Home Wealth Project
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Jan 15th
I really thought I was a rebel back in the 80s when I had blue streaks in my hair or in the 90s when I told a boardroom full of conservative main line executives that it was a dog-eat-dog market and we were wearing pork-chop underwear. So when I started reading my review copy of Users Not Customers by Aaron Shapiro I found myself standing up and cheering – literally.
You Are Probably Embarrassing Yourself Online
Shapiro is on a passionate crusade to give companies a whack on the side of the head when it comes to recognizing that users and not customers are the predictor of profitability.
Let me explain. Users are all the people who interact with your brand online and offline – but mostly online. And the companies who make it easy for users to become customers through their online interactions with them will be successful. The ones who don’t – will bear the consequences.
Shapiro doesn’t mince words. He tells it how he sees and you may disagree, but the millions of people who depend on their digital impressions of your business will spend their money with the companies that have put their focus on the user experience.
The best example of this is on the very first page of the book. Shapiro tells the story of his experience inside of a Williams Sonoma store. He was looking to purchase a product and winced at the $150 price tag. He simply whipped out his iPhone, scanned the bar code and found a better price at the Bed Bath and Beyond store. When he asked the Williams Sonoma manager to match the price, they refused and he made his purchase – at the Bed Bath and Beyond. It was that simple.
There is Data Behind the Book
Users Not Customers offers page after page of contextual data and research from the Digital Leadership Set Survey that Shapiro (@amshap) ran as CEO of HUGE, a digital marketing agency that helps global companies reimagine how they interact with their customers and manage their business in the online economy.
Shapiro had these opinions and observations about the digital user experience being at the core of a company’s profitability so he started the Digital Leadership Set study to start collecting hard data that would prove or disprove his theory.
To start, they went to the Fortune 1,000 and then grouped them according to industry. Then for each industry sector they evaluated the twenty largest companies. They measured over sixty aspects of the company that included how effectively their digital effectiveness across all aspects of their business. This information was then aggregated into an overall digital excellence rating between 1 and 100. The companies with the top ratings became part of the Digital Leadership Set. They included: Apple, Amazon, Macy’s, Wal Mart, Wells Fargo Hewlett Packard and more. Notice that these are not ALL digital or online companies. In fact, there are several mature companies in the Leadership Set that have evolved and transformed themselves time and time again.
The result was that:
“True market leaders focus on meeting their user needs above all else. Keep users happy, and customers follow; grow your user base and your customer base grows as well.”
What You Will Learn From Users Not Customers
This 200 page book only has seven chapters that take you on a journey of realization. The introduction is dedicated to bringing home the point that:
“If you’re not thinking about users, you’ll be out of business.”
Once you’ve wrapped your head around the new context of how buying decisions happen you’ll move on to building a user-centric management team. The meat of the book shows you how to structure your business in a way that brings the user experience to the forefront and attract and engage users by giving and not taking.
My favorite chapter in the book is called “TCPF Sales”. TCPF stands for Trust, Convenience, Price and Fun. The epiphany that Shapiro gives you here is that people are online for only two basic reasons:
If you were to only read one chapter – read this one. This is, by far, the simplest, most concrete and clear explanation of how your users (and you) go about making purchasing decisions.
Shapiro also gives many, many examples of companies (both startups as well as established brands) who have embraced this principle and how they did it.
I wasn’t surprised when I saw that one of his examples was Mint.com. This story hit home with me because I’ve been using Mint as an example of a web site that is so easy to use and understand from the split second you land there. I’m not a user of Mint, so I was blown away at their ingenious business model. The service is free and uses advertising to make money. So what, you say – that’s not new. But here’s the cool part. They only show you advertising that saves you money and improves your financial performance. The ads you see are targeted to you and your financial goals and the ads actually HELP you. The result is that while most conversion rates for ads are about .3% Mint gets an average of 12%! That is crazy!
Don’t Read This Book If. . .
This is not the book for you if you like the status quo. If you intend to close your business and retire in the next couple of years – this book will only be mildly entertaining.
But if you intend to be in business for the long haul, then you can’t afford NOT to read this book. Let me warn you. You will find yourself confronted on so many levels. Your web site isn’t good enough, your customer service or management isn’t organized around the user, etc. This book isn’t written to make you feel good – it’s written to snap you into shape for the future.
Check out the web site for Users Not Customers to get PDFs of free chapters as well as lots of great videos and blog posts.
Users Not Customers Will Wake You Up to the Future of Doing Business
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Jul 5th
Tips, strategies, guides, & courses for entrepreneurs using Cafepress, Zazzle, LuLu and other print-on-demand services.
PressFoo.com – Ninja Tactics for Users of Cafepress, Zazzle, & LuLu
Jul 4th
The Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure (CARD) Act, which took effect in late February, is good news for consumers who use credit cards, but could be bad news for small business owners, SMSmallBiz reports.
