Takeaway: With same-day delivery options becoming the expectation for shoppers, the consumer journey is changing. As a major asset in the quick digestion of product attributes and in preventing returns, buttoning up your product content with these tips now will save headaches later.
The main difference now is, with the new crop of fast-delivery businesses – UberRUSH, Postmates, Deliv, Google Shopping Express, and Zipments, just to name a few – competing ferociously to get your products in consumer hands faster and faster, shoppers are finally viewing need-it-now-delivery as a viable tool in their arsenal.
The key will be for your product content to help speed consumers through the shrinking consumer journey, and to rethink product content’s impact on a few other processes along the way.
Product content will: Better prepare your customers.
Now is the time to ensure product descriptions, sizing details, usage guides, materials, and care requirements are present, clear, and thorough.
Product content will: Speed up the decision-making process.
This low effort versus high effort is a critical factor in appeasing consumers. According to 75,000 customers surveyed by Industry Week using Customer Effort Score (CES) data, 94% of customers who experienced “low effort” during the research and transaction said they would repurchase and 88% who felt the experience required “high effort” planned to spread negativity via word of mouth. Yikes.
Product content will: Personalize the “Stay-in-Touch” experience.
They send a trio of emails to customers hungry to get their product and show it off.
Within the email body of each, product content appears in the form of the full title, correct color, and price, and also links directly to the product page. Nordstrom also maximizes this consumer-engaged time to include guiding content and other product recommendations, based on, you guessed it: keywords within the product content.