Stephan Spencer's Scatterings

The Scattered Wisdom of a scientist turned web marketing virtuoso

July 2009
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Ecommerce Best Practice Tip #8: Incorporate discussion forums into your ecommerce site

Discussion forums encourage customer participation, getting customers and prospects to stay longer which means more interaction with your brand. They drive repeat visits too. Some customers become "regulars" on your forums -- which should, hopefully, lead to you being top-of-mind more often when they are in the market for products that you sell. In other words, discussion forums make your site sticky. Not a bad thing!

Woot.com is a great example of an ecommerce site that encourages participation with forums. They consistently get dozens of comments per day; frequently it's even hundreds. For example, this blog post from a week ago generated 1200 comments in their forums! Their weekly contest is brilliant: they get customers to Photoshop images to a particular theme (which changes week by week) and then post their creations to the forums. Viewing the submissions is a lot of fun.

Online forums also generate wonderful search engine fodder. If the forum is architected correctly, each forum posting will become a separate page that ends up in Google, Yahoo, MSN, Ask, etc. And each of those pages will have been engineered to rank well (the HTML, the URLs, the anchor text of the back links, etc.).

We set up a forum for Van Dykes Furniture Restorers for their core customers (furniture restorers) to collaborate, share tips, ask and answer questions, etc. This user-contributed content is written in the language of the customers. For example, if a post is written about "gluing wood to metal" and that's the language that furniture restorers are using, rather than the product-focused industry lingo that the supplier is using, then that's new search engine visibility that hasn't been captured before by the online catalog. Multiply that effect out by the hundreds, thousands, or tens of thousands of forum posts and you've got the beginnings of a Long Tail search optimization strategy.

3 comments, 1 pingback

  1. Stephan,

    Any advice about how to deal with the possible issues around brand conflict on forums hosted by commercial entities?

    Cheers

    Comment by Charles [Visitor] Email · http://www.tagalyzer.com/links — 06/14/06 @ 13:47


  2. Hi Charles. If someone is trashing your brand in forums that you don't control, you can:

    * Respond directly to the poster and solve their problem, hoping they will post a follow-up
    * Respond on the forum speaking on behalf of your company
    * Respond on the forum speaking for only for yourself as an employee
    * Ask others (customers, etc.) to counter with positive opinions in response
    * Ignore it

    I'd usually recommend the first option, and if they don't post a follow-up then get someone with some "street cred" to respond with positive comments without it sounding like they were put up to it. Or if that's not an option you could respond yourself as an individual (not in an official capacity). If it's clearly a nutter who posted the negative comment, ignoring the post may be the best option, because otherwise you could stir things up even more (and besides, reasonable people will quickly gauge that it's the rantings of a nutter and discount it).

    Comment by Stephan Spencer [Member] Email — 06/15/06 @ 04:20


  3. [...] Spencer recommends incorporating forums in your ecommerce site to encourage participation and increase site stickyness. I can attest to [...]

    Pingback by   Finding Free Open Source Shopping Carts and Other eCommerce News by TimeForBlogging [Visitor] — 04/07/07 @ 01:40


  4. So I was off work and surfing and found this place and thought I would join up. I don't have much more to say right now except I need to start reading some of the older posts to get up to speed before I can start posting.

    Em

    Comment by ememjammer [Visitor] Email — 09/22/07 @ 19:36


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