The E-Marketing Mix: A Contribution of The E-Tailing Wars: Kirthi Kalyanam & Shelby Mcintyre
The E-Marketing Mix: A Contribution of The E-Tailing Wars: Kirthi Kalyanam & Shelby Mcintyre
Department of Marketing
Leavey School of Business
Santa Clara University
Santa Clara, CA 95053
Abstract
One of the most ubiquitous aspects of the marketing landscape is the concept of a
marketing mix. The marketing mix has persisted now for over 40 years as the 4P’s of
Product, Price, Place and Promotion. However, in the post dot-com boom, marketing
managers are learning to cope with a whole host of new marketing elements that have
emerged from the on-line world of the internet. In some ways these new marketing
elements have close analogs in the off-line world, and yet from another perspective they
are revolutionary and worthy of a new characterization into what we coin as the E-
Marketing mix (or the e-marketing delta to the traditional marketing mix). Today, few if
any marketing plans can be complete without a blending of the E-Marketing mix into the
traditional mix to form an effective marketing strategy. The current work attempts to
identify and characterize the E-Marketing mix, catalog it’s evolving tool-kit of elements
and classify them into a taxonomy for marketing managers and researchers.
Introduction
In the 5-year period beginning about April 19951 and ending in April 20002, an
era known as the dot-com boom, hundreds of businesses that used the Internet as a
primary means of transacting with consumers (e-tailers) were taken to IPO. In what is
referred to as the dot-com bust, from April 2000 to December 2001, the common stock
issued by these companies, in virtually all cases, was trading below its issue price.
Subsequently, many of these companies terminated operations or ceased to exist as an
independent entity3. The dramatic fall of these companies has been the focus of
considerable attention from the business press4 as well as scholarly research (Mahajan,
Wind and Srinivasan 2002). However, in the short period of their existence, these e-
tailers developed and introduced new internet-based marketing techniques at a furious
pace, essentially creating a new world for marketing5.
While these techniques were mostly developed in the context of Internet
Retailing, they are being widely utilized by other Business-to-Consumer and Business-to-
Business organizations as well. For example, www.grainger.com the web site of W.W.
Grainger Inc., the leading supplier of Maintenance, Repair and Operating supplies
(MRO), indicates the depth and the sophistication with which W.W. Grainger Inc. has
adopted Internet marketing techniques. Similar conclusions can be drawn from visiting
the web site of Intuit, which targets its best selling Quicken financial software at both
businesses and consumers. Web sites in the airline industry, the hospitality industry, the
electronics industry, the software industry or virtually any other industry indicate that the
adoption of Internet marketing techniques has been pervasive. In other words the
marketing techniques that were pioneered by e-tailers have evolved into E-Marketing.
1
The IPO of Netscape on August 9, 1995 was the first commercial web-browser company. Also, in 1995, a
number of Net related companies went public, but Netscape lead the pack with the 3rd largest ever market
cap for a NASDAQ IPO.
2
The first month of the precipitous decline in e-commerce stock prices
3
See the “dot-com graveyard” page at Upside.com
4
In fact a number of websites provide pages to track dot-com failures (e.g., the “dot-com graveyard” at
Upside.com, the “Dot-com Layoffs and Shutdowns” page of the WSJ, etc.).
5
Kurt Anderson provided an interesting perspective in the December 2000 issue of Inside Magazine. He
compared the internet business failures to a business model of Christopher Columbus’s voyage.
Columbus’s business model failed – no direct route to Asia, bad ROI on the venture – but he “discovered
America” and thereby changed the world, so too with the failed dot-coms.
2
However, depending on the area of interest, the marketing community has
developed a very selective view of these internet-marketing techniques. To web
developers and technology integrators internet marketing is about building web sites that
are robust and scale with traffic. To the advertising industry it is about internet
advertising and its impact on driving web-traffic and brand building. Auction oriented
sites such as eBay have grown through word of mouth and have emphasized community
building. To the Customer Relationship Management (CRM) community, it is about
personalization.
