Behaviour-Targeting and Personalization
I sat in on a webinar today with Sitebrand’s Director of Customer Experience, Carolyn Gardner and eCommerce Business Analyst, John Choo titled: Love, Faith & Hope: Conversion Meets Customer Behavior.
I recently blogged about geo-IP targeting and its potential for ecommerce marketing. The post includes examples of how you could serve up different home pages or offers on your site based on a customer’s location.
Today’s webinar introduced me to another way you can tailor content to the individual - keyword-targeted content.
For example, Danskin’s Title Tag reads like this: “Fitness, Dance and Yoga Apparel for Women and Girls.” This means its home page could appear in search engine results for relevant keyword searches like “yoga apparel” or “dance apparel for girls” in addition to category or product pages. The landing page for the keyword could be the home page.
Wouldn’t it be ideal to serve a home page design that’s targeted to the keyword that referred the visit?
Keyword: “dance apparel for girls”

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You’ve added your item to your cart, but you’re not finished shopping. So, you look for the “Continue Shopping” link to thrust you back to…to what? The product page? The category page? The home page?
I recently sat in on a Webinar with Lauren Freedman of 





Google Trends is just one of the nifty tools the Big G hath bestowed upon the Internet marketing community. Basically to type in keywords to compare their search volumes against each other over time. There’s also a “what’s hot” element, each day there’s a list of “Today’s Hot Trends.” Some of them are really hard to believe that they are remotely search-worthy, but clicking on a keyword will show 
Today is January 14th, which means we’re only one month away from what some believe is the 2nd largest retailing event of the year. Last year, Valentine’s Day raked in $905 Million in online sales. 
Cross-selling (offering items related to the product like accessories and warranties) and up-selling (suggesting more expensive alternatives) are effective merchandising tools both online and offline. You could think of cross-selling as an etailer’s answer to “would you like fries with that?”