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From: | Phil Eriksen <phil@acepay.co.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 23 Jun 2000 13:06:24 +1200 |
ril wrote: > What the internet doesn't deliver is what makes us human. Contact. Not > contact through a computer but face to face. When people purchase face > to face there are also subtleties. The attention one receives when > handing over ones money for example. The wrapping of the good. The > people around. The sitting in a cafe afterwards flicking through the > purchase. The internet cannot currently deliver face to face contact, so if that is what you really want, the internet is not for you. However, when I go to a retail store, the real point of the face to face contact is simple - to gain the information I need about the product I am purchasing, and to gain the confidence that i'm purchasing the product from the right place. The internet can't exactly replicate the retail store experience - and it shouldn't try to. What it can do, however, is offer the shopper substantially more information, and ensure that this information is top notch. Every tried to purchase computer equipment from certain large retailers? I have - and sure, i can get all the face to face contact I want - can't get any answers tho. An example from my own business. The product we sell (admittedly to business users not consumers, but I believe the rules don't change much) is sold direct, and also by dealers. The support for it (ie the information) can be gotten from a helpdesk, or face to face, or from a third party. The advantage of the internet is that when we add or change something now, the day it is changed, it is documented in full. The new information is indexed to other relevant information. Chances are that documentation has been written by one of the owners of the business. To look back at my computer equipment example, the "shopper", instead of relying on face-to-face contact with a part time worker who doesn't care, is able to get all the information they need, written by those who know the answers. >From a business point of view, its a terribly efficient way to do things. Instead of dispensing the information one-to-one 10,000 times, it is available to any takers, 24 hours a day. Our traditional sources of info (helpdesk, dealers etc) are still there and are helped by having the information source - an effective training manual. The face to face contact hasn't been eliminated - but if you are just wanting the information, and nothing else, you can get it faster, cheaper, and from the right source. CEO's of businesses always talk about "understanding customers" and "getting onto the groundfloor" thinking that 20 minutes a week on the phone achieves this - with the internet, a CEO can literally communicate with all of his customers - direct. I believe that currently, a comparison between traditional retail and online retail is unfair, because online retail has failed miserably to date. "e-commerce" is what people are talking about endlessly, but completing the transaction is the easy part. At the above mentioned computer retailer, there are numerous ways to pay for your purchase - the point is you walk out before buying because the rep isn't helpful. On the net, everybody has put lists of products and e-commerce facilities online - but very few have made all the information one would need to make a purchase available. Quite a few years ago I recall the term "information super-highway" was used often. Between then and now, as net entrepreneurs greed and investors idiocy ensured too much money flowed in to ensure the job was done right (why worry about building a business and controlling costs when your 25, just had an IPO and theres $50mil in the bank?) people seem to have forgotten the keyword - information. Face to face contact isn't overly useful, but it can provide information, and reassurance. Once these two things are better handled online (and the day will come) online retail will fare better. The internet companies have "caught up" with traditional retail by allowing the purchase to be made (as much as this misses the point). However, if they can next ensure that all information needed to make a purchase is provided, and offer reassurance, traditional retail will never catch up. Cheers, Phil ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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