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When Costco on Monday (Oct. 27) announced that it would support—for the first time—customer comments on its products, the move was less noteworthy for the $71 billion chain’s late-to-the-party embrace than for what it says about the industry’s acceptance of a once much-feared feature. Costco’s deployment of Costco Reviews went out of its way to avoid anything controversial or, for that matter, innovative or creative. Almost all of the functionality has been outsourced to an Austin-based social commerce vendor called Bazaarvoice, which will review all comments and post them within 24 hours, once any profanity or “completely inappropriate” comments are removed, said Ginnie Roeglin, Costco’s Senior VP for E-Commerce. Read more. |
October 30th, 2008 at 8:37 am
To elaborate on my comment, what marketers are starting to understand is that conversations about brands and products are taking place all over the internet, in blogs, forums and social networks. By opening up user reviews, through a partner like Bazaarvoice, companies are bringing the conversation directly to their own websites and creating a more compelling platform for users. There are lots of studies that suggest user reviews increase conversion - I’d be interested to see how Costco fares over the next several months and if they are able to realize the benefits.