The Present And Future of Product Information: Product Information 2.0

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: e-(motional), News, Technology

The Present And Future of Product Information

via thenextweb.com.

  • note Andrey: It looks like this article was written just in order to introduce e-(motional), the TRUE Interactive Video Technology by Moda e Tecnologia Srl icon wink The Present And Future of Product Information: Product Information 2.0 . Thank you TheNextWeb!

As the fight to stand out and remain relevant above the noise online gets harder, the information that frames a product sold has become an important element for both the buyer and the e-tailer. The content that goes with a product has gained significant gravity in the equation that defines the sales of a product, from user generated content such as reviews and comments about a product, to product description and manuals. The growth of social media and the increasing influence of word-of-mouth marketing have dictated the importance of adding content on e-commerce sites that would urge the customers to share info about new products on their social networks. This content has become an integral part of the customer’s experience and can make or break a sale.

A picture is worth 1,000 words: Images are a very important part of any e-commerce site. The five senses play a major part in our buying decisions but e-tailers can only use just two to make their products more appealing: vision and hearing. Apart from providing a rich high quality photo gallery to show every aspect and detail of their products, many e-tailers prefer to add to a written product info and a video description of the product like Zappos. Zappos videos feature next-door people who introduce themselves in the beginning the video instead of professional models with voice over, to create a more relatable feel. Then there’s Asos, who prefers to feature catwalk videos of its clothes. Further away from the old-school telemarketing are the videos featured on Youtique by French connection, a YouTube store, where instead of “dry” infomercials, they present the clothes while giving away styling tips for different occasions or with humorous how-tos like: How to eat spaghetti – in a gorgeous dress and bolero. Video is a great communication tool for your e-shop, as it allows a deeper experience with the products, but you need to figure out the style that appeals to your audience. Remember to upload it in a form that’s easy to share on social networks, for instance on Zappos and Asos, although the product page is easy to share, the video itself is not, unlike the case of Youtique.

Copywriting: Especially when it comes to fashion, the line between an editorial and an e-shop has completely blurred with e-commerce sites like Net-A-Porter running their own magazines and on then editorial sites like Refinery29 launching e-commerce sections. A great example of practical information presented in a “shareable” way is J’aime mon carre by Hermès, which shows different ways one can wear a Hermès scarf. Unfortunately this mini site is disconnected from the Hermès boutique so one can only look at the scarf and see the design’s ID but not shop it directly. Even simple short texts like the ones that describe Groupon deals play their part into attracting the consumer and spice up the experience. Groupon counts many writers among its staff (as of September 2010, 70) and has an entire style guide to help its writers find the right words to describe the deals. Keep in mind that while you want your text to be engaging, you need to convey the product info in a clear way so that the consumer will get the necessary info with the first scan of the text.

In-store: More and more customers look up product info online while shopping in-store, either by manually searching on the Internet or by scanning products’ bar and QR codes. BestBuy has included 2D bar codes in store to enhance the off line shopping experience. The customer can scan the codes with the BestBuy app and discover product info, offers and rewards. Many food and beverages companies enable the consumers to find out information about their products’ origins online by entering the product ID in a web app. Coca-Cola UK has launched a Web app that allows consumers to trace the environmental impact of their can or bottle of Coke. Other examples are Dole Organic which gives the consumers a tour of the farm their fruit came from once they enter the fruit’s sticker number online; Askinosie chocolate provides the customers their chocolate’s background once they enter their ‘Choc-O-Lot’ number, and more. People will look up products before they shop anyway so you might as well embrace this part of the shopping experience and curate the information needed in an easy to access and navigable way. Openness and honesty are the basis of any good dating profile and product description, so make sure you get back a: Like!

Social Media Content: The reviews of friends and family spread across different social media platforms are worth equally if not more as the information you put up on your e-commerce site. No way to ignore them anymore, so try to find a way to add information from the customer’s online network as a social layer on your e-shop. Levi’s has managed this with the Friend’s store showing what your Facebook friends liked through Facebook connect, same thing Amazon has done with Facebook connect (beta), providing gift recommendation for friends and birthday reminders as well as Amazon products recommendations based on your personal profile. Marissa Mayer in her recent LeWeb interview talked about social and real-time search and that taking into account parameters like the user’s location and tastes, comes up with curated results according to his context. For instance she said: “If you’re sitting in a restaurant, can we pull up the menu? And can we pull up a menu that isn’t the menu that the waiter would have just handed you, but a social menu – where you can see what other people have ordered, what other people like, how’s it’s been marked up.” How will e-tailers handle contextual user-generated content and integrate it in their online presence?

