Chapter 12 Digital business service implementation and optimisation
are posted to our blog
www.smartinsights.com/blog
and then we use tagging of topics in
different categories to surface the advice in relevant sections of the site. Each post is syndi-
cated to Google’s Feedburner service using RSS feeds which can then be automatically posted
to Twitter. We use Hootsuite to post to other social networks like Facebook, Google+ and
LinkedIn so that a more conversational tone can be used to recommend content or ask ques-
tions than is possible simply through updating a social network automatically. Hootsuite can
also be set to automatically track posts and the impact of sharing using social media, using
campaign tracking to add parameters to the URL of the post. The end of the cycle is where
email is used to share content weekly with an editorial written to recommend the most useful
posts or major updates for our readers to be aware of.
Feedback from users and analytics will reveal different types of errors and ideas across
a website. A change request system is needed to prioritise and manage these, so that the
highest- priority issues are corrected first. We can apply the fault taxonomy of Jorgensen
(1995) to an e-commerce site to decide on the timing of the action required according to the
type of problem. We can see that the approach is quite different from that for a traditional
information system or packaged software that is distributed to thousands of customers. For
example, with a mild problem such as a spelling mistake within software, it would be too
costly to update and redistribute the software. With the e-commerce site, a spelling mistake,
although trivial, can be updated immediately by correcting it on the web page or in the data-
base or content management system where it is stored. Indeed, minor problems need to be
corrected because they reduce the credibility of the site.
For more major errors, it is essential to fix the problems as soon as possible since revenue
will be lost, both from customers who are unable to complete their current purchases and
from users who will be unprepared to use the site in future because of their bad experience.
Data from transactional e-commerce sites show that very few have continuous availability.
If the site revenue for a 24-hours, 7-days-a-week site is £10 million per week then if avail-
ability falls to 95% this is the equivalent of losing £500,000, before the loss of future revenues
from disgruntled customers is taken into account. A modular or component- based approach
to e-commerce systems should enable the location of the problem module or cartridge to
be identified rapidly and the problem in the module to be fixed, or possibly to revert to the
previous version.
As well as fixing the problems shown in Table 12.3, companies will also wish to update the
functionality of the e-commerce system in response to customer demands, sales promotions
or competitor innovations. Again, a component- based approach can enable self- contained,
discrete, new modules or cartridges to be plugged into the system which are designed to pro-
vide new functionality with only minimal changes to existing modules. For each such update,
a small- scale prototyping process involving analysis, design and testing will need to occur.
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