"CES Success" Has Two E's

"CES Success" Has Two E's

Double Agent Derek Meister 01/09/2010

Walking around the convention floor here at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show, I’ve seen hundreds of products hoping not only to make their ways onto local shelves, but into your home as well. So what makes a product compelling enough to get you to buy it, or even recommend it to friends and family? As a Geek Squad Agent who helps clients set up their new technology in-home, I’m struck by two equally important factors that seem to create those successes: “engineering” and “emotional response.”

Engineering

While a product doesn’t have to be perfect to be a success, it does need to work well enough to accomplish the task it was purchased to perform. Of course, even tasks that may seem simple at first glance can require amazing amounts of engineering and design work before the product is considered for shipping.

Consider some of the new digital photo frames that can display photos sent to them via an email address unique to that individual frame. They have to be able to connect to a wide variety of home networks and internet broadband services. They have to be able to accept a number of image file formats, along with other unknown combinations, such as image quality and hidden file data. And the frame has to do this with a user interface simple enough to be operated by owners with wildly varying technical skill levels.

If a product isn’t produced with enough engineering care, it’s not going to function well enough for that customer checking it out in their local Best Buy to purchase it. Of course, that product is only “half-bought” at that point, because there’s the other factor to consider.

Emotional Response

Once someone has answer the question, “How would I use this product?” their next question is often, “Why would I use this product?” To use the example of that networked digital photo frame, one emotional response could come from the potential happiness they could create by giving the frame to their parents so they can remotely upload new photos of the grandchildren easily.

It’s that picture in that client’s head of how they will feel if they own a product, how it will impact their lives on an emotional level, that can quickly turn a potential purchase into an actual purchase. We are often, after all, creatures of emotion.

Engineering Emotions

Of course, the importance of both these factors is something that I’ve seen with my interactions with some of the more successful product developers here at CES. It’s clear that they looked at both the “how” and the “why” early on in the development cycle.

It’s also something that we understand at Best Buy as well, which is why we do our best to work with our customers by not just answering their tech product questions, but by finding ways of truly making their daily lives better with the products we sell.

It’s even part of our current motto: “Buyer, be happy."

What we saw at CES

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