Apart from this selective emphasis, the internet-community has also introduced
overlapping vocabulary to describe the techniques. For example, the technique of
growing the customer base through referrals, often termed word-of-mouth in the
literature, is also referred to as organic growth (Wall Street Journal 2001) or Viral
Marketing (Godin 2001). Another example is the term “collaborative filtering.” This
term usually refers to the provision of recommendations to a user on the basis of the
similarity of that user’s purchases to others who are like him. However, the terms
“recommendation engine”, “data mining”, “personalization”, “mass customization” and
“one-to-one marketing” are all sometimes used, in one way or another, to refer to the
same concept.
This lack of a common vocabulary, a categorization of techniques and an
integrating framework creates fundamental problems for practitioners and academics,
much as was the case in the 1950’s before E. Jerome McCarthy (1960) introduced the
4P’s standardization of the marketing mix: First, there is the fundamental question
“What is E-Marketing?”. Second there is the follow up question “How is E-Marketing
different?”. Third, the lack of a framework means that managers do not have a natural
starting point for developing the e-marketing aspects of the strategy. Fourth, since the
scope of marketing activities is not well established the specification and communication
of the marketing plan, a key marketing activity (Winer and Lehmann 1991), is more
difficult. Fifth, it is hard for a marketing manager to have an appropriate emphasis (and
budget) across all the elements in the marketing mix without a clear delineation of them.
For example, customer acquisition might be overemphasized relative to customer
retention. Sixth, the integration of the techniques might be insufficient leading to a
marketing program that is disjoint from the consumer’s perspective. Finally, without a
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complete understanding of the scope of the marketing elements, it is difficult to identify
how different strategies are being implemented through a differential blending of the
marketing elements.
In summary there are several ramifications of the fact that these e-marketing
techniques are not well categorized, the interrelationships not well understood and a
holistic view is not specified. Without such integration, it is difficult to: (a) create,
maintain and communicate an appropriate marketing plan to support the strategy, (b)
budget across the elements of the mix, (c) align the organizational structure of the
marketing effort, and then (d) assign appropriate responsibilities while still maintaining
the needed integration6. While there are several textbooks providing an overview of
Internet Marketing (Hanson 2000, Turban, et. al. 2002), they do not emphasize a
categorization or an integrative framework that enables us to answer these fundamental
questions.
This paper, therefore, focuses on internet-based marketing techniques (e-
marketing7) which first emerged during the dot-com boom. The research is exploratory
and descriptive in nature. Building on the concepts of the “marketing mix” and its
vertical analog in the “retailing mix,” attention is focused on characterizing an E-
Marketing Mix and describing and motivating each element. As Niel Borden said long
ago: “To define the concept of a Marketing Mix is one way to define Marketing” (Borden
1965). Thus, identifying the E-Marketing Mix actually answers the question of “What is
E-Marketing?” Comparing each E-Marketing element with its off-line analog can start to
address the question of “How different is E-Marketing.”
A two stage iterative procedure has been used to triangulate on a characterization
of the E-Marketing mix. The 4P’s of the traditional marketing mix serve as a starting
point. In the first stage, we conducted audits of industry web sites and determined what
modifications of the 4P’s framework are needed to reflect the E-Marketing activities.
This provided an initial characterization of the E-Marketing mix. However this first stage
would probably not have provide adequate coverage of E-Marketing techniques that are
not executed using the web site. Hence, in the second stage we compiled an inventory of
6
The same statement about integration problems exists for the traditional marketing mix, but arguably
more so currently for the newer e-marketing elements.
7
E-Marketing is meant to connote any use of an electronic or internet-based capability to interface with
customers or prospects with a ‘marketing intent’.
4
E-Marketing techniques by reviewing articles published in the industry and trade press,
Internet Marketing textbooks and academic journals. When the literature review did not
provide adequate information, additional information was gathered through depth
interviews of experts and practitioners. For each microelement (technique), we provide:
(a) a description, (b) a comparison to an offline analog, (c) key implementation decisions,
and (d) metrics. For the purposes of brevity and clarity, we focus directly on these new
e-techniques while understanding that they must integrate holistically with the traditional
marketing mix.
While the 4Ps characterize the current marketing mix, we find it worthwhile to
characterize the E-Marketing Mix using a 4Ps+P2C2S2 acronym8. In other words we keep
the original 4Ps and add Personalization9 and Privacy being the 2 new P’s, Customer
Service and Community being the 2 new C’s, and Security and Site Design as the 2 new
S’s to characterize the E-Marketing mix (See Figure 1). In addition we find that the
concepts of (a) Personalization, (b) Privacy and (c) Security plus relational database10
management as pervasive and best to be treated as a foundation for the whole framework.
