Creating Unique Shopping Experiences In Ecommerce

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Summary

Creating unique shopping experiences in ecommerce means tailoring the online shopping journey to meet customer preferences and needs, fostering a sense of connection, and simplifying decision-making. This approach enhances engagement and loyalty while driving conversions.

  • Offer co-creation opportunities: Allow customers to personalize or customize products with tools like configurators or quizzes, creating a sense of ownership and emotional connection to the purchase.
  • Design persona-based pathways: Build separate, tailored customer journeys by segmenting audiences based on behaviors, preferences, or personas, ensuring relevant content and recommendations.
  • Implement dynamic personalization: Use intelligent systems or agents to adapt layouts, offers, and messaging in real time, creating seamless, contextual shopping experiences for each visitor.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Jon MacDonald

    Turning user insights into revenue for top brands like Adobe, Nike, The Economist | Founder, The Good | Author & Speaker | thegood.com | jonmacdonald.com

    15,537 followers

    People value what they create 63% more. Yet most digital experiences treat customers as passive recipients instead of co-creators. This psychological principle, known as the "Ikea Effect", is shockingly underutilized in digital journeys. When someone builds a piece of Ikea furniture, they develop an emotional attachment that transcends its objective value. The same phenomenon happens in digital experiences. After optimizing digital journeys for companies like Adobe and Nike for over a decade, I've discovered this pattern consistently: 👉 Those who customize or personalize a product before purchase are dramatically more likely to convert and remain loyal. One enterprise client implemented a product configurator that increased conversions by 31% and reduced returns by 24%. Users weren't getting a different product... they were getting the same product they helped create. The psychology is simple but powerful: ↳ Customization creates psychological ownership before financial ownership ↳ The effort invested creates value attribution ↳ Co-creation builds emotional connection Three ways to implement this today: 1️⃣ Replace dropdown options with visual configurators 2️⃣ Create personalization quizzes that guide product selection 3️⃣ Allow users to save and revisit their customized selections Most importantly: shift your mindset from selling products to facilitating creation. When customers feel like co-creators rather than consumers, they don't just buy more... they become advocates. How are you letting your customers build rather than just buy?

  • View profile for Alec Beglarian

    Founder @ Mailberry | VP, Deliverability & Head of EasySender @ EasyDMARC

    3,299 followers

    Using "Hey {first name}" in your marketing emails and calling it personalization is like picking up a rock and calling it a hammer. Technically, it works. But we have better tools now, and failing to take advantage of them is going to leave you choking on the dust of your competitors. Here's how to catch up with the times and use TRUE personalization to boost engagement, loyalty, and conversions: 1. Use dynamic content fields to customize emails based on customer attributes, behaviors, and preferences. Go beyond just {first name} – incorporate product views, past purchases, and customer lifecycle stage. Don't be creepy! Be conversational. You want the reader to feel like you understand their needs, not like you've been peeking through their blinds. 2. Set up behavior-triggered automations like browse abandonment and cart recovery flows. Make these highly relevant by including viewed products, social proof, and timely offers. Marketing is all about getting the right offer in front of the right person at the right time, and behavior-based emails are one of the best ways to do that on a consistent basis. 3. Implement Recency, Frequency, and Monetary Value (RFM) segmentation to deliver personalized messaging to different customer groups. Target VIPs, at-risk customers, and prospectives customers with specific messages to convert or retain them. 4. Create personalized journeys that adjust the user's experience based on customer data or actions. For example, if you're sending the exact same post purchase sequence to a repeat purchaser as you are for a first-time buyer, you're missing a huge opportunity. 5. Use replenishment flows for consumable products, reminding customers when it's time to reorder. Or, capture email addresses on PDPs for sold out products and notify them when the item in back in stock. Easy sales. Be careful to avoid these common personalization mistakes: 🙅🏼 Over-personalizing in a way that feels intrusive or creepy 🙅🏼 Sending irrelevant recommendations due to inaccurate or outdated data 🙅🏼 Over-segmenting to the point where segments are too small to be effective 🙅🏼 Using templated, robotic language that sounds unnatural The key is finding the right balance ––  personalized enough to be relevant and engaging, but not so specific that it becomes cringey or off-putting. When done well, personalization makes customers feel heard, understood and valued. This builds loyalty, increases engagement, and ultimately drives more conversions and revenue. Level up your personalization with one (or more!) of these strategies, and your KPIs are going to shoot up and to the right.

