Maybe Personalization Isn't That Important
from the whooops dept
For years, it's been standard practice of most e-commerce sites to try to "personalize" their offering to each user. Companies spent ridiculous amounts of money to offer personalized pages that matched the users specific interests. A new Jupiter study suggests they shouldn't have bothered. The study found that personalized sites meant it was even more likely that visitors wouldn't actually buy anything - though, it cost four times as much to maintain a personalized website. At the same time, many people avoided using personalized pages, because they were afraid of what the companies would do with their personal information. In other words, they valued the anonymity aspect much more than whatever personalized results they would get. If you look at the details, though, it isn't necessarily a slam on personalization entirely - but on prioritizing personalization above such basic things as search and easy navigation. Those things are much more important to users than a "welcome back, your name here" tag at the top of each page. The other issue (not mentioned in the article) is that most personalization technology just isn't very good. There's almost no benefit to users. In the cases where it does seem to work well, though, people don't seem to mind as much. Many people like Amazon or NetFlix recommendations, for example, and end up buying more because of them. However, many other sites just seem to put your name at the top of the page, and then pitch items "just for you", that are clearly the junk they're trying to clear out.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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No Subject Given
Yahoo currently has that with some banks and brokers, but the selection is not too impressive. Also, there're some features, like plug-in of RSS feeds and external mailboxes that are non-existant on My Yahoo. So the opportunity is ripe for someone to come out there and support XML-driven standards to create personalized portals. But that doesn't mean that every mom and pop online store should have personalized features.
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Mozilla
Someone should whisper a similar idea to the people still coding pathetic, shiny chrome into mozilla. I know it's less glamourous, but how about some Roaming, folks? It's been 2-3 years now, and two changes in chrome methods, and still there's nothing compatible with the older, dependable (if uninspired) roaming model.
(Yeah, I could code that myself, apparently, but I don't know how. I'm just a stupid user, trying to convince my co-workers why mozilla's better than NS4 or IE, unable to respond to such a glaring incompatibility: "Yeah, well IE doesn't have Roaming either; we'll just use that like everyone else")
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Re: No Subject Given
http://enterprise.yahoo.com
Plumtree
Vignette
BEA Portal
IBM Portal
Oracle Portal
...etc.
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Re: No Subject Given
Yeah, on a corporate market. Haven't seen any good ones in Internet-user (hence free and ad-driven) market. I doubt it's something that regular folks are ready to pay for.
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Amazon
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Re: Amazon
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