In a competitive market place shifting fast to catch up with the latest technology innovations, the question raised is how to enrich and handle your product information in order to stay relevant throughout all the various communication channels. What do you think the future of product information looks like?

Google Jumps Into Fashion E-Commerce – in the U.S. and only for women’s fashion

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

via The Wall Street Journal online

Google Jumps Into Fashion E-Commerce

Screen shot 2010 11 18 at 8.44.28 AM Google Jumps Into Fashion E Commerce   in the U.S. and only for womens fashion

By AMIR EFRATI And SCOTT MORRISON

Aiming to become the first stop for online shoppers of apparel and accessories, Google Inc. launched a fashion e-commerce site Boutiques.com, which uses human curators, visual recognition and machine learning technology to recommend items to shoppers.

The move thrusts the Mountain View, Calif., Internet giant into the rapidly growing online fashion market, an area in which Amazon.com Inc. and eBay Inc. are stepping up their offerings. It’s a lucrative market, with the online apparel and accessories industry hitting $19 billion in the U.S. in 2009, according to comScore Inc., and growing fast.

Boutiques.com doesn’t sell the items, which come from hundreds of online merchants such as Ralph Lauren, Steve Madden and Juicy Couture, but directs shoppers to sites where they can be purchased. Other sites such as Polyvore.com and Kaboodle.com, also are attempting to make shopping and browsing for apparel more fun.

Munjal Shah, a Google product manager, said the company worked with about 100 fashion taste-makers such as celebrities, stylists, and designers to pick out clothing they like and teach Google’s machine-learning algorithms about their style and tastes. Those partners include Oscar de la Renta and retailer Scoop NYC.

Google is developing ways to direct users of the company’s Web-search engine to Boutiques.com when they search for fashion items, Mr. Shah said. The company already has a standalone product-search service that specializes in “hard” goods such as electronics and draws traffic from the main search engine. The product-search site has grown rapidly over the past couple of years, comScore data show, but still lags behind Amazon and eBay in terms of the number of searches it handles.

Shoppers of Boutiques.com will be able to browse for items a particular expert has selected, such as shoulder dresses or high-heeled shoes, as well as any other goods that Google’s algorithms thinks are similar in some way. Shoppers can also build their own personalized boutique and get recommendations of products that match their tastes.

Boutiques.com is similar to Like.com, the visual search site founded by Mr. Shah for shoppers of apparel and other soft goods. Google acquired the site in August for about $100 million, according to people familiar with the matter.

Boutiques.com currently has the same business model used by Like.com, where merchants pay if shoppers end up purchasing the goods on other sites, or sometimes pay a small cost for each time a shopper clicked on their merchandise to learn more. Mr. Shah said the model could change.

Scot Wingo, Chief Executive of ChannelAdvisor Corp., which helps merchants sell goods on Amazon and eBay, said Boutiques.com is a solid first attempt by Google and one that leverages its core strength in search.

“Amazon is becoming so popular in e-commerce that people are going there to start some of their searches,” he said. “This is Google waking up to that threat.”

Boutiques.com is only available in the U.S. and only for women’s fashion, but is expected to expand in the future, Google said.
Read more: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703688704575620840174153292.html#ixzz15cNInYz5

Ebay will let you try on sunglasses on iPhone, in December

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

via bloomberg.com

EBay Adds Tool to Let Shoppers Model 3-D Glasses, Expanding in E-Commerce

EBay Inc., the largest online retail marketplace, is introducing a technology that lets people browse and try on sunglasses using an Apple Inc. iPhone, as it seeks to mimic the real-world shopping experience.

The so-called augmented-reality feature is part of EBay’s fashion application, Steve Yankovich, vice president of the company’s mobile unit, said in an interview last week. The app will be available in December, he said.

EBay is using handset-friendly tools to benefit from rising demand for mobile commerce, an area of retailing where Colin Gillis, an analyst at New York-based BGC Partners LP, says it established an early lead. The company has said its apps will generate as much as $2 billion in volume this year. Worldwide, there will be about 150 million to 200 million mobile augmented -reality users by 2012, from about 600,000 last year, according to Perey Research & Consulting in Montreux, Switzerland.

“Within a year or two, I would be shocked if we didn’t see it everywhere,” said Norman Winarsky, a vice president at Menlo Park, California-based SRI International, a technology incubator known for developing the computer mouse. The future of mobile shopping will allow consumers to experience and try anything they want, Winarsky said. “You can put your finger in front of the camera and a diamond ring will appear,” he said.

