How to Connect Content and eCommerce
Companies make or break, depending on how fast and how well they embrace e-commerce and selling online. Consumers are more connected than ever. On average, the millions of US adults online have 4.3 connected devices and 70% use smartphones. Web and mobile experiences shape purchasing behavior. Online sales in Europe reached €232.60 bn ($253.86 bn) in 2016 (+15.6% from 2015) and this is expected to rise by 14.2% in 2017.
Decision-makers responsible for developing and managing digital business for their brands and companies know that they must deliver engaging customer experiences from desktop to mobile and to physical stores. Content is key and 95% of companies selling online have taken steps to combine their content and commerce strategies.
There are different approaches you can take when getting into e-commerce: you can start with an e-commerce system, or you can start with a CMS, or you can take a hybrid or headless approach. This paper looks at the merits as well as drawbacks of the different approaches you can take, and gives you pointers on how to choose the system(s) that best fit your enterprise needs.
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The challenges you face
1. Connecting painlessly with payment systems
Make sure your e-commerce system is in sync. Your customers are ready to pay, so don’t lose them with the error message, “credit card payment failed”. Your payment system must be able to handle high traffic and offer fast, smooth and seamless checkout.
2. Flexible integration with marketing tools
You have a CRM system for segmenting customers and recording details; social media tools to tag, message and engage customers in campaigns and flash sales; analytics to understand, test and track customer behavior. All these need to be well integrated in your marketing strategy so that you don’t have to fight against data silos. Your e-commerce site should be robust to meet your enterprise-scale requirements and scalable to evolve with changing technology.
3. Omnichannel brand experiences
Your e-commerce website is geared for multiple channels and languages, but is it truly omnichannel, i.e. orchestrated into a consistent brand experience connecting all touchpoints for customers? About 50% of e-commerce transactions are cross-device5, so whether consumers first search on a tablet, then visit your brick-and-mortar store, and go back to their desktops to purchase and pay, they expect a seamless journey without thinking about how complex those connections might be.
Mobiles are becoming the battleground that determines the quality of digital experiences. Retail apps are consumers’ most popular tool for browsing, buying and reviews, while the preference for apps vs. mobile sites is fairly even in the travel sector
4. Delivering personalised content
No matter how large your company is or what you are selling, even simple personalization can power up the effectiveness of your e-commerce and marketing programs.
- Personalization can deliver five to eight times the return on investment (ROI) on marketing spend and lift sales 10% and more.
- Gartner predicts that by 2018, organizations that have fully invested in all types of personalization will outsell those that have not by 20%.
Personalize using data from the systems you have. Magnolia enables you to connect visitor data from your analytics tool or CRM for more targeted conversions. Personalize entire pages or page elements, and manage personalized promotions effectively. See Magnolia’s guide on how to create personalized web experiences in an easy and scalable way.
5. Quick product/service updates and timely campaigns
You need a fast and easy way to create rich content. A CMS that is easy to learn and to use allows you to manage digital assets like graphics, photos, sound clips and videos efficiently, and to tap on and integrate external data sources. It becomes straightforward to orchestrate social media posts and marketing campaigns to deliver the right triggers at the right time to the right audiences.
6. Security and reliability
If customers don’t trust your brand or your payment system, they won’t buy. Your e-commerce site must be safe, secure and reliable, and stand up to unauthorized cyber attacks and hacking. Compatibility with the latest SSL and PCI security standards, regular updates, guaranteed uptime and roundthe- clock support are vital.
Merging content and commerce
To create great digital experiences, you need engaging content. That’s why a CMS is an essential part of your e-commerce ecosystem. When online shops hit the market in the early days of the Internet, most of them functioned as product catalogs. Their focus was on processes such as shopping cart, checkout, payment and delivery. E-commerce translated into online versions of stores and shelves, but neglected the experience of selling and shopping.
With the rise of mobile phones and tablets, the game changed, opening up numerous possibilities of communicating, interacting, buying and selling. E-commerce merchants realized that they had to inject relevant content into their online shops, that they had to create engaging digital experiences, that they could win over more customers with personalization. A CMS makes content creation easy, with more options for creating campaign landing pages, product pages and digital journeys on multiple channels.
