Personalisation in E-commerce websites
As the internet has grown companies are realising at how effective a medium it is to market their products and services to customers over a worldwide basis. With this came web personalisation in which we see websites display adverts that are relevant to what the users have passed viewed, whether it be through simple page viewing, or through items purchased from an online store.
In this final blog, I am going to discuss the various pros and cons of this technology and give my opinion on what I think of it in general use.
Advantages
- Helps save time for new internet users in that it can eliminate repetitive tasks by remembering financial details.
- Allows users to see content that they may not have noticed otherwise that relates to an interest.
Disadvantages
- Lack of anonymity can discourage users and worry them on how they’re personal information will be used.
- User may not want or require suggestions made for them. Some see it as a invasion of privacy where others may just see it as an inconvenience.
- While it is good to form an opinion based on other people beliefs on this matter in terms of data security and anonymity ultimately, only in a real life example could I form a realistic and appropriate opinion on this behaviour. To test, I will go to my Amazon account and see what it believes are relevant to recent views and purchases I have made.
- My Amazon Recommendations
As can be seen from above, my recommendations are all in the genre of technology, most notably, external hard drives and Nintendo DS games. To give this system its due, I was looking for external hard drives with at least 1TB capacity and have bought ‘Yoshi’s Island DS’ for my Nintendo DS so it seems to have done a good, accurate job on extracting relevant information from my recent visits and purchases.
Now, am I for it? I’m still not convinced its best for consumers. My main worries would be about data protection and whether or not Amazon or any other company is going to sell on my details to a third party, most probably for the use of targeted advertising which I am not keen on.
Google is another big name if not the biggest in the search and advertising industry. One feature Google offers to users of its email service is the ability to personalise search results with targeted advertisements based on the users search criteria. Unlike the Amazon example on personalisation, I find this option by Google to be a little to ‘over the shoulder’ for my liking.
The biggest advantage that this personalisation has for the consumer is that it can help let them find something that they were otherwise going to miss out on. Any other benefits are usually just for the retailer in that it has the potential to get consumers to buy more products than they had originally intended when logging in.
Personally, I think that web personalisation is a good idea and it seems to benefit more users than those it does not but something has to be said on the importance that our data is kept secure and that it is never distributed to third parties, nor should there be any ‘opt out’ programs such as BT and Phorm (A company that filters all internet traffic and uses this information to display personalised adverts.) BT got into a lot of trouble with users on this as it was never announced that their every page view was being recorded in what can only be described as a ‘spy-ware’ style fashion. If companies are transparent about what information they are harvesting from users then I see this to only benefit the majority of potential customers and to help businesses attract more.