The CARD act affects only consumer, not business, credit cards. But like consumers, in the past few years business owners have been hit by rising interest rates and fees on their business credit cards. They’ve also been struggling with rising costs for accepting credit and debit cards. Interchange fees–the fees charged by credit-card issuers to merchants whenever a credit or debit transaction takes place–increased from between 1.25 percent and 1.91 percent in 1991 to between 0.95% and 2.95 percent in 2009, according to a recent report on credit cards by the Government Accountability Office.
Not only have business owners gained no relief from interchange fees, they’re also likely to be hit with even higher fees, rising interest rates and more confusing billing tactics. “There is a whole revenue stream that has been shut off to credit-card issuers [by the CARD Act],” Molly Brogan, spokeswoman for the National Small Business Association in Washington, DC, told SMSmallBiz. “They may look to small businesses to make up that revenue.”
If you’re considering using your personal credit cards for business reasons to gain the protections of the CARD Act, don’t. Gerri Detweiler, small business credit adviser with educational website Credit.com, cautions that combining personal and business expenses on a personal card can hurt your credit score, prevent you from deducting interest and annual fees as a business expense, and even put your corporate structure at risk.
At least one source is hoping business credit card users might benefit from the CARD Act. Nessa E. Feddis, vice president and senior counsel for the American Bankers Association in Washington, DC, told SMSmallBiz that some of the benefits of the CARD Act–such as consistent billing periods and allocation of payments–might get applied to business credit card users as well. “When a computer-oriented change is required, for example,” she explains, “it may be easier and more efficient to apply the same rule [to all users].”
CARD Act Protects Consumer Credit Cards – But Could Hurt Business Users
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Feb 28th
If you use Gmail, and your Google mail didn’t work starting yesterday, you may be one of the 120,000 or so users left stranded by a Gmail outage. Engadget has more:
If you’ve got a working Gmail account, you might want to back it up every so often — as many as 500,000 Gmail users lost access to their inboxes this morn, and some of them are reporting (via Twitter and support forums) that years worth of messages, attachments and Google Chat logs had vanished by the time they were finally able to log on. While we haven’t experienced the issue personally, we’re hearing that the bug effectively reset some accounts, treating their owners as new users complete with welcome messages.
Google engineers wrote that fewer than 0.08% of users were affected. They’re still working on fixing the bug.
eWeek writes that this kind of outage happens every year for Gmail:
Gmail outages are an annual issue for Google, which provides e-mail for millions of consumers and businesses via its sprawling cloud computing cluster of servers and storage arrays.
However, after some nerve-wracking outages both in 2008 and 2009, 2010 was a pretty good year for Gmail in terms of uptime.
In 2010, Gmail delivered uptime of 99.984 percent for business and consumer users. That translates to 7 minutes of downtime per month over the last year, or small delays of a few seconds.
If you use Gmail, the aptly named freeware program Gmail Backup is a good way to back up your account. (The site is down at time of writing, presumably from too many downloads.)
View full post on Business Pundit
Jan 4th
We like to think of Kindles and iPads as butting heads, but a recent survey shows that 40% of iPad owners also own a Kindle. TechCrunch reports:
…in a recent survey of about 1,000 consumers by JP Morgan’s Internet team, 40 percent of iPad owners also own a Kindle…According to the same survey, another 23 percent of iPad owners plan on buying a Kindle in the next 12 months.
About half of the people surveyed read between zero and ten books a year. But 16 percent read more than 25 books a year.
The big takeaway here is that the iPad and the Kindle are perceived as different types of products, and rightly so. Amazon has done a good job marketing the Kindle as an ebook designed specifically for book lovers, and at $139 for the lowest-priced Kindle it is seen as a different class of device than the $499 iPad. (It also doesn’t hurt than you can use the iPad as a Kindle reading device, removing the need for consumers to make an either-or decision).
There are a few interesting implications to this study. One, the iPad isn’t a Kindle killer because its current technology isn’t as eye-friendly as that of the Kindle. Two, the kinds of people buying iPads (early adopters and tech-savvy users) aren’t shy about owning multiple devices. Thirdly, and perhaps most importantly, the media and analysts are jumping to premature conclusions about products’ implications. Before calling something a Kindle-killer, in other words, it’s worth thoroughly analyzing what a product offers, to whom it offers those benefits, and where its potential weaknesses lie. The iPad-Kindle combo underlines the fact that for many consumers, tech gadgets work in concert with one another, and people don’t necessarily choose one over the other.
The media probably won’t take this into account, though–expect the next tablet to also be a Kindle (or, even more glamorously, and iPad) killer.
View full post on Business Pundit
Oct 6th
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Facebook engineers have been in a… off some of those new tools, showing how they’ll change the way users of the social networking site share information. |
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Oct 5th
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According to security firm Sophos, a number of social networkers have reported their status being updated automatically… |
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Sep 25th
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Being perpetually connected through social media can increase stress, weaken personal relationships, and even cause sleep loss, according to a U.S… |
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Sep 21st
| The Twitter social media site has been hacked, impacting thousands of users of the popular microblogging site. According to Mashable, the bug… |
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