Thus that is the depiction of these elements in Figure 1. These four concepts then
provide a helpful policy and technological basis for integration of the various elements.
In contrast, the traditional marketing mix did not depict a policy or technological basis
for integration. Perhaps, as a partial result, in traditional organizations of the past, the
elements of the marketing mix too often tended to become “silos” and were sometimes
implemented as vertically separated blocks each with its own corporate manager11.
The sheer number of macro-elements and micro-elements in Figure 1 suggests
that there has been a considerable amount of innovation in marketing techniques over the
past 5-7 years. However since the E–Marketing Mix, as depicted in Figure 1, provides a
birds-eye view of these numerous techniques, at a marco-level and in a standardized
8
The mnemonic, or memory device, is important here, particularly when confronting a 10-element macro-
mix. The squared terms are meant to connote the power of the internet and, therefore, are depicted as
exponential rather than additive elements.
9
We adopt the convention of underlining the first letter of each macro-element of the E-Marketing Mix and
suggest that this be used as common practice to identify these elements.
10
Relational database is not taken as part of the E-Marketing Mix because it is only a technology and not a
function that the manager manipulates to address the customer (while, say, Personalization is).
11
The brand management system can be perceived as an attempt to re-capture the integration essential for
an appropriate marketing mix.
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vocabulary, it should help a manager to quickly summarize the E-Marketing effort and to
see how it relates to the overall marketing strategy.
Before proceeding, it is important also to describe what what is not within our
scope. It is beyond our focus to prescribe marketing strategies and programs for either
traditional businesses or internet-based businesses. Thus, it is only implicitly assumed
that the e-marketing mix elements we describe will be a part of the overall marketing
program for a firm, and that a complete description of such programs requires a holistic
blending of the on-line aspects with off-line ones. Also, we do not delve into when
different sub-elements should be used or how to use them. In short, the treatment is not
normative, but descriptive.
In the next section, we provide some perspectives on the Marketing Mix, and then
present the first stage results of characterizing the E-Marketing Mix. This is followed by
our second and third stage analysis and cataloging of the E-Marketing mix elements. We
close with a summary of the perspectives developed in this paper and opportunities for
future work in this area.
There are several benefits for the marketing mix. First and foremost, it provides a
standardized vocabulary for the marketing community. The mix helps to categorize what
would otherwise be potentially thousands of microelements in a full-blown marketing
campaign into manageable macro-elements that can be the basis for the development and
communication of a more macro marketing strategy. The marketing industry is
organized into verticals around the elements of the marketing mix (e.g. Advertising,
Direct Marketing, Pricing, Sales promotion, Branding) with associated industry
organizations, conferences, tradeshows, textbooks and academic courses. Since the
marketing mix specifies the scope of marketing activities, it serves as the natural
reference point for budget allocation. Vertical industries differ in the manner in which
they allocate their marketing budget across the marketing mix. For instance, the
marketing budget in the pharmaceutical industry is heavily skewed towards a sales force
that targets doctors, whereas the more typical approach in packaged goods is to
emphasize TV advertising to consumers. It is not unusual for marketing managers to
benchmark their budgetary allocations with the typical allocation in their industry.
Within an industry, the marketing mix can be used to characterize competitive
marketing strategy. For instance, “push” and “pull” strategies of marketing are stylized
descriptions of a blending of the marketing mix elements wherein some elements are
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being emphasized over others. And of most importance, undoubtedly, has been the use
of the marketing mix as a tool or framework to communicate the marketing strategy in a
standardized way and also to organize teaching and research about marketing.
Perhaps the key point is that the concept of a marketing mix has survived the test
of time as a central contribution to the practice of marketing, particularly with regard to
organizing marketing strategy and for teaching and communicating about the marketing
strategy and process. This core need still exists today, maybe even more so, in the post
dot-com world when marketing managers now must grapple with a host of additional
potential marketing elements.
12
The term “customer-facing” here means directed at the customer, and particularly when interacting
with the customer either directly, one to one (as in a service encounter), or in the actual transaction of a
sale or delivery.
8
categories. Even within a category, the assortment (depth) typically spans the product
lines of multiple manufacturers and hence is broader in scope.