So companies have to integrate content and commerce. Two of the biggest technology and organizational challenges that they face here are: 1) working with their legacy content management system, and 2) integrating the content management system and commerce software. Let’s take a closer look at how to achieve this and the factors to consider.
Why companies often look to fit a CMS around a commerce system
Most companies are reluctant to dump an existing commerce system that they are using. This applies to small businesses who can’t afford to replace ther commerce system, but also to large enterprises who can’t risk the big investment to give their commerce back-end a facelift. Commerce systems often have complex integrations with other systems: CRM, ERP, PIM, point-of-sales, payment, logistics, etc. It’s thus easier to add a CMS than to start from scratch.
When brands and retailers were asked to prioritize their initiatives, 16% prioritized a commerce system project, while 41-59% prioritized investments to improve the customer experience including content development, responsive design and personalization. Hence, companies are three times more likely to invest in improving the content experience than in switching commerce systems.
Three main apporaches
Digital business practitioners talk about “owning the glass”: the system that “owns the glass” is the one in front that serves the content and that handles the traffic load and speed of delivery.
Which system should you lead with: e-commerce system or CMS? Each has their strengths. In general, e-commerce systems are better at transactional flows like shopping carts and delivery tracking. Tasks like editing content and managing campaigns are easier in a CMS.
Pricing models are different. Most e-commerce systems charge for a license and also by usage: you pay per request for transactions through the channel. The more you sell, the more you pay. CMS charges tend to be fixed: you pay per license server.
There is no one-size-fits-all solution and each integration is unique. Analyze your business needs to find the approach that fits best. Let’s look at the three approaches in more detail.
Commerce at the front, content at the back
If you go for a commerce-first approach, you put the commerce system at the heart of your strategy and tap on its transactional capabilities from product catalog and search, to pricing, payment and shipping. The CMS is at the back-end and supports the commerce system with content elements.
In this approach, the commerce system delivers the experience and the CMS has a straightforward role as a content repository and helps generate content creation processes. Companies who go for this approach might find it difficult to justify investing in a high-end CMS, as they would be under-using its delivery capabilities. As such, those who go for this approach usually look to use their CMS in a headless scenario.
On the commerce site, you integrate content elements to complement the products or services. This means that the site is structured as a typical shopping journey, with selective parts enhanced with content, e.g. themed landing pages for certain product categories or special promotion pages.
Many commerce systems also offer basic, built-in content management features. However, for complex enterprise requirements, such as optimizing for multiple channels, having a publishing workflow, incorporating personalized content and analytics, you are better equipped with a full-fledged CMS.
Pros and cons of the commerce-first approach
Pros: This requires little effort to set up - the CMS delivers single content elements to the commerce system, which then delivers the assembled page to the consumer. It is an easy way to inject some content into online shops, using the CMS in a headless approach.
Go for commerce-first if: This approach works if you are focused
exclusively on selling or if you already have
an established online presence and simply
wish to enhance the customer experience
with rich media content. Examples include
department stores and major retailers that
live by the classic “search, browse, view,
cart, checkout” model. They offer a wide
range of diverse products, which require
detailed search and buying guides, and use
the product catalog, merchandising and
promotion functions of a commerce
system to drive conversions and revenues. If you lead with content, you are driven by marketing and publishing
strategies that call for a CMS to provide designed templates, structured
modules for managing news, events and campaigns, and easy-to-use
editing tools. In this approach, the CMS delivers the
experience - including page generation,
navigation and personalization - using content
from both the CMS and commerce repositories.
The commerce system acts as a service layer.
It serves the CMS with ordering, payment and
processing functions. Your site is free to focus on branding, imaging
and storytelling. You are more concerned with
how visitors consume and process the content,
and the ability to buy and sell is an added service. Pros and cons of the content-first approach Pros: This puts customer experience first and
you can create those experiences in the CMS.