Ikea introduced an app on the iPhone earlier this year that lets people see how the retailer’s furniture would fit in their homes. Companies such as Lego A/S, Europe’s biggest toymaker, have store kiosks through which shoppers may hold up a box and see what the Legos will look like assembled.

As technological hurdles fall and companies start synchronizing their online and mobile business strategies, more retailers may introduce augmented reality-style apps, said Rob Gonda, global lead of creative technology at SapientNitro, a London-based marketing firm.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE.

Web e Cinema: Moda e Tecnologia lancia E-(MOTIONAL) con il Trailer del film Maschi Contro Femmine, di Fausto Brizzi

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: e-(motional), Moda e Tecnologia, News, Technology

WEB E CINEMA: MODA E TECNOLOGIA LANCIA E-(MOTIONAL) CON IL TRAILER DEL FILM MASCHI CONTRO FEMMINE, DI FAUSTO BRIZZI
Comunicato stampa, Milano, giovedì 28 Ottobre 2010.

E-(MOTIONAL), il video interattivo virale di Moda e Tecnologia è online da oggi 28 ottobre con il trailer del film Maschi contro Femmine, di Fausto Brizzi. Si apre uno scenario nuovo nei rapporti con utenti e fan.

e motional logo 300x50 Web e Cinema: Moda e Tecnologia lancia E (MOTIONAL) con il Trailer del film Maschi Contro Femmine, di Fausto Brizzi

Era stato annunciato alla 67. Mostra D’Arte Cinematografica di Venezia, con una conferenza stampa organizzata da Moda e Tecnologia in partnership con Armosia, che ha curato il placement del Film Maschi contro Femmine, e da oggi, in concomitanza con l’uscita del film distribuito da 01 Distribution, è online una sperimentazione sul blog ufficiale del film maschicontrofemmineilblog.it,  e tra pochissimo sul sito di 01 Distribution, e su quello ufficiale del film su MSN maschicontrofemmine.msn.it.

Si chiama E-(motional) ed è il video interattivo virale per comunicare e vendere nell’era del Web 2.0, che consente per la prima volta agli utenti di avere un ruolo attivo nella distribuzione dei contenuti selezionati  all’interno di un video in movimento e persino di distribuire l’e-commerce abbinato agli oggetti o servizi scelti e muniti di un tag che rimane sempre attivo.

Un approccio rivoluzionario che fa di E-(motional) la  tecnologia più avanzata per  chi vuole fare un product placement  2.0, o una campagna WEB abbinata ai corti di moda, spot  o  film cinematografici, infatti questa tecnologia  funziona su  video di ogni genere ed è adattabile a prodotti, personaggi, servizi.

E-(motional) unisce  info-intrattenimento, pubblicità mirata e attivata dal cliente in base alle sue preferenze e necessità, possibilità di acquisto direttamente mentre si guarda il video in un processo facile ed intuitivo per l’utente che potrà vedere un video, o delle foto in movimento, e con un semplice click,  prendere solo ciò che più lo interessa, metterlo nella propria wish-list (lista personale), condividerla con gli amici, comprare… anche con il supporto della community!

Attenzione! Nulla di già visto, perchè a differenza dai vari progetti ed iniziative sul “video interattivo”, dove si fanno molte speculazioni per il termine “interattivo” ma in pratica si tratta di un “video cliccabile”, e-motional introduce per la prima volta nella storia del web una vera interattività tra gli utenti ed il contenuto multimediale, attraverso i meccanismi come tracciamento degli oggetti all’interno del flusso video (brevetto di Moda e Tecnologia SRL), interazione con l’oggetto del contenuto e non con tutto il video o tutto lo schermo, il wish-list personale dell’utente e condividibile online come elemento cruciale verso il social shopping, ed in fine il meccanismo della distribuzione virale per una vera promozione 2.0 da parte degli utenti e fan.

Il popolo della rete chiede interattività vera, personalizzazione delle infomazioni e focalizzazione della pubblicità sui propri interessi e gradimenti, afferma Marina Garzoni, CEO di Moda e Tecnologia, ed i vantaggi di e-(motional) si collocano  non solo dal lato dell’inserzionista o del committente  ma sopratutto da quello dell’utente, come mai è stato possibile fare prima”.

“Il product placement con e-(motional) esercita un’azione diretta ed impattante sul pubblico” aggiunge Francesco Romeres COO di Armosia, con il quale favorisce non solo un link emozionale con il prodotto ed il brand, ma anche crea i presupposti, perchè questa attrazione diventi acquisto, con il supporto di tutta la community.