In summary, the retailing mix adds customer-facing elements and de-emphasizes
channel management. Location and assortment decisions substitute for channel and
product decisions. Figure 2 graphically portrays the overlap between the marketing mix
and the retailing mix.
14
Given this example, it is natural to ask whether a banner ad with a “buy now” link to the retailer is a
promotion or a channel? Since the transaction itself will occur at the retailer, our categorization would
suggest that this is an example of a paid-for promotion rather than a channel intermediary.
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retailing mix. Further the four concepts of Personalization, Privacy, Security and a
relational database provide a helpful policy and technological basis for integration of the
various elements. In contrast, the traditional marketing mix or the retailing mix did not
depict a policy or technological basis for integration. Finally, based on Figure 2, an
argument could be made that the E-Marketing mix, though distinct from the marketing
and retailing mix, has enough overlap to be considered evolutionary rather than
revolutionary. We recognize that this is a matter of debate depending on the weight that
one would assign to Personalization, Community and Site design, their digital
underpinning and their integration potential. It is important to emphasize that the
previous discussion is about categorization at the top-level of the mix. Sub-elements of
the E-Marketing mix (e.g., banner ads, search engines, etc.) would be distinct from the
traditional Retailing mix or the Marketing mix. These sub-elements are cataloged and
discussed in the next section.
Site Design
Traditional retailers have long known that the look and layout of a store is crucial
for maximizing sales potential. In an analogous way, one of the crucial elements of the e-
marketing mix is the design of the web site. After all, an important culmination point for
the outbound marketing activities is to generate customer visits to the web site. It is
when the customer visit finally occurs that effective web Site design becomes critical.
Effective web Site design has evolved from focusing simply on the novelty of it all to
ensuring that the web Site design provides a compelling customer experience. Just as
traffic generation is an important metric for promotions, customer conversions and
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retention measures are important measurements for the effectiveness of the design of the
web site. The fundamental building blocks of web-site design are: (a) the home page, (b)
navigation and search, (c) the design and layout of each page, (d) site tools and (e)
performance and usability testing. These building blocks have to be optimized for the
customer activities of search, display, purchasing and order tracking.
15
As elements of the marketing mix, Testing is much like Marketing Research. These “research elements”
can be viewed as a mix component, or simply be treated as “research” in preparation for design of the
mix (as has been the typical treatment in past discussion of the Marketing Mix).
16
See for example www.vividence.com
16
Another aspect of the web site that is frequently tested is the site performance and
availability (See for example, www.keynote.com). Industry experts argue that waiting for
a page to load is like waiting in line for the cashier at the checkout or for the store to
open. Hence they measure performance, which is defined as the average number of
seconds it takes for the home page to load. In addition to performance, they measure
availability (uptime), which is an estimate of the % of time the web site is available.
With respect to usability the following yardsticks are typically monitored: 3
Clicks to find the merchandise, 1 click to purchase, and 3 clicks to track the order.
Additional metrics that are often monitored include the number of clicks needed to
perform crucial tasks, the number of dead ends reached in navigation, the % conversion
of the web site, and the % of abandoned shopping carts resulting from usability issues.
Product
The Assortment
This aspect of the E-Marketing mix has many similarities to the assortment
selection practices of retailers. The assortment strategies of retailers have been well
documented and discussed in the literature (e.g., Levy and Weitz 1998). Given these
similarities, we focus discussion on some of the more unique capabilities in the online
environment.
Price
There has been considerable attention paid to the issue of price sensitivity in the
online environment (Bailey 1998; Brynjolfsson and Smith 2000). Specifically it has been
argued that in the online environment it is easy to make price comparisons across
retailers. Hence price sensitivity should be higher in online environments and in turn this
should reduce the price dispersion across retailers selling comparable goods. We will
focus the discussion around online pricing techniques, particularly those that are
substantially new.
Dynamic Pricing
In the offline world, the airline industry popularized the notion of dynamic pricing
and called it yield management. In this approach, the number of seats allocated to a price
category on a particular route is continuously modified to match demand. For example,
demand on the Phoenix-Las Vegas sector might be currently very low and the airline
might release a block of seats in the $99 price category. Conversely when demand is
high, the airline might reduce the number of seats allocated in the low price category and
increase the number of seats in the high price category. The abundance of data online
expands the scope of dynamic pricing techniques. Product sales can be continuously
monitored and if sales are below expectations, then prices can be adjusted accordingly.
