Posts Tagged ‘backcountry.com’

a little homepage fun from HEMA …

this was passed on by a friend, it’s an interesting way to either get your homepage viral, entertain new viewers or annoy a customer on a mission. Checkout HEMA’s page …  you’ll need to let it load. i don’t think backcountry.com will be ascribing to this anytime soon ;)

04

02 2010

e-commerce old hat?

two weeks into the new gig @backccountry.com and like any new opportunity i’m getting to know new faces, a new culture and some new technology. maybe i should use the word “different” instead of “new”. is ecommerce new technology?

back a few months ago when i was first interviewing w/ backcountry and thinking seriously about a jump from mozy a friend of mine asked why i would even think about ecommerce “it’s not very bleeding edge”. at least compared to the mozy distributed file system (20+ petabytes, processing power, redundancy & protocols) or other cloud computing services an ecommerce platform lacks the blood.

but maybe my friend is wrong … first of all i’m sorry for using “cloud computing” it’s a buzz word like web 2.0 that won’t go away because no other pithy definition exists for distributed web application and storage environments exist. however, over the past few years ecommerce has been influenced by social applications like facebook, twitter & the variety of blogs out there. of course the subject of “community” and “conversation” , which are enabled by the above mentioned applications, but now the bleeding edge for ecommerce companies and the googles of the world is to create context through implicit/explicit actions and crunch models to provide rich experiences online.

a negative example: i buy a lot of things from amazon, but why do they keep recommending Nintendo Wii games to me. i’ve not bought a Wii game from them in over a year? at some point that should decay from their recommendation algorithm and move on.

backcountry.com is a great catalogue, but it’s not a great user experience. i’m excited to tackle this challenge. as of today i’ll be working product management for community projects, content surfacing and all things bike (realcyclist.com & hucknroll.com).  ecommerce, not so old hat in my opinion.

29

01 2010

Sundance for the freshies

so saturday i did the irresponsible thing and didn’t go to class; it’s snowed for 3 days straight here in Utah.  so you could say the responsible thing was to make use of God’s given blessings. that i did and headed up to Sundance w/ my brother and a friend to catch some freshies and hopefully make an “epic” day out of it.

we were a little late (around (9:30 am) to cut first trails in some of the areas, but w/ a little bit of resourcefulness we found a few untouched lines and had an absolute blast. barrett and i had not been on the mountain since i was in high school and he was a ski bum in Park City, so it was great to ride w/ him. it’s amazing how good he is despite the hiatus and the fact he’s gotten fat and old. don’t worry i suffer from the fat and old part too (i felt all 30 years and 200 lbs on the mountain).

one thing is for sure i look forward to some more days on the mountain w/ barrett this season and getting some new gear from backcountry.com to ensure a little more productive outings:

that and a little of the class playing between the ears and i think it would be pretty sweet. next ski day is Feb 01 @ the Canyons. after that i’m looking for the next snow fall to head up to Powder Mountain for some cat skiing.

i’ll throw up some pics later …

25

01 2010

gearhead for a week

it’s official, i’m now spending my days as a billy w/ the rest of goats at backcountry.com. like every new kid i spent my first week in gearhead training; a five day crash course in customer service and the labyrinth that is inventory mgmt. by the end of the week my trainers (shawn & angela) had me completing customer tickets, tracking order, handling miss-ships, refunds, exchanges and even chatting w/ customers about gear. pretty sweet! i have a profound appreciation w/ the frontline troops and the warehouse dudes.

next week i start product mgmt in lovely park city, ut. hopefully it’s less product mgmt and more customer innovation. backcountry has done some great things and i think their site is a great catalogue for gear, but buying experience has opportunity to be wicked awesome. anyone who’s experienced buying their first set of skis or road bike can relate to the challenges of dropping $1000 bucks on gear.

the haul from provo to park city is going to be long, but beautiful. i’m going to keep an open mind for now.

backcountry has way more than just that one site; it will blow your mind:

yeah i had the same reaction. i’m keeping an open mind on this one too. odat stands for “one deal at a time” which means you get wicked prices on closeout gear. the sites are pretty innovative in fact, in that they motivate impulse buying, which is pretty hard online. they do this w/ limited quantities, time limits, showing you how many people are on the site and swapping new deals all day long. great concept.

one thing i realized during my week as a gearhead … snowboarders are retarded. they care way to much about matching boots, pants and board :p

i hate to admit this but the most exciting part about this job in my head at this point is the gear and wicked discounts (sorry discounts are only for me and dependents). need to start planning some adventures for this year.

16

01 2010