Follow-up: GPeC SUMMIT 22-23 Mai 2023 (Teatrul Național București)
În Sala Ion Caramitru a Teatrului Național București a avut loc conferința GPeC SUMMIT 22-23 Mai 2023.
De asemenea, au fost oportunități de business în cadrul GPeC Expo, cu principalii furnizori de servicii e-commerce și marketing online.
Mai jos, imagini de la eveniment și notițele mele de la prima zi a evenimentului.
Album foto pe Facebook »
Album foto pe Google Photos »
Un album oficial » (va apărea aici)
Notițele mele:
Oana Dumitrescu, Industry Manager Retail & Travel, Google
In today’s digital world, consumers are bombarded with marketing messages from all sides. It can be difficult to stand out from the crowd and get your target audience to take action. This keynote will show you how to decode your customers’ decisions and close the gap between intent and purchase. You’ll learn how to:- Understand your customers’ search intent
- Ensure brand presence
- Intelligently employ behavioral science principles
- Close the gap between trigger and purchase
Talia Wolf, Conversion Optimization Specialist | GetUplift - The power of Emotion: The secret to driving more sales and revenue
All the analytics, automation tools, machine learning, and technologies in the world will never help you create high-converting funnels for your shoppers if you fail to leverage the one component that matters more than anything else in marketing: Emotion. During this session, Talia Wolf will show you how to leverage Emotional Marketing to increase sales, AOV and revenue. In this talk, you’ll learn:- How to get into your customers’ heads and hearts and get meaningful insights that impact conversions
- The emotional marketing framework Talia uses to 10X conversions for her clients
- How to optimize your copy and design to convert more customers
Panel: Comerțul online românesc în stagnare? Ce își doresc clienții și cum scalezi business-ul e-commerce în contexul actual?
Piața de E-Commerce din România a atins pragul de 6,3 miliarde de euro în 2022, înregistrând o creștere foarte sensibilă de la 6,2 miliarde în 2021. De ce această relativă stagnare? Este acesta pragul maxim la care poate crește comerțul online românesc?- Cele mai noi cifre ale pieței de e-commerce pentru primele 5 luni ale anului în curs
- Predicțiile curierilor pentru dezvoltarea pieței până la finalul lui 2023
- În ce măsură crește interesul comercianților români pentru extinderea cross-border? Ce provocări și oportunități sunt aici?
- Ce își doresc clienții finali de la magazinele online în privința livrărilor și a retururilor?
- Sustenabilitatea: un buzzword sau o realitate?
Els Aerts - User Testing & Usability Evangelist | AGConsult
In this talk, Els will go deep on one of her favourite user research methods: user testing. No other method gives you the same profound understanding of how your customers actually use your website or app. Understanding your users, finding out what makes them tick, is crucial to driving growth. See a video with Els Aerts from GPeC » Been doing UX since 2001. The answer in UX is, "It depends." Research is a business tool to help you make better business decisions. User research - it helps you to create empathy. It puts you at the same level as your users. User testing creates empathy. User testing - one on one. A focus group is not a user test. User testing myth #1 - you need a test lab. Myth #2 Don't test in the client's office. It's interesting to watch people in the wild using devices. A more probable scenario is remote moderated user testing. People are at their own home. You need participants to turn on the webcam. Facial expressions can be very informative. Three crucial aspects to getting user testing right: #1 Recruit the right users #2 Write a good scenario #3 Be a kick-ass moderator People close to you will try to do pleasing - your husband/friends will try to make you happy, and this will change the outcome of the test. Don't get too fixated on a precise user profile. Be mindful of device familiarity. Recruit for diversity. It is not of problem at all to have a blind person in your testing. On the contrary. Nielsen - "First rule of usability? Don't listen to users." Not the biggest fan of post-user testing interviews. Best starting point for your user test scenario? Data! Don't make your task too specific. Tailor your tasks to each user. You have to have a conversation with the users beforehand, and get to know them. Switch up the order of your tasks during tasks. Treat your test scenario like a guide, not a straightjacket. The moderator is both the biggest strength and weakness in moderated user testing. Jared Spool: "A good moderator adopts 3 personalities simultaneously: 1. Flight attendant; 2. Sportscaster; 3. Scientist." There's a 4th personality: 4. Switzerland. 3 moderation techniques:1. Echo (when a participant says something, echo that back at them). 2. Boomerang (when you get a question, put the question back to them). 3. Columbo - detective from a TV series (as a moderator, fumbling and mumbling are your best friends). I learned some things from every user testing series I've done. Eye tracking doesn't bring that much value. Analytics is a great source of information; surveys can be a great tool (if you ask the right questions and know what to look at from the responses).Panel: Ce trebuie să știi pentru a primi investiție în business-ul tău?