Another opportunity in the online world is to conduct early testing of product sales rates.
Such tests can be executed in a non-obtrusive manner, targeted at select customers
through catalog like mailings. The observed sales rates can provide some information of
overall season sales. A potential issue is with respect to the types of products where
dynamic pricing can be beneficial. In some situations consumers might expect stable
prices and could consider the price volatility to be disruptive. Such concerns have to be
balanced against the profit improvements from dynamic pricing.
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Forward Auctions
The forward auction (sometimes called the English Auction), as popularized by
eBay, is perhaps the most widely used auction technique on the web. In this approach the
seller places an item for auction. The item is available over a pre-specified time interval.
The seller may or may not stipulate a minimum reserve price. Interested buyers bid on
the item until the auction closes. From a marketing manager’s perspective a natural
question to ask is when and why this type of pricing mechanism should be used? A key
insight from auction theory is that auctions are a useful way to price a product when there
is ambiguity about the value of the item. The value of the item might be ambiguous
when it is unique, one of a kind, custom built or when it is used. The popularity of
forward auctions for selling used products, collector’s items and specialty products on
eBay is consistent with the theoretical insights.
In addition to Ebay, other sites such as Yahoo! and Amazon host forward
auctions. However our review indicates that the use of forward auctions by traditional
retailers is not widespread. A possible explanation for this phenomenon might be that the
product assortment sold by traditional retailers is skewed towards items that have a clear
market value. For example for many branded products, manufacturers recommend a
price (MSRP) and this price along with the margin offered to retailers creates in effect a
‘retail price’ for the product. So when the market value of the item is established and one
of the key benefits of an auction mechanism is obviated. In addition, an auction involves
higher transaction cost in terms of time and effort and might not be worth the additional
effort for low priced items.
Reverse Auctions
Reverse auctions (sometimes called Dutch Auctions) are the other form of auction
that has been used online. FreeMarkets, Inc. has used this approach in the Business-to-
Business context, particularly in lieu of sealed bids. The FreeMarkets reverse auction
begins with a buyer providing technical specifications for a project. Several qualified
sellers are allowed to bid on the project. The difference in the reverse auction model
compared to a sealed bid model is that the bidding is sequential and sellers can bid
multiple times before the auction closes. In effect, in a reverse auction we have supply
chasing demand, whereas in a forward auction we had demand chasing supply.
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17
FreeMarkets Inc. reports savings of $6.4 billion on the sourcing of $30 billion to date
from using the reverse auction process. The extent and scope of the use of reverse
auctions is yet to be determined and is the topic of ongoing research (Jap 2002).
Promotion
Banners
Banners are the equivalent of advertisements on the web. The standard banner
usually appears at the top of a web page as a rectangular box of text with some graphics.
The banner will link to a target web page, which may be the homepage of the advertiser
or a page developed by the advertiser that is more directly relevant to the message or is
an elaboration of the message. Banners can also come in the form of buttons (smaller,
usually in the left hand column), or be hosted on delay pages or pop-up pages. The
banner ads, when appearing on a search engine site, can be keyed to appear when certain
terms are used in the search query, which is a form of context marketing. Banner ads are
frequently served by third party companies (e.g. www.doubleclick.com) who specialize
in feeding millions of banner ads to different pages. These companies claim that they can
schedule and rotate ads even down to the level of each individual visitor.
Click-thru rates have been the primary focus in terms of measuring the
effectiveness of banner ads. However there has been considerable discussion around the
17
http://www.freemarkets.com/benefits/, data collected on 2/10/02.
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fact that such hard measures do not correlate well with subsequent sales, awareness and
brand-associations (Briggs and Hollis 1997).
Sponsored Links
Web advertisers often pay content providers or search engine sites (e.g.
Google.com) to host “sponsored links” which are a close cousin to banner ads. This is a
link that can be traversed by an online shopper from that search engine to the sponsor’s
web page. This is analogous to buying an ad or listing in the yellow pages. Industry
research (Modahl, 1999) increasingly suggests that generally, search engines are the most
popular approach for locating information on the web. Hence sponsored links at search
engines can be very effective at driving traffic. Further, the user is already searching for
specific information and the link promises to provide relevant information. In this
manner, sponsored links are contextually very relevant and this contributes to their
effectiveness. Moreover, most web-users are well educated in the use of web-links and
find it natural to follow them to new sites. The decisions about this tool are what key
words and searches to sponsor, where and how the sponsored link should appear, where
to direct those who click-thru, and to find sites that are cost/benefit effective in terms of
cost per thousand.
