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Posts Tagged ‘Enterprise eCommerce’

2010 Sign Off From HotWax Media

Friday, December 31st, 2010

enterprise-ecommerce-new-year

As we reach the end of 2010 I find myself spending a little bit of extra time reflecting on the past 12 months, and wanted to share some thoughts.

First of all, we’re extremely lucky to have an incredible staff of people positioned all around the world who work passionately day and night, quite literally. It’s these inspired individuals who consistently generate quality enterprise ecommerce business solutions that ensure HotWax Media will always deliver on the assurances we make. To every one of you who came up with an innovative solution to a problem we were facing, worked through the night to hit a deadline, set your alarm for 3AM to get up for a conference call with someone on the other side of the world, or just put your heart into delivering the best, highest quality work you could, I thank you. I am proud of the dedication and continuous improvement we represent together as a team.

We work hard to deliver top shelf solutions for our customers, and HotWax Media is fortunate to have been involved with so many great companies, in so many exceptional projects this past year. On behalf of everyone in the company I would like to say thank you to the many outstanding organizations and extraordinary people we’ve worked with this year. From Scarpa North America and Black Diamond Equipment to Anytime Costumes, ALX, TWP, High West, Champion, and others (you know who you are), we appreciate the opportunity to work with you and your organizations. The great personal relationships we forge through our business associations are a tremendous incentive to keep our partnerships not only professional, but also enjoyable for both sides. It’s all about the bottom line, and we continue to have a great time getting there.

As we look forward, I’m thrilled to think about everything HotWax Media has on the horizon for 2011. In a matter of days we’ll launch a full ecommerce web store called PrepareWise.com, which features Wise Foods food storage products, and there are similar projects lined up and in development through 2011. We have another large product deployment as well during the first week in January, and the work load looks to be hot and heavy throughout the year. When one enjoys what he does — and we do — it’s great to be busy and in demand. For that I am very thankful.

Our commitment is to continue to deliver the best enterprise ecommerce solutions available today at prices that make a preacher want to kick out a stained glass window. That’s what we do, and I think most anyone we’ve encountered along the way can confirm the fact that we love doing it.

I wish you all health and happiness going into the tweens. Happy New Year, and here’s to an amazing, fulfilling, prosperous 2011!

Mike Bates is CEO at HotWax Media and will join other HotWax Media employees and advisers in periodically posting thoughts here related to OFBiz, eCommerce, ERP, and related topics.
Mike Bates - OFBiz Expert

Accounting for OFBiz eCommerce

Friday, October 29th, 2010

OFBiz-Accounting-Application

After a long wait and a lot of hard work, I am pleased to finally be able to say that the Accounting application in Apache OFBiz is ready for prime time! By working with internal experts (including Jacopo Cappellato) along with client experts, we have recently launched an enterprise e-commerce system that is using the OFBiz Accounting application more extensively than any of the systems we have previously implemented.

It is no surprise that the mantras of entrepreneurs everywhere often center on revenue generation, and rarely on the underlying accounting thereof! Keeping accurate financial records of all business activities is, nevertheless, essential, and the OFBiz Accounting application has many features designed to help support that critical need for sound financial management.

In an effort to make the OFBiz Accounting application as easy to use as possible for a variety of businesses both small and large, Hotwax Media created additional tools allowing for user export of general ledger account transaction data in the Quickbooks IIF format, as well as the ability to receive payments in A/R batches. (There is a widely accepted perception that Quickbooks is very easy to use. I don’t necessarily agree :) This integration, nevertheless, means users can easily export data of their choice out of OFBiz Accounting and import that data into Quickbooks. We created this integration based on customer demand. I would not have guessed it, but they told us loudly and clearly that accountants love to play with numbers in Quickbooks; well, we aim to please!

Over next little bit I’ll share more information with some concrete examples that you can use for setting up your own OFBiz Accounting system.

- Anil

Anil Patel is Chief Development Officer at HotWax Media as well as an OFBiz project committer, PMC member, and active community contributor. He also studies karate! Anil will join other HotWax Media employees and advisors in periodically posting thoughts here related to OFBiz, eCommerce, ERP, and related topics.

Google Instant: Implications for E-Commerce Search

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010
Last week Google rolled out their new “Google Instant” search platform to web users in the US, UK, France, Italy, Germany, Spain, and Russia. The launch represents another step in Google’s efforts to provide a more dynamic, predictive search environment. Google Instant updates, in real-time, the search results displayed on the page with each additional typed character entered by the user. Instead of requiring the user to click “Search” or press “Enter” after typing their full phrase or choosing from the list of popular search terms, the results are instantly displayed on the page below and update dynamically with each additional character typed. Google instant also incorporates local information, which will mean some variation in the real-time results displayed depending on the location of the search user.

The change promises to make a typical web search via google much less tedious to the user, and more of an exploratory endeavor. As Tom Krazit describes in his review for CNET;

“Instead of search as an outcome, Google is trying to get people to think of search as a process in which you constantly refine your query without actually ’searching,’ or hitting the button to produce a concrete result.”
Google has been quick to point out via its Webmaster’s Blog that Google Instant has not altered the search ranking process, and could have the effect of increasing the overall number of search impressions because of the relative ease of obtaining a search result in the new platform.