Marketing and commerce teams can work with
their respective tools with little need to switch
between the two. While this approach tends to
be a bit more complex and time-consuming, it is
well worth the effort as it is likely to be the most
flexible and extendable in the long run. To reduce
the complexity while increasing flexibility, some
CMS vendors and commerce systems have
developed ready-built integrations and
connectors. Cons: Elements of commerce personalization,
e.g. shopping history, behavior and general
profile, need to be combined with content
personalization. The search function, and the
search rules set up, must work properly across
both the content and product worlds. Product,
pricing and inventory details need to be featured
on the site in real-time. Go for content-first if:
This approach works if you have clearly
defined products, if you have highly
individualized purchase journeys, or if you
have strong brands that emphasize the
customer experience and can draw from a
large pool of editorial content and digital
assets. Examples include fashion brands,
online media channels or travel and tourism
(hotels and airlines). In this approach, the CMS and commerce systems share the task of
delivering the experience, each system meeting the relevant request as it
comes. Integration focuses mainly on the front-end, such as using single
sign-on so that customers only authenticate once, or sharing CSS and HTML
templates to create a consistent experience across the site. This approach
usually calls for basic back-end integration, such as synchronizing customer
data and user profiles between the two systems. Pros and cons of the hybrid approach Pros: This attempts to bring the best of both
worlds together: the commerce system deals
with the checkout and payment, while the CMS
handles the experience. Cons: One difficulty is making the CMS and
commerce systems appear as one consistent
experience to consumers. For a seamless
transition between browsing and buying, the
consumer’s session needs to be shared between
the two systems. Losing the previous data and
having to type in your shopping choices and
address details at the point of payment is a
no-go. Another difficulty is how to synchronize
the managing and publishing of assets.
As content and commerce become more
tightly intertwined, content will depend on
product and pricing data and vice versa.
The dependencies between the two systems
need to be clear and streamlined in the
publication workflow. Finally, it is difficult
to integrate the targeting, personalization
and search capabilities of both systems. Several retailers have used Magnolia
successfully in hybrid approaches. REWE’s online shop rewe.de won first prize in
the multi-channel category of the Internet world
Shop Awards 2016. The supermarket chain is
open 24/7 with its online shop and indulges
customers with shopping on all channels.
Customers can order either via the site or the
REWE app and have the items sent conveniently
and directly to their home. They can also choose
from a wide range of recipes and add the
ingredients to their virtual shopping baskets.
To create this digital shopping experience, REWE
used a hybrid approach with e-commerce
platform commercetools, together with the CMS
from Magnolia. The drugstore chain Rossmann went on an
e-commerce offensive by launching a completely
responsive online drugstore that enables mobile
shopping across all devices. The new shop
platform enhances the customer experience by
combining product presentation and content in
the form of advice and magazine articles.
Implementation partner Aperto used Magnolia in
a hybrid approach. Other retailers have used Magnolia’s integration
strengths to easily connect with other systems in
order to access all the data needed to build
multichannel digital experiences. Coop Alleanza is the leading grocery
distribution chain in Italy. Using Magnolia,
it launched a digital communication strategy
that offers customers interactive in-store
digital experiences. With Magnolia, Switzerland’s largest retailer
saves over 50% on annual IT infrastructure costs.
The new solution also makes it faster and easier
for Migros customers to find goods and services.
Migros used Magnolia to develop a dedicated
interface for managing thousands of campaign
and product teasers accross the site. This made
it easier for editors to mantain an overview of
what was available, allowing time-sensitive
marketing content to be found and used faster
and more effectively. All three approaches outlined above are key in merging content and
commerce, and depending on your needs, one or the other might fit better in
certain scenarios. If your main concern is creating consistent omnichannel
experiences across mobile web, app, tablet, desktop or kiosk applications,
the content-first and hybrid approaches are more likely to achieve this. Regardless of which system is in the lead, you
need to think about how to integrate and the
quality of the integration. Choose a CMS that can
cover the common pitfalls and that allows you to
merge content and commerce systems to create
a unified experience not just for your customers,
but also for your commerce and marketing
teams working with these tools. Let’s now go
into the types of integrations. Pseudo or no integration Companies often use both commerce and CMS
systems in parallel without any actual data
exchange. This is what Forrester calls the
“two-site syndrome”, where the “discover” and
“explore” parts of the customer journey are
disjointed from the “buy”12. They produce
similar-looking templates to give customers
the impression of a seamless transition from
one system to the other. Or they use i-frames
to keep the overall design while jumping to an
external page. This approach is easy to implement and it might
work for some scenarios. The downside is that
editors have to deal with redundancy and work
with two separate tools. Sharing assets might
become a pain. Customers won’t have a good
user experience, especially when they see
different URLs and have to login at two different
pages or if pages are not optimized for mobile
devices. In the long term, pseudo integrations
are stop-gap solutions that lead to additional
costs and limited functionality. Import integration In this approach, data is exported/imported
between the two systems, commerce and CMS.