Outbound e-mail
One of the most effective forms of Internet-based direct marketing (Nail, et. al,
2001) is the use of personalized e-mails. Given a database of prospects and customers e-
mail messages can be highly targeted. Experimental designs can be used to pre-test
messages on samples and predict response rates that can be expected from the rest of the
database. Email campaigns can rely on “opt-in” or “permission marketing” to be sure
that respondents do not receive unsolicited messages. Apart from text, emails include
video, audio, and web pages. E-mail campaigns have become almost ubiquitous, to the
degree that Jupiter Media Metrix projected over 50 billion marketing e-mails being sent
out in 2001. Retailers that we interviewed consider email marketing to be their most cost
effective approach for retaining and communicating with existing customers.
Most email marketing campaigns begin with list building. Testing commercially
available lists to ensure good coverage of the desired target audience is a first step.
Companies with an established installed base of customers acquire email addresses and
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permissions through direct response tactics such as promotional mailing and in store
campaigns. Once the email database is assembled, key decisions include who to target
for what message, determining the frequency of communications, and the type of copy
and graphics to include in the message.
Viral Marketing
Viral Marketing is a technique that uses a company’s best customers to promote
the product. Hotmail pioneered this technique when it launched a free web-based email
service with the tag line (at the bottom of each email) "Get your free email at Hotmail."
As customers used this email service, and were e-mailing others, they were effectively
sending an advertisement for Hotmail. This attracted new customers, who repeated the
process. Hotmail soon became the fastest growing media company in history.
The term viral marketing comes from biology and the notion of how a virus
spreads by first finding a host and subsequently by contaminating those who come in
contact with the host. Similarly in viral marketing, a customer becomes a host by
adopting a product and then spreads the word to others thereby infecting them. To put
this in perspective, Viral marketing is the online analog of word of mouth marketing.
The key difference online is expanded scale and accelerated speed. Some products and
services are inherently more viral than others. For instance, the web site Evite.com
enables users to set up a party or social event using the web site. E-mailings to those
invited to the party provide a natural viral marketing scheme since the invitees are
induced to consider Evite for subsequent parties that they might initiate. Similarly
PayPal.com is a site that allows one e-mail user to send funds to another. An individual
with a PayPal account who sends e-mail funds to another user necessitates that
subsequent user to sign up for PayPal to collect the funds. However, it is important to
recognize that “viral” aspects can often be included in many products or services
provided the marketing manager is sensitive to the possibility.
The steps in a viral marketing campaign include the goal of the campaign, the
target for it and the level of inducement to the individual for participating (e.g., at one
time PayPal gave a person $10 to send to a friend who would then need to open an
account to collect the money already in it for him.)
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E-Coupons
Coupons are a ubiquitous feature of the consumer-oriented marketing mix in the
traditional marketing plan. In the on-line world, coupons become e-coupons and are
delivered as part of an e-mail or web ad placement program. E-coupons are just like
normal coupons except that they come from the web and are printed out by the consumer.
This arrangement saves the cost of distributing coupons and allows consumers the
convenience of finding the coupons they want on the web with search engines and sites
dedicated to the purpose. As with all coupons they are inducements for a specific act on
the part of the receiver. The steps involved in an e-coupon offering include deciding:
what is the goal of the coupon effort, what act is to be required of the recipient to qualify
for the coupon, how much value will be offered by the coupon, the form of the
inducement, how to distribute the coupon, and sometimes how to promote the existence
of the coupon. The key metric in coupons is the number of them distributed, the
redemption rate, and the cost of the program relative to its goal attainment.
Place
As discussed previously, even an internet retailer relies on intermediaries to drive
sales. One class of intermediaries consists of the large portals like Yahoo!. Then there
are much smaller intermediaries that are called affiliates.
Remote Hosting
Portals like Yahoo! maintain and run shopping sections on their web site.
