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This article is based on the new book, The Stranger's Long Neck: How to Deliver What Your Customers Really Want Online.

Customers Behaving Differently

These potential customers were not behaving as expected. They were avoiding all the classic marketing material on the website and were instead digging deep into the technical details and spending considerable time in the support section.

Strange, considering that they hadn't even bought the product yet. The organization's marketers were surprised by such behavior. They thought it strange.

But it's not that strange, really. I've seen that pattern occur again and again on the Web. Customers want details, facts, comparisons, and feedback from other customers. They avoid the fluff and waffle and marketing hype.

In fact, when applied to the Web, old-school marketing drives many customers away. That's because old-school marketers, when on the Web, are like needy children tugging repeatedly at the customer's sleeve while whining, "Pay some attention to me!"

"This is marketing," one customer complained as he sought to do product research on the website. "I don't have time for this."

Many people associate marketing and advertising with deception, lies, half-truths, and manipulation. When marketers talk about wanting customers to have an emotional engagement with the brand, what many customers hear is an attempt to exploit human emotions to make profit.

What the Web represents, more than anything else, is a shift in power: away from organizations, toward customers. Brands, politicians, even popes are being questioned more than ever.

In Western societies, at least, the age of blind faith and brand loyalty is waning. The Web customer is skeptical, cynical, and impatient. On the Web, the customer isn't kingthe customer is the dictator.

The Rise of the Long Neck

Web customers are strangers. They're on the outside. They have a small set of tasks that are extremely important to them.

Sure, there is the long tail of minor tasks as popularized by Chris Anderson in his book, The Long Tail. But if you look at the following chart\, you will see what I call "the Long Neck": the top tasks customers come to your website for.

When we did top-task analysis for tourism websites, we found that two tasks are overwhelmingly important to customers:

  • Booking accommodations
  • Getting special offers

The problem with the long tail is that it can wrap itself around the long neck and choke it. We once worked with an airline that had lots of destination information available. When it removed that information, its bookings went up.

A case study in my book is about another such suffocating experience: Microsoft had thousands of people come to its Excel website wanting to know how to sum two numbers (a top task). But when they searched for "sum a number," many of them landed on a page about the IMSUM function, a mathematical formula.

The tiny task (the IMSUM function) had gotten in the way of the top task (sum a number) because of word overlap. (Tiny tasks often use the same type of words as top tasks.)

To solve that problem, Microsoft Excel made sure that the IMSUM function page was no longer found when someone searched for "sum a number." Half of search management is knowing what you don't want to get found for a particular search.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Gerry McGovern
Gerry McGovern (gerry@gerrymcgovern.com) is a content management consultant and author. His latest book is The Stranger's Long Neck: How to Deliver What Your Customers Really Want Online, which teaches unique techniques for identifying and measuring the performance of customers' top tasks.