Dialog deschis întrebărilor tale despre cum poți atrage investiție în business-ul tău sau cum poți face exit / vinde business-ul:- Cum îți pregătești afacerea pentru investiție / vânzare?
- Unde găsești potențiali investitori?
- Care sunt metricii la care se uită investitorii?
- Cum se calculează valoarea unei companii?
- Ce este un business angel, un investitor privat, un fond de investiții și care este diferența dintre ei?
- Ce înseamnă seed, pre-seed, rundă de finanțare și alte terminologii specifice?
- Exemple de succes de companii care au crescut în urma investițiilor. Cum au reușit?
Nancy Harhut, Behavioral Marketing Expert & Author | HBT Marketing - Discover the Brain Science that Drives Buyer Behavior
Every day behavioral scientists uncover new information that confirms people don’t think about what they do. Instead, they conserve mental energy and react automatically – relying on hard-wired decision defaults that influence everything from what they read… to whom they trust… to when they buy! In fact, science has proven that 95% of purchase decision-making takes place in the subconscious mind. If you want your marketing messages to persuade people to act now, you need to know how to trigger these automatic actions. And you want proven tactics that are easy to use. In this example-jammed presentation, you’ll discover 9 specific decision-making shortcuts all humans have, and how you can add them to your marketing messages to improve results instantly. Don’t risk being ignored, overlooked, or forgotten. Gain your competitive advantage by creating marketing that hacks people’s brains. Key Takeaways:- Discover how to easily increase engagement and response to emails, ads, and webpages with messaging that triggers automatic, instinctive behavior – including one tactic that makes people four times more likely to buy right away
- Find out how your creative can strategically tap the mental shortcuts customers and prospects use to make their buying decisions – including the magic word that gets people to agree with you before they even finish reading what you wrote
- See numerous examples of in-market creative that demonstrate how to effectively add proven brain science principles to your campaigns to lift ROI – including one campaign that increased purchase intent by 13%.
Karl Gilis, Top 3 Most Influential CRO-Expert in the World | AGConsult - Listen to your users! (And stop doing stupid things)
Karl is optimizing online businesses for over 20 years. And teaching people about UX, user research and conversion optimization. But he’s also getting frustrated: because marketers, designers and developers are making the same mistakes over and over again. Most websites have the same flaws as 20 years ago, despite all the knowledge we have about UX. Karl will vent his frustrations. But luckily, he will also share some really hands-on tips and examples on how to improve your business by listening to your users. So you can turn more visitors into customers. See a video with Karl Gilis from GPeC » Houston, we have a problem. Sliders are bad. Always. As an industry, we have a problem - we are not learning. When I say "we", I mean "you." Everyone that is involved in websites isn't learning. We are reinventing the wheel. Don't test stupid things, like buttons. But we do user research! Yes, but you're probably doing it wrong. Don't ask Leading questions (do you think it's good or bad X) / Loaded questions (how would you rate the amazing X) / Questions about the future. How do most companies ask people? NPA, and focusing on the future. Ask open questions. A lot of companies tend to ask closed questions. Bad research => False data => Wrong conclusions and decisions. Learn the fundamental UX principles: 1. Don't make me think (Don't Make Me Think, Revisited: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability (3rd Edition) (Voices That Matter): Krug, Steve: 9780321965516: Amazon.com: Books) - you should read this book; 2. Don't shout for attention. Give attention. (ads => cry for attention; on the website, give attention) 2.1. Video backgrounds are the new sliders; they're a distraction. 2.2. Less is more. (but maybe on my website, more is more - not!) 3. Think customer first. Listen to your customers! Houston, we have another problem 80% of companies say they're customer-centric. Only 8% of their customers agree. How do you overcome the disconnect between you and your customer? Why do people buy from you? Why don't people buy from you? What are their frustrations? There might be a big difference between what language you and your clients are using. Take away people's fears and barriers. Do your user research by asking the right questions at the right time. Sell the way people want to buy. Put your customers at the time of everything. Heatmaps are a good starting point of where the problems lie. People don't want videos, explanation videos are fine, but they should come at the right time. Booking.com, and AirBNB are good examples of UX.PS: Also, you can see an interview with Georgi Georgiev by GPeC, on Facebook: see interview »
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