Retailers can rent space on these shopping sections. Using a technology called remote
merchant hosting the portal can host a mirror image of the site. The portals take the order
and forward it to the retailer. This approach provides convenience to the consumers and
allows them to perform the transaction at the portal itself thereby eliminating the need to
create an account and login in again at the retailer. The fee structure for this hosting can
vary from a flat fixed fee to a variable fee per transaction. Some implementation
decisions include choice of portal and the type of compensation scheme. Metrics include
customer acquisition, quality of customers acquired and revenue generated.
Affiliates
An affiliate program is a form of pay-for-performance advertising, on the web,
and rewards the affiliates (self-selected advertisers) for actual transactions that take place
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at the target site. An affiliate program uses a multi-level marketing concept where
affiliates attract additional customers. Some affiliate programs are multi-tiered, thus
increasing the incoming earning opportunities for the affiliates (rewarded for their traffic
and the traffic of affiliates they recruit). Marketers have the option of developing their
own in-house affiliate program (Amazon.com and BarnesAndNoble.com are examples)
or joining one or more of the large affiliate networks (Beefree, Linkshare or
CommissionJunction.). Critical decisions about affiliates program include: to use an in-
house approach or join one of the networks, which network to choose, the commission
scheme, the program to select (since there are pre-packaged promotional packages at the
affiliate networks). Important metrics include the percentage of sales that come from
each affiliate link, new customer acquisition rates, LCV of acquired customers, and
distribution of revenue across affiliates.
Customer Service
FAQ’s and Help Desks
Given the self-help nature of the web most sites feature a help desk or a support
link on their navigational bar or their home page. This link leads to a help desk or a
support page that provides users with links to specific customer support tools. A very
common customer support tool is a frequently asked questions (FAQ) list. This list is
usually reflective of the most common types of customer support issues. As described in
the next section, it is often compiled from inbound customer queries either over email or
from other channels. The customer support site, can also provide a button to email the
company with a question or a clarification. From a customer expectations perspective it
is extremely important to manage this inbound email stream effectively. Automated
approaches to do this are described in the next section.
Chat
Customer support can also be delivered using chat technology. These approaches
and community chat rooms have much in common and are described in the next section.
Community
Much has been written about the concept of “community” with regard to the web
(Hagle and Armstrong 1997a). In terms of an e-marketing tool, “community” means
getting customers to interact with one another in a way that increases the benefits of
coming to the sponsor’s site. Such interaction can be moderated through the sponsoring
site, or it can be directly among the users themselves. A virtual community is also a
location on the internet where individuals interact with one another. Chat rooms where
people discuss specific stocks, automobiles, Far Eastern culture, backward compatibility
of the latest Cisco systems Router, or buy and sell goods and services through auctions
like eBay are all examples of virtual communities. Internet technologies have enabled, in
25
a very cost effective manner, the building of communities that are at the same time very
narrow in terms of their focus while geographically broad in terms of their reach.
Reputations
One of the most powerful aspects of a community is the ability it has to form
social norms for the behavior of its members. The old-world role of word-of-mouth in
marketing has long been understood as a powerful force in the success of many
marketing campaigns. In the online world, however, automated and systematized
reputation management systems have taken this concept to a much more powerful level.
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Some observers credit the success of eBay, in large part, to its online feedback system
wherein each party to a transaction reports back to the community on the result of the
transaction both with a numeric score and a textual comment. Thus, on eBay, it is only
possible to prosper as a trader (as a buyer or seller for that matter) by having a string of
satisfied partners. One error in late payment or improper shipment and the whole
community will know about the injustice. This has enabled eBay to foster transactions
mostly between complete strangers who never meet one another nor see the goods that
they are transacting, which would seem to be an impossibly risky situation at first
thought. And to make matters worse, these trades take place even while the participants
remain mostly anonymous being known only by user ID’s like “BigDog236.” Yet eBay
managed to host over 250 million such auctions in the year 2000 (Business Week, 2000,
p.68). That outcome clearly demonstrates the power of community.
Decisions about reputation scoring systems are: how to encourage members to
post their ratings, what scoring mechanism to use for each feedback event, how to
aggregate the feedback scores, how to display the summary of scores, the level and ease
of drilldown to provide, and the length of textual comments to allow.
