Rightmove analyses website improvements
By Miya Knights,
Rightmove has just announced it using customer experience management (CEM) software to help enhance the online experience of visitors to its website.
As the largest online UK property website, with 90 per cent of all UK estate agents advertising their properties through it, the new software is enabling it to capture in more detail the journey of every customer journey, allowing it to proactively seeking out and resolving any obstacles that impede the customer experience.
Hannes Buhrmann, Rightmove public website manager told IT PRO that before investing in the Tealeaf CX software suite last summer the business was reliant on internet log files to track customer web activity and focus groups and user interviews for feedback. "Customer have tended to ring agents about properties and tell them about problems they may have experienced with the website at the same time," he said.
As well as relying on agent feedback, he added there hadn't been a pressing need for such technology before: "In the first four years of our existence Rightmove had no competition really. The market has become a lot more competitive recently," Buhrmann said.
Having used Tealeaf CX full-scale since December, Rightmove is using the more detailed information about web activity to improve the site and increase consumer conversions, as well as deliver more leads to the 14,000-plus estate agent branches and new homes developers who list their properties on the site.
In return, the estate agencies and developers can target more than 4 million visitors who generate 550 million page views in 27 million visits per month.
Buhrmann said that the company now has real-time visibility into what is happening at every stage of the customer journey from the images they view to the enquiries they send to agents. This view has enabled it to resolve website issues more quickly and provide better online service for consumers, to ultimately increase the number of leads that the site delivers to their customers.
"The web is by far the most important part of business," he said. "For example we were able to identify abandonment rates of 70 per cent on one form that was key to creating agent leads. Since re-designing it, the abandonment rate has dropped by 35 per cent. And we have some significant architectural changes we are planning to implement that Tealeaf will definitely help us with."
Buhrmann stressed: "Don't underestimate the effort needed to use these kinds of tools fully. They are very broad and need significant effort to configure properly."
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Networking Analysis & Insight
Welcome to the stay-at-home Olympics
Inside the Enterprise: The Government has warned of disruption, and the Civil Service is practising working from home. Could IT yet save businesses from chaos on an Olympian scale?
- Q&A: Cisco on servers, storage and strategy
- It's not about the browser, stupid!
- The Great British network squeeze
- New year: new suppliers
- Top 10 tech winners and losers of 2011
- 2011: The year in news
- UK rural broadband: too little, and too late
- HP PCs back on the menu with Dellish plans
- Top 10 social networking tips for enterprise - part one
Latest Networking Reviews
Swyx SwyxExpress X20 review
Rating: ![]()
- Ipswitch WhatsUp Gold Premium 15
- ForeScout Technologies CounterACT 6.3.4
- ThinPrint Printer Dashboard review: First Look
- TITUS Aware for Microsoft Outlook review
- Windows Phone 7 Mango review: First Look
- Dartware InterMapper review
- Kemp Technologies LoadMaster 3600 review
- Sangfor WANACC M5500 review
- Office 365 review: First look
advertisement
Most popular
- Google releases Chrome for Android beta
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- OneNote hits Google?s Android
- BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
- Google sends in Bouncer to sort out malicious apps
- Ubuntu vs. Windows 7 on the business desktop
- Who to trust after the VeriSign hack?
- Head to Head: Mac OS X 10.7 Lion vs Windows 7
- ACTA: the basics, the controversies, and the future
- BT considering Ofcom price cap appeal
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