  • View profile for Brian Schmitt

    CEO at Surefoot.me | Driving ecom growth w/ CRO, Analytics, UX Research, and Site Design

    6,655 followers

    Do you cater to multiple customer personas? Guiding them to the right products from the get-go can significantly enhance their shopping experience. One effective strategy is to implement a "Choose Your Own Adventure" approach on your ecommerce homepage. Why This Approach Works: → Personalization: By allowing customers to select their persona or interests, you can tailor the shopping experience to their specific needs and preferences. → Improved Navigation: This method helps visitors quickly find the products that are most relevant to them, reducing the time they spend searching and increasing the likelihood of a purchase. → Enhanced Engagement: A personalized experience keeps customers engaged and encourages them to explore more of your catalog and return in the future. How to Implement It: → Identify Key Personas: Start by identifying the main customer personas you serve. For example, if you're a skincare brand, your personas might include "Teens," "Adults," and "Mature." → Create Clear Pathways: Design your homepage to feature clear, clickable options for each persona. For instance, you could have buttons or images labeled "Teen Skin," "Adult Skin," and "Mature Skin." → Tailor Content: Once a visitor selects their persona, direct them to a customized landing page that features products, testimonials, and content relevant to their needs. Show product recommendations tagged for each persona. Bonus points: Setup a personalization campaign that adapts each page of your site with language and imagery to match each persona. e.g. A teen would see imagery of other teens and copy on the page follows suite. By implementing a "Choose Your Own Adventure" approach, you can create a more personalized and joyful shopping experience for your customers, ultimately driving higher conversions and revenue.

  • View profile for Rishabh Jain
    Rishabh Jain Rishabh Jain is an Influencer

    Co-Founder / CEO at FERMÀT - the leading commerce experience platform

    13,694 followers

    Personalization at scale is the holy grail of ecommerce. Many brands try this, but their attempts end up feeling artificial or breaking under load. Then I saw what UnionBrands accomplished with FERMÀT. What makes their case particularly interesting is the inherent tension in their business model. With brands like Gladly Family (baby gear) and BravoMonster (luxury RC cars), they're essentially running multiple distinct businesses under one roof. Each brand serves completely different customer personas - imagine the complexity of speaking authentically to both RC car collectors and parents shopping for family-friendly gear. Here's how they approached this challenge using FERMÀT: 1. Persona-Driven Experience Architecture → Each audience segment gets its own tailored journey → The messaging adapts naturally across collector, racer, and gift-giver segments → Brand integrity remains strong while speaking to specific buyers 2. Seamless Ad-to-Cart Alignment → Seasonal offers feel authentic and contextual → Their beach-themed funnels mirror specific UGC content → The narrative flows naturally from first impression to purchase 3. PR-Driven Funnel Optimization → Press coverage leads to custom-built experiences → Publication audiences see perfectly aligned messaging → Direct attribution captures real PR impact Their results validate this approach in remarkable ways: • First week of launch: FERMÀT funnels drove 3X the revenue of their website • PR placement performance: Their collector-specific funnel hit a 14.29% conversion rate when UnCrate featured Bravomonster • Seasonal campaigns: Their beach-themed funnel achieved a 4.56 ROAS What I find most compelling is how they've reframed the personalization challenge. Instead of rebuilding their core site for every audience segment, they’re creating AI-powered FERMÀT funnels to create targeted experiences that preserve brand integrity while delivering true personalization. As Jen Johnson Latulippe, UnionBrands founder, puts it: "FERMÀT allows a smaller team to get bigger results, faster. We can create a whole shopping experience in a few hours without having to touch the website."

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