
İnternet reklamı
yapan firmaların 2/3 si, başarılarını sadece sitelerindeki trafik
ile ölçüyorlar.Bu yanlış bir ölçümleme...
Yeni araştırmaya
göre,sadece site karlılığı üzerinde , durusanız, internet sitenizin
size yarattığı katna değerin 2/3 kaçırmış olusunuz.
NEW YORK, August
20, 2001 — Jupiter Media Metrix , the global leader in Internet
and new technology measurement and analysis, today reports that
69 percent of retailers are wrongly judging the success of their
Internet investments on top-line metrics such as online sales and
profits.
According to new Jupiter retail infrastructure research, brick-and-mortar
companies that look at the non-transactional benefits of their sites
— including online influenced sales and improved payroll productivity
— will find that the ROI of their Web sites are 65 percent higher
than if they only considered sales that occur online. Jupiter analysts
say that brick-and-mortar retailers must strive to maximize their
sites' ability to not only drive online sales, but to also drive
informed customers into stores.
"Brick and
mortar retailers should not blindly follow the lead of their pure-play
competitors by adopting a laser-like focus on the profitability
of their Web sites," said Ken Cassar, senior analyst, Jupiter
Media Metrix. "A typical brick-and-mortar retailer's Web site
can yield financial benefits well beyond the transactions it generates.
Jupiter estimates that nearly two thirds of the total Web benefit
for retailers will be in offline transactions influenced by online
research."
Key findings from
the latest Jupiter retail infrastructure research report, "Profits
Are for Pure Plays: Prudent Online Investment Strategies for Brick-and-Mortar
Retailers," include:
Brick and mortar retailers only "pay lip service" to the
value that their sites have to their stores, tracking metrics that
treat their sites as selling channels. According to a Jupiter Executive
Survey, 46 percent of retailers cite sales as the primary metric
that they base the success of their Web sites on, followed by 23
percent that are focused on profit. Meanwhile, a Jupiter consumer
Survey reveals that 45 percent of consumers have used a retailer's
Web sites to research a product before buying it in that same company's
store.
Jupiter analysts say that only Internet pure-play retailers should
focus solely on driving profits from their Web sites. According
to the Jupiter ROI model, a brick-and-mortar retailer with a fairly
successful transactional Web site is likely to extract nearly two
thirds of its total Web benefit from the non-transactional capabilities
of its site. In this model, the site's ROI is 65 percent higher
when the non-transactional benefits are included than when they
are ignored.
Integrating online and offline systems will become increasingly
important for retailers who are focused on driving consumers into
their stores with purchase intent.
A Jupiter Executive Survey reveals that while only 31 percent of
retailers already provide visibility of store inventory on their
Web sites, another 23 percent expect to offer this capability within
the next 24 months. Jupiter analysts advise that while systems integration
is inevitable, the costs can be high enough that many brick and
mortar retailers should delay aggressive integration efforts until
after their in-store systems have been brought up-to-date with software
that was built to Web-based standards -- something that will happen
in due course for nearly all large retailers.
"Brick and mortar retailers cannot ignore the impact that their
Web sites have on store purchasing because it is difficult to quantify,"
Cassar said. "The retailer that spends its limited Web resources
shoring up the transactional elements of its site at the expense
of the elements that would send a customer with purchase-intent
into its stores may ultimately lose offline market share to smart
competitors."
|