User Distraction and other Potential Impacts
Google Instant may have the impact of distracting potential customers who would otherwise be entering a full search query. As the search user begins typing an extensive phrase, they will be displayed a host of search results during the process which are likely to draw their attention away before ever completing the full query. The more extensive the originally intended phrase, the more of a potential impact this distraction factor may have for the site whose visibility is geared for that exact phrase.  (Never mind the fact that I already have way too many tabs open!)

This will present a new challenge for small sites or those running their own search optimization, because click-through and impression rates are likely to favor the top few positions in the paid and organic search results. It is also likely to benefit sites which have a lock on more generic terms.  (This is due to the fact that page 2 seems infinitely farther away when you are in mid-search scrolling down the page to look at results.)

Google Instant may also generate a new wave of competitive efforts to optimize for search results based on single letters or other otherwise nonsensical phrases, purely because of their appearance sooner in any given search attempt. The introduction of this “time component” to what has previously been primarily a competition over vertical ranking, may become a big factor for optimization experts. (Think optimizing for ‘boo’ — is that user looking for a Halloween costume** or a book on Amazon?)  These earlier results, though less optimized for the originally intended search phrase, could draw customers away from e-commerce sites whose competitors optimize more effectively for the time factor introduced by Google Instant.

The bottom line at this point is that enterprise e-commerce professionals would be wise to keep a close eye on their sites’ search performance and analytics in coming weeks. Be ready to identify and take advantage of opportunities found through testing Google’s auto-complete suggestions, and begin optimizing for more general phrases.

Of course, once you get potential customers to your site, you still have to convert them!  Contact HotWax Media today to learn more about how we can help you build an enterprise e-commerce site that is feature rich on the front and back ends, and makes it simple and enjoyable for site visitors to make a purchase.

** If you are looking for a Halloween costume, skip Google Instant, visit the online leaders at www.anytimecostumes.com, and use coupon code HOTWAX for a 15% discount!

Mike Bates is CEO at HotWax Media and will join other HotWax Media employees and advisers in periodically posting thoughts here related to OFBiz, eCommerce, ERP, and related topics.
Mike Bates - OFBiz Expert

Enterprise E-commerce and SEO / PageRank

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Enterprise eCommerce SEO

September 1, 2010

HotWax Media is the leading provider of enterprise e-commerce websites running on Apache OFBiz. We build enterprise e-commerce systems for a variety of different types and sizes of businesses, from online costume retailers to mesh materials and cutting service providers. Our enterprise e-commerce systems offer all the bells and whistles: completely custom front end designs, great merchandising features (cross-sell and up-sell, feature-driven navigation, robust pricing and promotion creation, multi-channel sales, etc.), custom shopping cart and checkout, shipping integrations with FedEx, UPS, and USPS, inventory management (receiving, stock management), order management and customer service, and much more. When it comes to robust e-commerce features, the Apache OFBiz framework combined with our unparalleled enterprise ecommerce expertise at configuring, customizing and extending OFBiz features means that our clients can have just about any e-commerce feature that they can dream up.

But a successful e-commerce enterprise requires much more than a whiz-bang system.

Perhaps more important than the site design and features is the marketing strategy that drives your online sales efforts. Let’s assume that you have a product line that makes sense — you manufacture or purchase your high-quality products at wholesale with plenty of margin to run a profitable business given reasonable sales volume. You have a great enterprise e-commerce site with all the great design and site features you wanted. Now what?

SEO (search engine optimization) is the crucial ingredient in making your online sales efforts bear fruit. Simply put, the best product in the world will not sell online if your customers cannot find you.

Online marketing is a dynamic field full of smart, ambitious professionals. Some are wildly successful on your behalf, while others will take your money for nothing. Some are hard working and forthright, and others are shysters. Ask any online business leader and they will agree: there are many aspects for a business to consider as it markets itself online and some are much more straight forward than others.

Good page content? Check. Good file names, alt tags, page titles, meta tags? Check. Site map and robots.txt file? Check. Now how to measure performance while still having time to run your business?

For SMB owners, dollars generally represent the most meaningful method for measuring progress, of course, but there are other useful indicators that can help along the way. A great place to start is Google’s PageRank.

In their paper The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine, Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page describe PageRank as “a model of user behavior.” They elaborate as follows: “We assume there is a “random surfer” who is given a web page at random and keeps clicking on links, never hitting “back” but eventually gets bored and starts on another random page. The probability that the random surfer visits a page is its PageRank.” They go on to state that “…a page can (also) have a high PageRank if there are many pages that point to it, or if there are some pages that point to it and have a high PageRank. Intuitively, pages that are well cited from many places around the web are worth looking at.”

For SMB owners, the bottom line is that a well known page (quantified by random visits and pointers from other well known web pages) will have a higher page rank. This page, in turn, will return more prominently in search engine results than lesser known pages with similar content. Step 1, then, is to create pages with higher PageRanks than those of your competition!

