What Will Google Think of Next? GPS for Smartphones
October 30, 2009
It’s TomTom and Garmin’s turn to be worried. Google has rolled out its free navigation service using Google maps available through Motorola’s Droid smartphone (and coming soon to more phones).
It appears Google has done it again. What do GPS companies have to worry about? Let’s take a look:
- Google’s navigation tool is free: Instead of paying for a GPS or a mapping service subscription through cell phone providers, consumers can benefit from Google’s usual model — free.
- Google provides one-stop-shopping: Yes, this navigation tool is just one more way that Google is on track to rule the world by providing access to every kind of information you could possibly need at your fingertips at anytime and on one device.
- Google is a brand people know and trust: Like it or not, people know the Google brand and trust it. That ready-made brand recognition and trust is likely to go a long way in terms of shifting consumers from stand-alone GPS devices and subscription services.
Put it this way — if Google’s new navigation tool for smartphones works well and keeps its free price tag (and becomes available on more smartphones than Motorola’s Droid), there will be little need for anything else. In other words, the same things that happened with online search, online email, and so on, will happen to GPS.
The question becomes not whether or not Google will be successful in its new venture into GPS, but will any other company be able to challenge Google in that new venture?
According to the New York Times, even the progressive Apple is behind in this area. Can anyone ever compete with Google? What do you think?
Xstrata — Communicating Corporate Ethics
October 29, 2009
Xstrata is a major global diversified mining group, based in Switzerland and the UK, that knows how to communicate via its website. Take a look at the Homepage –

First the abstract image at the top changes; I had to mention this since I like abstracts. The Home page is loaded with information links, but is not overwhelming. The navigation on the upper left is good, the company prominently displays updates on its merger, the About quickly describes the company to new visitors. Finally, stock price and links to reports are available Nicely done.
The company also does a good job communicating the nature of the industries in which they compete. On the Commodity Businesses section you can use the links to more information–
Microsoft is Late to the Party – Again
October 28, 2009
Once again, Microsoft is desperately trying to copy their cooler competitor, Apple. This time, the company is jumping on the brick-and-mortar retail location bandwagon. Introducing Microsoft Retail Stores!
There is no doubt that the Apple stores have helped Steve Jobs and friends create one of the most powerful relationship brands by surrounding consumers with another branded experience where they can share the brand they love. The Apple stores employ cool employees, give free training sessions to new owners, and the Genius Bar is always hopping with satisfied customers getting the help they need and further interacting with the brand. It’s a fun store to hang out in!
Can Microsoft create anything close to what Apple has developed with its retail stores?
Let’s face it. Microsoft has a lot to live up to in comparison. I suppose that’s why the first store, which opened in Scottsdale, Arizona, has a modern design that practically duplicates the design of an Apple store. I guess Microsoft copied Apple’s Mac Guy vs. PC Guy commercials, so why not copy their stores, too? Check out the similarities in the exterior and interior pictures of the Scottsdale Microsoft store below. Incredibly similar to an Apple store, wouldn’t you say? Read more
Down the Garden Path: Anatomy of an Unfortunate User Experience
October 28, 2009
I recently took a rather twisty trip through the website of a “membership organization, think tank and educational resource.” I was trying to access a report, and since I do that sort of thing a lot—for an assortment of different topics I write about– I’m pretty accustomed to the various strategies utilized to extract (a) information about me, and (b) money from me. But some extra challenges made this attempt worth a post.
The following comments are not about this particular organization, which is not only respectable but also provides value. It’s just that their website offers an excellent example of the “unfortunate user experience.”
Here’s what happened:
- I went through the registration process in order to access a specific report. I wasn’t surprised when it turned out (many screens later) that the report itself wasn’t accessible under the “free” membership level.
- But I persisted, and it turned out that a briefing-style version of the report is in fact free. Actually, there are several kinds of free content available on the site, some of it high-value. But! You don’t know this until you try accessing a variety of items, and occasionally stumble on something you can view without charge.
- For some types of free content, including the briefing I was trying to see, you still have to put the item in a “cart” and go through a “check-out” process. There’s no charge, but every time you “buy” a free content item, the system sends you an email confirming the “purchase.” And of course you are offered frequent opportunities to “upgrade” your membership.
- Finally (although I could go on for much longer), the briefing turned out to be in slide format. Not a problem in itself, but the page is arranged so awkwardly (due to a humongous–yet pointless!–banner at the top) that you have to scroll far down even to see the slide. And you have to do that for EVERY SLIDE, because the slideshow does not play automatically. The slide display is a fixed size (quite large), which means you have to scroll down even further after viewing a slide in order to see the notes (which contain most of the information).
Now here’s why all that is important—and relevant. This website committed several offenses against the user, and the organization lost brand credibility in the process. Notably:
- Expectations violation. At the beginning I thought of the organization as an information resource, but by the end of my visit, I thought of it mainly as marketing machine. And a dysfunctional one, at that. Did I mention that the “new member orientation” slideshow did not work?
- 2. Unnecessary inconvenience. And did I mention that every single thing you do on this site results in opening a new tab? (At least in Firefox—didn’t test in IE.) In trying to register and access just one report, I ended up with about a dozen tabs. And that’s only a single example from a series of challenges encountered during the visit. Each was relatively minor in itself, but they added up to a significant level of aggravation.
- Mixed messaging. By the end of my visit I had been exposed to many labels, logos, and taglines, but had no idea about the actual purpose of the organization. Every page I visited delivered a different message—and returning to the home page provided no help. It is so crammed with links (including literally dozens of sponsor badges) and things to buy or sign up for that I still cannot tell you what their essential value proposition(s) is/are.
Your company’s Careers site is probably not in danger of seeming too much like a store. But it may well be violating expectations in other ways, as well as causing unnecessary inconvenience and delivering mixed messages. Those failings won’t deter people who need a job from searching the posted openings. However, they will be a discouragement for quality candidates in search of career opportunities with a quality company.
The site I’ve been critiquing actually had some very good information to offer, once I figured out how to work the system. So I’ll visit again—but I won’t look forward to it.
(The illustration is a plan view of the garden at Chateau de Choisy, a seventeenth-century French palace.)
What Makes for Effective Investor Relations Sites? Part 5: Historical Share Price Information
October 27, 2009
The third essential piece of share price information for investors coming to your web site is historical stock price information. When investors buy stock they know they are supposed to record their purchase price, but they often fail to do so. Or they misplace the information. So companies need to provide an easy way for people to look up the stock price on a particular day.
There are several ways to address this need for investors. The Telephonica site includes one that I think is well done. Reproduced below is a page that pops up when you click on a link for historic price data. Note that the page also allows you to enter different dates to customize the information.

An alternative to this is to provide for an excel spreadsheet data download. I encountered this in a couple of U.K. sites I investigated, but unfortunately, when I downloaded the data, it was in comma delimited format and not very user friendly. (I sometimes wonder if the investor relations departments ever actually take their sites out for a test drive, or merely take their data providers at their word.)
To go along with this, it’s helpful to provide investors with a way to calculate the worth of their holdings. Below is the page from British American Tobacco’s site that provides this calculator. Note that the calculator allows the investor to enter the data for share price in a number of different ways and also provides for calculation of the investment return.

All of this inures principally to the benefit of retail investors, as institutional investors will have very sophisticated systems for tracking price movement and charting, but it will also save a fair amount of heartburn in investor relations departments, as it should cut down on the number of calls coming in looking for this type of information, particularly around tax time.
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