Archive for 'Opinion'

High Risk & Low Reward: Buying with the Brakes On

After a brief detour last week (thanks for the many heartfelt messages for my Uncle Jim) I want to return to my exploration of the role of risk and reward in our online consumer behaviors.  We looked at the low risk/low reward and low risk/high reward quadrants. Today, we’ll continue by exploring the high risk/low reward quadrant. As a brief recap, our brains tend to apply brakes or step on the gas when steering through a buying decision based on the degree of risk and the promise of reward inherent in the decision. This dictates the nature of the consumer [...]

Multilingual SEO: by language or by country?

With only around a quarter of internet users being native English-speakers, and with the majority of multilingual users placing more trust in websites written in their own native language when it comes to making purchases online, website localisation and multilingual SEO are becoming increasingly important aspects of online marketing. Indeed, Common Sense Advisory studies suggest an average return of US$25 for every $1 spent on localization. The benefits are clear, but once you’ve decided to take the plunge, you still have to decide whether to target foreign markets by language or by country. By language Many languages are spoken across [...]

Uncle Jim: My Information Highway

For my last column of 2010, I’d like to take a little detour from my usual subject matter and tell you about someone very special to me. I’d like to introduce you to my Uncle Jim, who passed away on Christmas day. He was, in many ways, a precursor to the connected world we write about constantly in this column. Uncle Jim was a long haul truck driver. For most of his life, he delivered bricks in Eastern Canada and the United States. Over the last several years of his career, he hauled specialty vehicles for the rich and famous [...]

Risk, Reward and the Buying Matrix

Last week, I explored how two parts of our brain, the Nucleus Accumbens and the Anterior Insula, are key in driving our buying behaviors. I compared them to the gas pedal and brake of our buying “engine”. The balance between the two is key to understanding how we are driven towards our ultimate decisions. The Nucleus Accumbens drives our anticipation of an emotional reward, and the Anterior Insula creates anxiety around areas of risk. As it turns out, you can plot the two as the axes of a matrix on which, theoretically, you could plot any purchase. The four quadrants [...]

My 2011 List is Very Short

It’s that time of year when everyone trots out their end of year lists; you know, the Top 10 Best/Worst/Biggest/Smallest/Smartest/Stupidest something-or-others of 2010. Looking ahead, there are also the prediction lists; 10 Social/Mobile/Online whatever’s we’ll see in 2011. I am reaching a point where I’m starting to leave mailing lists, and retracting permission for companies to send me their newsletters, because it’s becoming too much for me to handle. I don’t have the time, and frankly, too much of the information I’m getting is either something I already knew, had already read somewhere else, or don’t care about anyway. What [...]

The Insula and the Accumbens: Driving Online Behavior

One of the more controversial applications of new neurological scanning technologies has been a quest by marketers for the mythical “Buy Button” in our brains. So far, no magical nook or cranny in our cranium has given marketers the ability to foist whatever crap they want on is, but a couple of parts of the brain have emerged as leading contenders for influencing buying behavior. The Nucleus Accumbens: The Gas Pedal The Nucleus Accumbens has been identified as the reward center of the brain. Although this is an oversimplification, it definitely plays a central role in our reward circuit. Neuroscanning [...]

Search Breaks Out of the Box in Park City

Wow! The Search Insider Summit is in full swing in Park City, Utah and for the first time in 6 or 7 Summits, I’m not there. I don’t mind saying, it’s feeling kinda weird. Laurie Sullivan and the team, including your emcee Aaron Goldman, did a bang up job putting the show together. I did have some limited involvement, looking on from the sidelines as they lined up the speakers and nailed down the agenda. They’re touching on all the hot topics: the convergence of display and search, social and search (pretty much everything and search), new platforms to allow [...]

Baring Your Corporate Soul Online

Web presence is taking on a whole new meaning. I’m having more and more conversations with companies that are in the middle of redefining who they are online. In that process, they’re just not sure what they expose and what they keep hidden behind the kimono. Their website started as a marketing channel, but the explosion of potential customer touch points online makes the whole idea of a website seem hopelessly antiquated. Yet, there’s a limit in scope and complexity that makes websites an easily grasped online concept. Here are some selected snippets from those conversations: 1. “Is blogging really [...]

Google: Caught in the Act of Balancing

In last week’s column, I talked about the number of changes I was seeing on the Google results page, and, in particular, how they might maintain the delicate balance between driving revenue from the page and maintaining user trust. No sooner did the digital ink dry on the column than I received an email from an old friend, Chris Knoch, formerly of Omniture and now VP of Marketing at Ready Financial. In his email, Chris included a screen shot of a rather interesting beta that Google is running: It’s hard to say, given Google’s love for beta testing, how widely [...]

Google’s Recent Changes: Here There Be Monsters

Something’s brewing in Mountain View. Google’s geared up the SAR (Screwing Around Rate) of their results page to unprecedented levels. We have Google Instant, Place Search and Google Previews all rolling out in the last few months. And from around the blogosphere, there’s rumors of testing that allows users to show 11 sponsored ads on top and also the telling switch of the label “Sponsored Links” to simply “Ads.” So, what does Google have up their sleeves? The recent changes with Google prompted me to dig out a research paper we wrote a few years ago called: Search Engine Results: [...]