This past week, I had the pleasure of working with a customers’ marketing department. They were celebrating – a newly redesigned website was now getting millions of hits! Traffic had improved so dramatically the team was eager to discuss how to turn that traffic into revenue via a Direct-to-Consumer eCommerce implementation. While the salesperson in me was celebrating the opportunity, the analytical businessman questioned the validity of the move.
This business sells products used in home improvement projects. Their products are simply components in a larger bill of materials associated with the entire project; envision a kitchen remodel, a sunroom addition, or a pool installation. Today, they sell primarily to contractors and since the consumer really can’t install their products easily, a certified installer is required. Additionally, some of the products are consumables, also sold through the same contractors.
History and trends from their website show consumers are going to their website to research products, shop for colors/styles, and request a preliminary cost estimate. After the installation, consumers continued searching for consumables recommended by the installer. There is an unproven correlation between consumer website traffic and purchase intent.
Will the investment in a Direct-to-Consumer eCommerce channel help or hurt revenue?
The immediate response to this question was “Of course it will improve revenue. Consumables can be purchased direct, with higher margins due to omitting the middleman”. But wait, that middleman is the contractor who is installing your products. The contractor uses consumables as a way to get additional service work. Since the contractors’ revenue is a direct reflection of service work, if your consumables are not available for him to sell, at a competitive price, they will recommend competitive products.
Will the investment create an experience the consumer truly wants?
The marketing department quickly said “Why YES! They can order products directly from us.” But a streamlined transaction isn’t necessarily the experience the customer wants – it’s what the seller wants. The consumer still requires a contractor for installation. The contractor usually offers the entire project at a single fixed price. Lastly, the contractor is the consumers trusted advisor. Improving one portion of a project doesn’t always create a memorable, successful experience.
Is there a better way to engage the consumer AND the contractor?
For this company, their contractor customers, and the end-consumer, perhaps a better experience would be to create an “idea-board” for the consumer to add researched products, with an option to share with the contractor of choice. This can be done with an eCommerce shopping experience, typically known as B2B2C; Supplier-to-Contractor-to-Consumer. The consumer chooses the products they like or want to have installed, adds them to their shopping cart, and checks out. However, checkout doesn’t take payment, it sends the cart to their contractor. The contractor would review the order with the consumer, add other products required for the installation, and place the complete order with the supplier. The Consumer has order choice. The Contractor has order accuracy. The Supplier has order completeness. As a result, revenues will increase, both for the supplier and the contractor, creating brand advocates of the people working closest to the consumer, which is a much better option than selling a few consumables online, and watching contractors leaving to sell competitor’s products due to channel conflict.
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Exactly the type of outside the box, challenge the conventional thinking I’d expect. I’m sure this customer would indicate that their buying experience was top notch.
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Wonderful analysis. Thanks for sharing.
Does the option to move/submit the cart to another account (other than CSR) work OOB in HCL commerce?
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