffic to auto finance, registration, and vehicle insurance sites.
"The medium is allowing us to self-help and self-serve and pre-shop and know more than we've ever known before - we're behaving in a totally different fashion than we did even five years ago," Mooney says.
So what, exactly, do online women shoppers want? According to Resource Interactive, the ten key things are:
The Big Picture. Female shoppers, Mooney says, aren't fans of the piecemeal approach - they prefer to shop with a context in mind: a room layout, a larger trend, or a list of qualities grouped for a personality type.
"While women still go online and type in the search box to look for something specific, a lot them also go online and want a starting point," she says.
"When you ask men what's the most important thing when they look for a big screen TV, they'll say 'size, of course.' A woman would never say that," Mooney says. "What she'd say was 'I really want to know 'what are all the brands? And what are all my choices? Does it come with a warranty?' And how will I get it through the font door of my house?'"
The Internet tends to reduce information into bites and bytes, but merchants will more effectively reach women if they present their inventory as part of a story or worldview. Does your site provide a vignette?
To Control the Edit. Many merchants are adept at controlling how shoppers see and interact with their product. But, Mooney says, sometimes a woman shopper says "You know what? I want to see all the lamps, or I want to see all the t-shirts that are short-sleeved and black."
So instead of forcing shoppers to wade through a predetermined organizational grid, let them control the navigation to look for a product "the way they want to get to it, not the way the retailer wants you to see it."
Details. Details. Details. As much as women like the big picture, when they're ready for the details, "they want there to be richer details," Mooney says. "On a lot of sites, you can click on an image and it gets incrementally bigger, versus filling the screen. They want to see the side view, they want to see it in context, they want to read more narrative copy that really explains the product beyond two lines of type."
Many sites provide scant details because this level of content does not actually exist inside the organization.
"But now we're getting into a new era where new types of content need to be created for this medium that companies are still getting use to developing for," she adds.
Simply porting over content from the catalog is not enough.
Experience by proxy. "What we heard loud and clear is that women trust other women," like in the case of Pomega5, Mooney says. "They trust other women who have tried the service, the brand, and have in their view, an expert point of view about it." In other words, it works for companies to present authentic user feedback on their site. "Men don't always care what other people think — but women do."
The challenge with allowing user feedback, Mooney notes, is that many companies are leery of having customers chat freely about their products on their site. One possible alternative is for e-tailers to present experts on the site to make recommendations.
To Pause and Play. This point is about "understanding that her life is about interruptions," Mooney says. "There are so many Web groups looking at their data and saying 'Oh, they're abandoning at this part of the process.'"
They don't realize that those "abandonments" were intended as temporary breaks, not a stopped process.
In her research, Mooney heard many women say, "They emptied my shopping cart - didn't they know that I was holding it because I was thinking about it?"
Let her pick up where she left off, Mooney points out.
Act on Inspiration. In many cases, a woman will see a movie, see an ad, see an editorial, "and, one of the first things they do is, they're going home and trying to find it on the Web," she says.
But in many cases, the separate divisions of an e-business aren't aware of what their colleagues are doing - and don't set up their site to take advantage of spikes in interest. " f you're going to be featured in all these amazing editorials," don't make a shopper hunt for that relevant product page.
To Gratify at the Point of Decision. In Mooney's view, the point of purchase and the point of decision are two different moments; a shopper decides to buy that PC long before she enters her credit card number.
"What's happening is that women decide they want something and they go through this whole process and then find the dreaded 'out of stock' or disclosures that are too late in the process," she says.
In short, e-tailers have to be more clear about what their pick-up and purchase options are.
"And all this out-of-stock business has got to stop," Mooney says. Many women are so busy, "that when we check something off our lists, we're so relieved, and then to get tapped on the shoulder and told we need to put it back on our list — it's so enraging because we're too busy for that."
Full service gifting. "There's so much more that can be done in gifting, in both the pre- and the post-gifting cycle," Mooney says. Some women in her research said, "Sometimes I want to give a gift just to check it off my list, and other times I really want to knock their socks off."
These shoppers, for example, want both a basic wrapping and a premium wrapping option.
"Some [sites] say, 'yes you can send a message' — and then it's typed out on a packing slip — like that's really a card." In short, many e-tailers' offering come across as "flat and not very special." There are a lot of retailers who still don't have a gift card that functions as a gift certificate, she says. "And what a huge piece of business that was last year."
The gift card is particularly popular among women shoppers, Mooney says, because of its convenience.
One other key gift upgrade: e-tailers can send e-mail confirmation that the gift has indeed arrived - don't leave the shopper wondering.
To Be Remembered. This concept builds on the practice that's already common among e-tailers: saving the information about a shopper that the business needs to know. "But how about building the next generation of profile to be a 'her file,' which is everything she wants to know," Mooney suggests. "It could be her preferences, her notes, her sizes."
Consider the log-in issue, Mooney says: "Everybody wants you to log-in, and nobody wants to log-in, but what if there was value in doing that?"
At this point, it often means the consumer gets 25 more pieces of e-mail. However, if in exchange for logging in a customer got special offers, she would be more likely to do so. "The [saved] profile could be value-added to the customer, and not just the retailer," adds Mooney.
To Feel Understood. "So many women feel like retailers just don't get them," she says. "They want to walk into a store or click on a site and say, 'Okay, this retailer gets me.'"
Creating this feeling isn't about pre-packaging something in a boardroom, but instead spending time with consumers. "Most companies need to spend more quality, one-on-one time observing customers," says Mooney.