Ma come funziona il video 2.0 e-(motional)? Lo spiega Andrey Golub, partner e CTO di Moda e Tecnologia:

- se abilitato il modo interattivo (“show markers”, “show hints” in alto a sinistra), vedrete gli effetti speciali applicati agli oggetti del film prescelti,
- l’effetto impostato inizialmente è quello del, “quadratino rosso” ma lo potete scegliere a piacere dalla galleria (il bottone in basso a destra),
- l’oggetto sotto l’effetto speciale applicato, diventa interattivo e cliccabile, provatelo! Se cliccate su, si apre una finestra con le informazioni e descrizioni sull’oggetto,
- potete anche aggiungere l’oggetto di vostro interesse alla vostra wish-list personale, ed in futuro (questo trailer online è una versione di demo), potrete anche condividere gli oggetti del wish-list con i vostri amici sulle reti sociali,
- infine, se volete inserire il trailer 2.0 e-motional nel vostro blog o metterlo sul vostro sito, basta prendere il codice generato dal player stesso, cliccando sul bottone “get code” in basso a destra.

Voglio sottolineare, continua Golub,  che qui si tratta di una demo semplificata e non del vero servizio commerciale, con lo scopo principale di verificare la percezione del servizio video interattivo da parte degli utenti finali. I link ai contenuti (ad es. alle pagine ufficiali degli attori)  e cosa attivare (ad es. la funzione di distribuzione virale delle notizie, degli oggetti e dell’e-commerce da parte degli utenti) non dipendono da Moda e Tecnologia, ma da decisioni della casa di distribuzione e di chi ha curato il placement del film.

E-(motional) funge anche da aggregatore di contenuti e consente all’utente di ottenere in pochi secondi i link ufficiali di  tutto quello che ruota intorno l’oggetto, il personaggio o il servizio selezionato, funzione che offre agli utenti  un diverso approccio nella ricerca online. Ma questa funzione, per scelte che non dipendono da Moda e Tecnologia, non è stata attivata in questa prima versione, che è un assaggio di quanto si può fare con la nostra invenzione, che è pronta per una applicazione  più complessa di tutte le sue funzioni, conclude Marina Garzoni.

Per ulteriori  info:
http://stylestar.it/e-motional-technology-interactive-video/
www.stylestarlounge.com

UFFICIO STAMPA press @ modatecnologia.com

TrailerBLOG Web e Cinema: Moda e Tecnologia lancia E (MOTIONAL) con il Trailer del film Maschi Contro Femmine, di Fausto Brizzi

Measuring e-commerce, business-to-consumer virtual shopping market.

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News

Definition to measure e-commerce.

Even as the internet changes the ways of shopping and retailing, there still has been no agreed international standard for measuring e-commerce. Due to the lack of a capability for measuring, online trade undermines capacity for understanding how to manage it. This is an increasingly problematical issue as the scale of e-retailing surges: in 2010, business-to-consumer (B2C) virtual shopping market is estimated to be worth €550 billion worldwide. An overhaul of the world’s trading and support infrastructure is required to accommodate the e-commerce growth, and accurate data is essential to justify the business case for it.

news MP e commerce l Measuring e commerce, business to consumer virtual shopping market.The Global Ecommerce Measurement Standard (GEMS), is a new set of definitions for the measurement and monitoring of B2C online commerce. GEMS is backed by e-commerce industry associations in the UK, as well as countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and the European Commission.

James Roper, CEO of IMRG and one of the architects of the scheme, comments: “The only accurate way to monitor the dynamic e-commerce market is to measure actual trade. Until now there has been no cross comparable standard for countries to measure e-retail sales – local analysts and associations have adopted standards including or excluding retail sectors, transaction types and channels as they saw fit; typically serving the interests of an established community with a self-serving bias, such as physical store retailers, catalogue retailers, or ‘pure play etailers’. The new GEMS standard gives us detailed national and international insight into how the e-commerce distance selling sector is developing.”

E-commerce is particularly critical for retailers who need the best available intelligence to support their business decisions and help target investment which is continually needed to remain competitive online. Participation in an industry association e-sales index scheme gives retailers access to new data and business-critical intelligence.

GEMS is to be governed by the ‘Global B2C e-commerce measurement standard council’, which will comprise the European Commision, EMOTA, BVH, FEVAD, IMRG, and Becommerce. This council will control, develop and evolve GEMS and associated measurement mechanisms in light of changing market and environmental needs. GEMS will be expanded to include other sectors and sales channels in due course.

SOURCE: imagesfashion.com

images logo Measuring e commerce, business to consumer virtual shopping market.