Editors can work with one tool, but they have to
deal with data redundancy and potential
synchronization issues, e.g. at what time point
was the import done, what amount of data was
exchanged. Real integration A true integration uses machine-to-machine
communication, e.g. through standardized
application programming interfaces (APIs),
to combine the systems. For instance, if login
data is exchanged, customers only have to
sign in once and have access to both systems.
As another example: if unformatted data is
exchanged, content from the CMS can be
transferred to the commerce system and the
required formatting takes place there using
the lead system’s template logic. This is the
principle that enables integration in headless
scenarios. A pure headless CMS is one without the delivery tier, where the content
managed in the CMS is rendered on another system. It separates content
from presentation and removes the limits of pre-defined structures. You can
serve structured content to existing end-points quickly and support delivery
formats from mobile or web-based apps to TV. You can deliver content to any
format you want via a content API. Leading global brands use Magnolia in headless
and hybrid scenarios. Magnolia enables them
to combine the speed and agility provided by
headless with robust enterprise CMS features
that a pure headless CMS usually does not
offer, such as workflow, personalization and
multi-site capabilities. REST APIs: The key to going headless Magnolia’s use of open APIs and data standards
create rich integration and customization
opportunities that make it easy to share and
manage content across multiple sources.
Flexible REST APIs support headless scenarios
and enable you to use semi-structured content. Magnolia’s representational state transfer
(REST) Web service allows you to manipulate
content through a Web API. Developers can call
any Magnolia command via REST and expose
their own REST endpoints via Magnolia. You can
create, read, update and delete any pages,
components or elements stored in a named
workspace. You can also execute commands to
activate, export and import content. REST is
useful for connecting other systems, e.g. use
REST to push product data from a third-party
system into Magnolia and let editors enrich it in
a Magnolia app. Companies focus heavily on content in order to differentiate from the
competition. In doing so, they have to increasingly support more content
types, from product and informational content, to ads, videos, social
media and user-generated content13. Enterprises have consistently told
Magnolia that their top pain point when pushing e-commerce initiatives
was how to manage content easily. Here’s a quick checklist of what your
CMS should be capable of doing. 1. Easy to use Is it fast and easy to create content? Creating
pages and managing content should be as
simple as using a smartphone app. Can you
update retail offers quickly and publish with
minimal developer help? Can you produce core
content across country sites and in different
languages? Your CMS should have built-in tools
that are easy to learn, but flexible enough to let
your team be creative. 2. Personalize effectively Does it have personalization features that let
you deliver the right content to the right
audience in a practical and scalable way?
Your CMS should allow you to manage your
personalized campaigns, seasonal promotions
and special offers more efficiently. Does it
connect easily with your analytics, CRM and
marketing automation tools so that you can
do more? 3. Manage content from any source and publish
to any format Are you able to pull in content from different
sources, e.g. social media, brand personalities
or travel packages? Can you publish to any
front-end format and go headless? Magnolia’s
content apps allow you to manage structured
data productively and they can be tailored exactly
to your needs. Build a content hub to cover
any structured content creation task that you
have, such as managing event pages or your
store’s catalog. 4. Caching and fast display When you’re launching a high-traffic marketing
campaign, you want to be sure that your sites
are fast and won’t go down at peak times. Is your
CMS reliable and stable enough to meet your
demanding enterprise requirements? And does
it offer the scalability you need for future
challenges? There is no out-of-the-box solution for succeeding in e-commerce. Each
integration is different, so look for the best approach. Analyze your business
needs, which would cover factors such as resource and structural maturity,
and budget. Go back to basics and choose systems that excel at their
core functionality. Pick tools that give you the flexibility and scalability to
evolve your e-commerce deployments and integrations over time. You won’t
be alone on this journey. Other enterprises have faced similar questions
and challenges before. Your vendors, implementation and technology
partners can help you assemble the best-fit bricks and patterns to speed
up and power up your e-commerce integrations.Content at the front, commerce at the back
The hybrid approach
Types of integration
Headless for the enterprise
Content capability checklist: The final four
Build the bricks
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