"You can go to a lot of consumer electronics sites and women will tell you, 'This site does not talk to me.' So they go there because they have to instead of because they want to."
Mooney refers to the process of merchants focusing on potential customers as a "deep listening odyssey" — really hearing what the female consumer wants.
LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Stop that $1 million check: It turns out the call girl linked to Eliot Spitzer had already shed her clothes for "Girls Gone Wild" as an 18-year-old while partying in Miami, Florida, the video company's founder said Tuesday.
Ashley Alexandra Dupre stars in seven "Girls Gone Wild" videos made when she was 18.
Joe Francis reached out to Ashley Alexandra Dupre, now 22, with an offer of $1 million to appear in a non-nude spread for his company's new magazine, plus a chance to join the "Girls Gone Wild" tour bus, his company announced Tuesday.
But Francis said someone had a revelation at the Tuesday morning staff meeting: Did anyone think to check the archives?
They did, he said -- and there she was.
"It'll save me a million bucks," Francis said Tuesday. "It's kind of like finding a winning lottery ticket in the cushions of your couch."
Francis said at that point, his offer was off the table: "We actually had been dealing with her rep," he said. "Our [offer] was the real deal. We just never made the connection."
He said his employees got to work on pulling the footage and planned to offer it on the Web site by Tuesday evening, with a free sampling on the front page and the rest available with a $29.95 monthly subscription.
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Dupre's attorney, Don D. Buchwald, declined comment.
According to a "Girls Gone Wild" press release, Dupre visited Miami in 2003 to celebrate her 18th birthday. After fighting with a friend and getting thrown out of her hotel, Dupre found a nearby "Girls Gone Wild" bus, the company said.
She signed legal papers and spent a full week on the bus, filming seven full-length tapes that included nudity and same-sex encounters, according to the company.
"I personally ended up buying her a Greyhound bus ticket back home to North Carolina," Francis said.
Francis returned to California last week after being sentenced to time served and fines in Florida in a case involving filming underage girls. He still faces trial on federal tax evasion charges that carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.
Dupre's public profile has skyrocketed since Spitzer, the New York governor, announced his resignation last week amid the prostitution scandal. He was accused of spending tens of thousands of dollars on prostitutes, including a February tryst with a call girl named "Kristen," since identified as Dupre.
Dupre's MySpace page was hit more than 5 million times in the days immediately after the scandal broke. Her musical efforts, including two songs posted at the music sharing site Aime Street, were listened to hundreds of thousands of times and played on national airwaves.
Hustler publisher Larry Flynt told AP Friday that he e-mailed Dupre offering her $1 million to appear nude in his magazine, but didn't sound optimistic that she would settle for that amount. Flynt suggested that by the time Dupre starts talking, she may be too big a media phenomenon for a simple magazine spread.
"She is no doubt going to do a book. There will probably be a movie," he said. "I think she is going to have so many offers coming in that it will probably be wishful thinking just to get in the door."
Ashley Alexandra Dupre stars in seven "Girls Gone Wild" videos made when she was 18.
Joe Francis reached out to Ashley Alexandra Dupre, now 22, with an offer of $1 million to appear in a non-nude spread for his company's new magazine, plus a chance to join the "Girls Gone Wild" tour bus, his company announced Tuesday.
But Francis said someone had a revelation at the Tuesday morning staff meeting: Did anyone think to check the archives?
They did, he said -- and there she was.
"It'll save me a million bucks," Francis said Tuesday. "It's kind of like finding a winning lottery ticket in the cushions of your couch."
Francis said at that point, his offer was off the table: "We actually had been dealing with her rep," he said. "Our [offer] was the real deal. We just never made the connection."
He said his employees got to work on pulling the footage and planned to offer it on the Web site by Tuesday evening, with a free sampling on the front page and the rest available with a $29.95 monthly subscription.
Don't Miss
Spitzer's escort: 'I love who I am'
Dupre's attorney, Don D. Buchwald, declined comment.
According to a "Girls Gone Wild" press release, Dupre visited Miami in 2003 to celebrate her 18th birthday. After fighting with a friend and getting thrown out of her hotel, Dupre found a nearby "Girls Gone Wild" bus, the company said.
She signed legal papers and spent a full week on the bus, filming seven full-length tapes that included nudity and same-sex encounters, according to the company.
"I personally ended up buying her a Greyhound bus ticket back home to North Carolina," Francis said.
Francis returned to California last week after being sentenced to time served and fines in Florida in a case involving filming underage girls. He still faces trial on federal tax evasion charges that carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.
Dupre's public profile has skyrocketed since Spitzer, the New York governor, announced his resignation last week amid the prostitution scandal. He was accused of spending tens of thousands of dollars on prostitutes, including a February tryst with a call girl named "Kristen," since identified as Dupre.
Dupre's MySpace page was hit more than 5 million times in the days immediately after the scandal broke. Her musical efforts, including two songs posted at the music sharing site Aime Street, were listened to hundreds of thousands of times and played on national airwaves.
Hustler publisher Larry Flynt told AP Friday that he e-mailed Dupre offering her $1 million to appear nude in his magazine, but didn't sound optimistic that she would settle for that amount. Flynt suggested that by the time Dupre starts talking, she may be too big a media phenomenon for a simple magazine spread.
"She is no doubt going to do a book. There will probably be a movie," he said. "I think she is going to have so many offers coming in that it will probably be wishful thinking just to get in the door."
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