How does one go about measuring and boosting PageRank?

Measuring PageRank is relatively easy. There are toolbars and websites readily available that will tell you the PageRank for any given URL. For example, PR Checker gives you a web page for checking PageRank, and Google Toolbar runs right along with your browser.

Boosting PageRank takes more work, and happens by getting other pages with high PageRanks to link to your page. (For example, you can submit your site to directories like Yahoo!, and list your products on sites like Amazon.) There are many tactics and techniques to be explored, but we will not cover them in detail here. As with the rest of your online marketing strategy, boosting PageRank takes time and consistent effort. It requires good planning up front, and ongoing work to maintain and improve. But if you master the basics and keep working at it, you will see results.

HotWax Media offers online marketing packages for enterprise e-commerce businesses. Contact HotWax Media today to learn more!

Mike Bates is CEO at HotWax Media and will join other HotWax Media employees and advisers in periodically posting thoughts here related to OFBiz, eCommerce, ERP, and related topics.
Mike Bates - OFBiz Expert

E-Commerce and Digital Media Delivery: Interpreting the Market Signals of Piracy

Monday, August 16th, 2010

enterprise-ecommerce-piracy

August 16,2010

Since the early days of Napster’s popularity and subsequent demise as a piracy medium, we have been treated to the public spectacle of the awkward “cat and mouse” battle between owners of intellectual property and the “pirates” who live to steal it. It seems that with each new advance in technology for content delivery and file sharing, a new wave of legal efforts and public relations campaigns arise to counter its use as a method of unauthorized sharing of media. And then another previously unapologetic heavy metal thrasher first insists that we eff the man, then complains about digital piracy, and finally pirates his own music.

In some cases, it is this very battle that seems to be driving innovation in methods of digital content transfer and delivery. The protective mechanisms of legal enforcement and civil liability, at least in theory, offer a safety net to the media industry, which would otherwise likely be more actively involved in driving these innovations in content delivery themselves. Potential consumers regularly face a choice between what is to them an inefficient, old-school method of obtaining their digital content (and the high price point involved therewith), or some new and innovative, highly efficient, yet criminal alternative. For every consumer who takes the step of pirating the content, furthermore, there are likely several with similar desires who simply do the most honorable thing and choose not to buy the content or illicitly download it.

In other words, not every digital content pirate is a black hat hacker looking for the thrill of putting one over on the big media industry, or a criminal at heart who simply wants to get a product without paying. Many are simply acting on a desire to obtain the content through a more efficient medium that is not offered legitimately; and indications are that many of these people would be willing to pay for the content, delivered efficiently, if they were able to do so.

In other cases, there is an unwillingness to pay the prices demanded but not a general unwillingness to pay for content. Digital content delivery affords manufactures significant savings in production costs, and yet even some of the most innovative channels for content purchase and delivery often price the digitally-delivered product the same as an off-the-shelf retail packaged copy. One striking example of this is IGN’s Direct2Drive service for computer games. To add to the problem, these services are often still slower methods of content delivery than a highly-populated, free pirate torrent download through BitTorrent.

Jerry Kirkpatrick, professor of international business and marketing at Cal State Polytechnic has illustrated this in his article, The Market Function of Piracy

“Message to the innovative marketer? Either drop the price of the new product or produce a cheaper version — or be the first to exploit a new technology, something the movie and recording industries chose not to do. Many, including these two industries, would rather sue than practice good marketing.”

Another striking illustration of this is piracy of television series. For many consumers, the desire to download the pirated media is driven primarily by a desire to view the content in the soonest format available because it is an episodic series that they are actively following. It is not at all an indication of unwillingness to use a legitimate channel, were it available and even modestly priced, instead of piracy. (A la carte cable channels on demand, anyone?) Often ill-timed release dates and regional conflicts delays delivery through Itunes or other legitimate channels and fuels this demand.

While these considerations may or may not justify the willful violation of a copyright (read: justify? they do not), or the consequent deprivation of monetary benefit to the creator of digital content (read: innovate or die), downloads of pirated products are a very real indicator of market demand. Consumers are indicating a demand either for a lower price point or a better method of content delivery, both of which are often only available through digital piracy. Manufacturers and marketers, as well as enterprise e-commerce professionals working on new strategies and business models would be well-advised to heed these market signals… as savvy ones traditionally have.

Speaking of savvy, it is only fitting to end with a mention of Radiohead’s 2007 album In Rainbows. They offered the album via their website as a pay-what-you-like download, and the album subsequently made them more money online than all of their previous albums combined. Wired featured a great interview of Thom Yorke by David Byrne at the end of 2007 discussing the topic. Yet it should come as no surprise to anyone interested in the digital piracy space that even the In Rainbows download story is not as simple today as it may have appeared in 2007. The awkward battle continues.

Mike Bates is CEO at HotWax Media and will join other HotWax Media employees and advisers in periodically posting thoughts here related to OFBiz, eCommerce, ERP, and related topics.
Mike Bates - OFBiz Expert