IT confronts the Splinternet

December 31, 2010

Something happened while we were sleeping: The Internet became the Splinternet. Here’s how my colleagues Josh Bernoff and Shar VanBoskirk describe it in a recent report: “The golden age of Internet standards is ending. The Web is splintering, and interactive marketing is fragmenting along with it. Welcome to the age of the Splinternet.”

OK, so that is the problem statement for interactive marketers.

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But if you are on the e-commerce team, you are thinking about how to sell over mobile apps and TV apps as well as on tablets and multiple browsers — all the things your customer anticipates — as a single company offering a single experience.

If you are in customer service, you are thinking about how to turn a Twitter request into a direct engagement, with a trouble ticket and resolution code. You’re thinking about the impact of smart mobile devices on your traditional services channel mix.

If you are in the executive suite, you are thinking about how to deliver a consistent brand experience across all customer devices and channels.

To thrive in an era where customers are empowered to engage with you in any channel and device they want, you have to serve that customer over a steadily and inevitably fragmenting set of devices and channels and media.

Remind you of something? Yep, it’s like e-commerce all over again. E-commerce started out with every group — marketing, HR, communications, customer service — building a narrowly defined solution. But ultimately, IT got involved to provision the e-commerce platform. The Splinternet is following the same path: fragmented solutions for each business function, device and channel.

If you are in IT, you can stand by while every part of the company builds its own channel-specific, device-specific, function-specific solution. Or you can step in to coordinate a whole-company response and create the platform for the Splinternet. Here’s what that means for IT:

You have to raise awareness of the impact of the Splinternet. The process of coordinating a whole-company response starts by bringing Web, marketing, IT and business people together to comprehend the Splinternet problem and opportunity. You should plan an offsite workshop to kick-start the collaboration. At least one multinational company we know of has done that already.

Your customer engagement technology has to work across channels and devices. And that means that search, transaction state, content targeting, analytics and optimization have to be coordinated across multiple delivery channels. For example, an experience initiated on-line has to also be delivered over a mobile app, and an SMS or Twitter or Facebook service request has to trigger a phone call to a preferred customer.

source : www.infoworld.com

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Submited at Friday, December 31st, 2010 at 6:00 pm on News by steve
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