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In an analogous way, it could be argued that the jet-air-travel was not revolutionary in terms of function
(e.g., getting from point A to point B). A jet accomplishes the function today as did the donkey cart of
ancient times. But in terms of form, jet transportation is clearly revolutionary – it is a form of
transportation that provides a quantum shift in time and cost to accomplish the same function.
29
2 2 2
finally, the E-Marketing Mix, and its 4P’s+P C S memory mnemonic, can serve as a
tool for recalling the framework and keeping it top-of-mind.
A primary limitation of this E-Marketing Mix is that it has yet to be validated as a
“good” framework. After all, others might come up with alternative frameworks or
different classifications. So, this is only a starting point and should be viewed as
exploratory. This suggests that the first line of empirical research might be to validate
this particular framework and categorization. Such an empirical validation of
classification could be done with experts in the form of knowledgeable E-Marketing
managers.
Future work might address: budget allocation over the e-marketing mix and
methods to identify which elements are producing the best marginal contribution to ROI
in a given situation. Research might explore normative aspects of the e-Marketing mix
and when certain components are more or less effective. The e-Marketing mix can be
used for characterizing e-Marketing strategies, (e.g, how the different elements are being
blended) and what these strategies are leading to an analysis of comparative strategies
(possibly of competitors in the same market). The issue of multi-channel marketing is
also important in a total marketing plan: Will the customer search online and then buy
offline as opposed to the reverse, or possibly everything online? Can service be a major
component of the online functionality? What are the conditions which favor one
approach over another and for different customers or segments? Strategic questions such
as these can only be addressed with an understanding of the total marketing mix,
including the e-marketing mix.
30
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business • What technology is being used to secure the site? • Number of complaints regarding credit card
y
Mix
Sub Element Off-line Analog: An Example Implementation Decisions Measures & Metrics
Element
Merchandising & Recommendations Retail sales associates who • Provide creative expression for merchandise • Sale of assortment
answer customer questions • Items recommended by experts and buttons for • % of conversions through recommendations
Product
consumer access
• Extent and scope of collaborative filtering
recommendations
Dynamic Pricing Yield Management • What items are appropriate for dynamic pricing? • Overall ROI from dynamic pricing
• What types of mathematical algorithms to use?
Forward Auction Cattle auctions • What auction to use for what products? • Total revenue received
• • Number of bids
Price
Mix
Sub Element Off-line Analog: An Example Implementation Decisions Measures & Metrics
Element
Remote Hosting Distributors • Choice of portal • $ and % of sales from Portal
• Upfront versus pay for performance • New Customer Acquisition Rates
compensation • LCV of acquired customers
Place
Affiliates Independent resellers, Dealers • Choice of in house approach or 3rd party network • $ and % of sales from affiliates
and Distribution Partners • Choice of promotion program • New Customer Acquisition Rates
• Implementation and integration into web site • LCV of acquired customers
• Distribution of revenue across affiliates
Inbound Email U.S. Mail and call centers that • Analyze incoming email and create “intent” • Cost per response
are reached through toll free categories • % of resolutions in 24 hours
numbers • Draft appropriate responses • % of automated resolutions
• Create escalation path and review policy • Average time to resolve escalated email
Customer Service
Registry Management Gift registries • Whether to offer the registry? • % of customer base using registry
• What is the minimum $ value of the transactions? • $ volume of sales
• The user Interface design
Reputations Word of Mouth Reputations • What scoring mechanism to use? • Number of auctions closing
• Levels of score for de-listing from the site • Level of negative feedback
• Whether to allow for elaboration? • Fraud rates
• How to aggregate the feedback scores? • Complaint rates
• Where and how to display the summary of scores
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• Home Page
• Navigation & Search
• Page Design & Layout
• Site Tools • Assortment
• Usability & Testing • Merchandising &
Site Design Recommendations
• Chat Rooms
• User Ratings
& Reviews
• Registries &
Community Product
Wish Lists
• Reputations
• Dynamic
Customer Pricing
Price • Forward
Service Auctions
• FAQ’s & Help • Reverse
Desk Auctions
• Email Response • Name your
Mgmt. Place Promotion price
• Chat
• Affiliates • Online Ads
• Remote Hosting • Sponsored Links
• Outbound Email
• E Coupons
• Viral Marketing
Relational Database
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Site Design
Customer Service
Store Design
Customer Service
Macro Elements
Personalization
Privacy
Community