3. Fluctuate Engagement Levels: Customer personas are valuable, but consumer-experience design can become muddied by trying to serve each persona equally. When designing, brands should think about customers in two large buckets: "errand-runners" and "experience-engagement." If a company speaks best to errand-runners, it must design to their needs: to get in and out quickly, to perform transactions as effortlessly as possible, and to repeat the same tasks and purchases repeatedly. This company then has to be the best shopping list it can be for an errand-running audience, and shouldn't distract them with useless information. Conversely, visitors interested in brand experiences and deep engagement must be able to delve into catalogs, ask questions, evaluate recommendations and share their insights. They shouldn't be forced down the transactional path that errand-runners seek.
4. Think Beyond the Web Visit: We know one thing: Mobile visitors are almost certainly splitting their attention between brands and "something" else. A Google study found that 86 percent of mobile users are multitasking. Whether that means mobile visitors are looking to engage in long, leisurely content searches, or they just want to order more diapers before the commercial break ends, is a question each retailer must answer with his or her own research. Without a clean, responsive design, however, mobile viewers won't do much transacting or engaging at all.
In short, the rise of the "always-connected" consumer means that a Web visit is now just one component of an overall consumer experience presentation. Curated recommendations, geolocation-sensitive offers and in-store shopping aids are all part of the brand message now; and a brand's voice should be consistent throughout.
5. Don't Hide Superior Customer Service: Exemplary, loyalty-building customer service is useless if customers can't reach someone in a jam. Retailers must ask if their most effective customer care channels are prominently featured to customers, or if shoppers are consistently funneled to lowcost, less-effective outlets. Resolving a problem is just as important to consumers as the checkout button is to merchants; design should reflect that.
About the Author: Justin Cowan is the director of content management for LightCMS, a NetSuite Inc., company that provides a powerful, yet easy-to-use cloud-based platform for creating websites.