Webonomics: Nine Essential Principles for Growing Your Business on the World Wide Web - Hardcover

Schwartz, Evan I.

 
9780553061727: Webonomics: Nine Essential Principles for Growing Your Business on the World Wide Web

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Explains in nine essential principles how to market a business on the Internet, providing insights and practical information while profiling the habits of Web users

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Evan I. Schwartz (evan@webonomics.com) is a contributing writer for <i>Wired</i> magazine and a former editor at <i>Business Week,</i> where he covered software and digital media.  He has been the featured speaker at major corporations, business schools, and conferences.  Evan lives with his family in Brookline, Massachusetts.<br><br><br><i>From the Trade Paperback edition.</i>

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de Web has become the most important new communications medium since television, with tens of millions of people now on-line and Web sites<br>springing up at the rate of one per minute.  It has also created a digital marketplace where consumers can search for the best deals and services in an instant.  While almost everyone agrees that the Web provides excellent marketing opportunities, many businesses don't know how to use it effectively and have been losing millions of dollars because of it.  <br><br>In <i>Webonomics,</i> Evan I. Schwartz shows how the new Web economy mirrors the traditional economy in some ways but also exhibits entirely unique<br>properties of its own.  Using numerous case studies of corporations such as IBM, Volvo, Playboy Enterprises, and Wells Fargo bank, as well as smaller companies and web-based start-ups, Schwartz documents both the tremendous failures and successes on the Web in a multitude of industries.  

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The Foundation of Webonomics

New sites on the World Wide Web have been cropping up at the rate of one per minute.  As it expands at this astounding pace, it's clear that the Web's colorful entanglement of words, pictures, sound, and motion is briskly becoming more than just the most important new communication medium since television. The Web is more like a parallel universe that mirrors the physical world in some ways but exhibits entirely unique properties in others.  And if you hang out there long enough, you will slowly discover that there's nothing less than an entirely new economy taking shape on this digital terrain--and a new way of looking at the way this marketplace of information and ideas works. Call it Webonomics.

Many of the businesses now piling onto the Web may totally misunderstand what this new medium is all about.  They may end up losing millions of dollars and eventually decide that the Web isn't living up to its hype.  Other businesses may totally ignore the Web and get left behind.  Their competitors, meanwhile, will use the Web as a tool to literally steal their best customers away. Averting such scenarios will only come with a keen understanding of Webonomics.

Traditional economics is based on the notion of scarcity--that human desires will always exceed available resources such as food, clothing, and shelter.  It was Thomas Malthus, the English economist, who first postulated that populations will always increase faster than the food supply.  This pessimistic focus on the allocation of scarce resources is what earned economics the reputation as "the dismal science."

Webonomics is anything but dismal.  On the Web, precisely the reverse is true. Since the Web is a fast-growing world of intellectual property that can be copied and downloaded ad infinitum, its supply of resources will continue to soar past human demand for these resources.  Instead of a scarcity of supply, the Web economy exhibits a scarcity of demand.  Indeed, one of the main complaints about the Web is that it's "mind-boggling" and "too overloaded" with information.  On the Web, the main commodity in limited supply is the attention of the busy people using it.  The underlying battle in the Web economy is the ability to command and sustain that attention.

As such, growth of the Web economy has everything to do with the quality of the information there--how interesting and engaging it is, how it is presented, and how it takes advantage of the unique attributes of the medium.  As more and more people continue to enjoy the Web, as they find it worthy of their attention, the Web will continue to grow at its frenetic pace.  Unlike a national economy with limited resources, there are no physical limits on this growth.  Unlike real estate, steel, or even paper, computing power and computer storage is cheap and getting cheaper.  There's an infinite number of bits in the universe and a virtually bottomless hunger for valuable information and knowledge.

The Web is also a world without borders in which the physical location of a company doing business there is of little importance.  Despite efforts to do so, the Web economy will resist efforts by national governments to control or regulate it.  It will be up to each citizen of the world to choose what they see and do.  In this sense, a totally free-market economy had been considered to be only theoretically possible in the past; the Web makes it practically possible for the first time.

The nature of this beast is both good and bad.  Because of the abundant choices available, the combat among companies is, in the words of Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy, one of "fierce Darwinism."  To succeed, businesses on the Web must invent new ways to market themselves, new ways to learn what customers want, new ways to forge lasting relationships with them.


Marketers Shouldn't Be on the Web for Exposure, but for Results

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Mass marketing won't work on the World Wide Web.  The idea that marketers can burnish a brand image in the minds of millions is fine for a TV advertisement or a print campaign.  But it's an unrealistic fantasy in this new medium.  What the Web can accomplish for marketers is potentially even more powerful.  Still, countless marketers have ignored what the Web can do well and mistakenly tried to use their Web site to do what they have always been doing--simultaneously shipping the same message to the masses.

Consider the case of Volvo.  In the fall of 1994, Volvo Cars of North America became the first automaker to establish a Web presence and one of the first advertisers on popular content sites.  In those early days of the Web, the most popular content creators, such as Hotwired, Time Warner's Pathfinder, ESPN SportsZone, and Playboy's site, all began charging between $30,000 and $100,000 for a three-month placement of a logo or banner on their digital pages.  These ads are also known as "links."  Click on one of these buttons and your eyes are transported, or linked, to a promotional Web site running on some other computer somewhere else.  After interacting with that advertisement, you will presumably link right back to where you were.

In buying banner advertisements on the Web, Volvo was hoping to enhance its brand image.  And by attracting Web surfers to its site, the Swedish automaker also wanted to give people in the market for a luxury car a new information tool that would make them consider a Volvo more seriously, says Bob Austin, Volvo's director of U.S. marketing.  He notes that only about 6 percent of the adult population has the money and inclination to buy an automobile costing at least $30,000.  He saw those people as having a high overlap with the early Web surfers.  "We know that our potential buyers are well-off and tend to be early adopters--people who enjoy technology," Austin says.  So the company spent about $100,000 developing and advertising what started out as essentially just an electronic brochure.

Not only did the Volvo site fail to lead to many, if any, sales, but it actually caused unintended problems.  The only truly interactive part of the site was the ability to send E-mail to Volvo's U.S. headquarters in New Jersey. "People would occasionally write things like: 'Nice Web site, but the sun roof on my 850 leaks,'" Austin says.  Many state lemon laws require responses to such complaints within a few weeks, otherwise the manufacturer has to take the car back.  Since Volvo failed to staff the site with people who were qualified to respond to such complaints, the Web site became a tool not to increase sales but a potential way to damage them.  So the E-mail feature had to be shut down within a few weeks.

With that bitter experience in hand, Volvo decided to pull back all its Web advertising and simply promote the site in its own TV and print ads.  Austin says he just wasn't getting value for the money spent, especially since the content sites weren't able to provide hard numbers about who exactly they were linking to his site.  "I'm not comfortable throwing more money at advertising the site," he says.  "We're not here to sell Web sites.  Web sites should be here to sell cars."

Volvo made two crucial mistakes.  The first foible was in treating consumers on the Web as a distinct demographic group in and of...

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