The funds management industry is not known as a rapid adopter of
new technologies. It was slow to appreciate the power of the internet as a
marketing tool and as a way to streamline backoffice and other processes. After
a flurry of activity in the late 1990s, when some managers mistakenly believed
that a whole new class of investors was willing to buy retail managed funds
online, without advice, development slowed. The Y2K red herring diverted time
and resources, slowing genuine development further.
The tech bubble bursting in
2001 did not help matters either. But since then the industry has gradually
improved its use of the internet both for marketing and operational
efficiency, although it has still, arguably, got a long way to go to match
other related industries, notably banking. And smaller players, such as
individual super funds and financial planning groups, are probably on average
well behind the big institutions in making the internet work for them. A new
book by an Australian web designer, Rich Evans, could prove useful to those
smaller organisations, or to the larger ones who want to have a reality check
on their fundamental aims with internet usage.
Click Here is a business
person’s guide, full of check lists and basic advice on building the most
appropriate web site for a business’s goals. The theme of simplicity permeates
the book. Spinning logos and time-consuming animations are out. Ease of use is
in. Going hand in glove with ease of use is speed of use. In this regard, customers
are becoming more demanding and, in a competitive industry such as funds
management, more frustrated by anything which delays gratification.
Evans says
that search engine evolution will have a big impact on the effectiveness of web
sites. For instance Google launched an application called SearchWiki last November,
which allows users to customise search results and store relevant information.
Users can re-rank, delete, add or comment on search results in order to build
their own information base. The results are displayed every time they do that
search and can be shared with other users.
Evans predicts that this new technology
will be integrated in all web sites in future, which will present challenges
from a marketing perspective. Customers could potentially be shown the door
before they have a chance to be engaged by the content. The book is not a
step-by-step guide on how to build a web site but rather a step-by-step guide
on what to think about before and during the process as well as ongoing
management.