Are you Hidden Behind A Social Media Glass Wall?


Behind The Glass: Courtesy Flickr

Behind The Glass: Courtesy Flickr

Its happening more than ever. Customers have stopped going to high streets to shop on weekends; kids would rather rent movies online;even pensioners have been given their online PINs to operate their accounts from home.

You’d say whats wrong with little convenience. Life’s getting ever busier. But let me take a step back to look closer.

I dn’t have problems with consumers shopping online,or, researching about their next buy via Kaboodle or Amazon. I have issues with businesses hiding behind that glass wall that’s getting ever thicker.

A typical ’smart’ company generally has a slick website, a blog, a number of Twitter accounts, Facebook fan pages, article accounts in at least 5 top directories, YouTube account ( if video marketing is relevant for them)…and the list goes on. And ya did I forget LinkedIn and Ecademy? If I visit this site with an intention to buy somthing, I rely upon their version of the product info that they want to give me, not mine. I can’t ask a question without waiting for several hours or days for an email reply. Sometimes the info is brief, often overwhelming.

When I walk into my local Curry’s store I expect at least a couple of annoying sales people approach me every five minutes. But, at least I have an option, a physical presence to ask for help if I am stuck. Or, may be just discuss why 5 MP camera is enough for my needs, or, the blue ray is actually not that cool. This is amiss on a website, generally. Even the most interactive CMS driven dynamic site can’t replicate the physical experience of window-shopping and then buying. Some say that’s not paramount for a great buying experience online. Some say its actually impossible to imitate that.

But I want to explore products before buying and get the seller’s opinion, dn’t you?

I have no interest in knowing who owns Curry’s, but I do remember the sales guy Tom who showed me around. Is that a bad thing ?

Try refunding stuff you bought online. Nightmare! Lot of buyers end up bearing the return postage. Is it not better to walk up your to local Next store and do it over the counter, no hassles?

I will be the last person on earth to be advocating offline shopping to online. I am fed-up of e-tailers and other online businesses who try to robotise and automate their business for minimal human intervention. People buy people not products.

Where do you say rests a fine balance? Do you know of any examples where the glass wall is thinner or may be with a large window? Why do you think we love high-street shopping? Will it be dead eventually?

Lets hear it.

Best,

Hersh

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  1. #1 by John Mccarthy at June 24th, 2009

    Hi Hersh,
    I can’t understand your apprehension with the online shopping going social!
    I do understand where you coming from though. Online portals are becoming more and more faceless. We do need a fine balance, I agree.

    J

  2. #2 by Elinor Jones at June 24th, 2009

    Hersh,
    I know where u coming from regarding the high-street experience and the lack of it online. Its sad isn’t it? I am no online expert but there gotta be a way of more interactivity?
    Tha

  3. #3 by Jason Ford at June 24th, 2009

    hey Hersh,

    Nice post. I am not sure about the interactivity part in high-street shopping. Mostly I like to shop quietly and a website allows you to do that. One can explore for hours and take his time, without being bugged by the sales people every five minutes.
    To be honest, it depends upon personal choice. But I do see your point that web sellers are increasingly becoming faceless.
    Cheers

  4. #4 by Susan at June 24th, 2009

    well, I love high street primarily because I get to see the stuff before paying for it. I guess that can’t happen online. But again if you go to somewhere like Ebay, you get to explore thousands of variety of any product. So there are pros and cons, a’right.

    What i’d like online stores to do is to improve their customer service, so that we talk to a real person and not an automated thing like voicemail or email or even an outsourced call-center.
    Bring more life to shopping!

    Thanks,

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