gctest50 wrote: » .
ukoda wrote: » Ah yes, now I definitely know which one you are
xband wrote: » I work with plenty of small businesses and if you think an advert asking people to come visit your website and enter your eircode to see if we can serve you would work you're absolutely kidding yourself. About 2% of people would do that. It might make sense for a cable company or some utility where you're already engaged with a sign up process and need to verify a specific address but, for a small business, you're just going to mention a list of areas and keep things simple. Getting the general public to engage with you at all is difficult. Getting them to key codes into a website us even more difficult. You guys are being extremely arrogantly, patronisingly dismissive of anyone who disagrees with you and it's making posting on this forum unpleasant. I came on here to make a few points about eircode from my own perspective and I was accused of beings "one of those" or something by the poster below and generally given a really nasty reception. I honestly couldn't give a **** about eircode. It seems like a stupid system to me but I'm not allowed to express an opinion on here.
marmurr1916 wrote: » Small businesses have been doing this for decades. Have you never seen ads in your local paper, heard them on your local radio station, seen them in your local Golden Pages etc? "Murphy Painters & Decorators. Covering Tipperary Town, Cahir, Cashel, Bansha, Dundrum and all of south-west Co. Tipp. Free estimates, quality work guaranteed by time-served painters & decorators. Call now on 1800 555 555." Sometimes I wonder if some of the posters here live in the real world.
plodder wrote: » Cheap shot. What I was asking was if any businesses are putting a box on their website to tell you what areas they cover, based on you entering your Eircode, since that's what we are discussing here, is it not? Why would any small business that doesn't already license Eircode do that considering it costs money and it's cheaper to list the codes they cover for free?
ukoda wrote: » Because of the reasons listed above I would have thought, it's easy for a customer, it could increase revenue, they could get market insight, it would be cheap if bought from a VAR, any reason they shouldn't or wouldn't do it? Besides it costs money? Because everything they do to increase business costs money.
But as said, it's not for every website, each would have to decide themselves if it's worth it. In some scenarios it would be far more effective to just list the areas they cover
plodder wrote: » Listing the postcode areas you cover doesn't cost money, which is presumably why that locksmith business did it. Let's come back to this in a month or two and see how many small businesses that aren't using Eircode for some other purpose, have a query on their website that allows you to enter your eircode and the website tells you information about whether they provide service in that area or something similar.
So much opportunity for those who are willing to see it!
plodder wrote: » You're a man with vision and can spot an opportunity. Why don't you give it a go?
marmurr1916 wrote: » "Because of the reasons listed above I would have thought, it's easy for a customer, it could increase revenue, they could get market insight, it would be cheap if bought from a VAR, any reason they shouldn't or wouldn't do it? Besides it costs money? Because everything they do to increase business costs money. But as said, it's not for every website, each would have to decide themselves if it's worth it. In some scenarios it would be far more effective to just list the areas they cover."
hans aus dtschl wrote: » IMO this comes back to the same thing about the Eircode website requiring data entry from end-users and how that's a turn-off. Why should every interaction with Eircode have to be reciprocal? It's a service, not a product.
hans aus dtschl wrote: » I don't think that you can get potential customers to key in that sort of information, when you're at first-contact (trying to win the potential customers). IMO this comes back to the same thing about the Eircode website requiring data entry from end-users and how that's a turn-off. Why should every interaction with Eircode have to be reciprocal? It's a service, not a product. What they currently have implemented is good for some users, who do want to enter information. It's not as good for passive users who want the information "at-a-glance". Or who don't want to or cannot interact with an online database. Like plenty of posters before me, I don't understand why this is such a red-line issue. We're not all "wrong" or "haters". It's a pretty simple observation IMO.
GJG wrote: » The first three chainstore websites that I took of the top of my head in neighbouring countries Carrefour in France, Lidl in Germany and Argos in the UK, had a feature to enter your postcode and find your closest branch. They were either directly linked from their front page, or in most cases actually on their front page. I don't think that Ireland is such a special snowflake or that conditions are so different; you can assume the same will be installed on Irish websites over time.
Carawaystick wrote: » Why would acompany add an eircode lookup when google location services or ip lookup do almost the same job now?
marmurr1916 wrote: » I do it quite often in the UK - loads of websites ask for your postcode so they can provide details of your nearest branch for example. It takes a couple of seconds to type the postcode into a little box. Perhaps people in Ireland aren't as familiar with such simple website interactions yet but I don't see why there should be any strong resistance to a website that asks potential customers to enter their Eircode so they can either find out if the company serves their area at all or get information about their nearest branch or whatever. It seems to me that a lot of posters on this thread don't have experience of living in countries where requests for postcodes are routine and unproblematic.
my3cents wrote: » The UK had its postcode roll out in 1971 and it was very different from the Irish mess. Basically there was loads of advertising and because the Royal Mail were using the postcode for sorting, it was made quite clear that any mail from then on without a postcode could take longer to deliver because it would need to be hand sorted. What happened here? Here's your postcode but don't worry no one needs to use it. As a result I think it will take much longer than necessary for the Irish to accept and start using Eircode.
oscarBravo wrote: » I just did an IP lookup, and the location it came up with is about 30km from me.
marmurr1916 wrote: » Once it's on Google Maps its adoption will be much more rapid. People will get used to asking other people for their Eircode instead of asking for detailed directions and that'll spur its adoption for other purposes. We've already seen that it's going to be used by Electric Ireland. Nearly everybody gets an electricity bill regularly so most people are going to be receiving post with their Eircode on it regularly, making it more likely that people will remember it and use it.
my3cents wrote: » I support Eircode and think its a good idea but I also think that a big opportunity to promote it when the codes went out was missed.
marmurr1916 wrote: » I do it quite often in the UK - loads of websites ask for your postcode so they can provide details of your nearest branch for example.
hans aus dtschl wrote: » I don't think that you can get potential customers to key in that sort of information, when you're at first-contact (trying to win the potential customers). IMO this comes back to the same thing about the Eircode website requiring data entry from end-users and how that's a turn-off. Why should every interaction with Eircode have to be reciprocal? It's a service, not a product. What they currently have implemented is good for some users, who do want to enter information. It's not as good for passive users who want the information "at-a-glance". Or who don't want to or cannot interact with an online database.
Like plenty of posters before me, I don't understand why this is such a red-line issue. We're not all "wrong" or "haters". It's a pretty simple observation IMO.
hans aus dtschl wrote: » Yes this is not about people knocking the design, it's about some of us saying "you know what would be an easy thing to improve now?"And we get replies like "[you're] not such a special snowflake that..." It's really strange head-in-the-sand stuff.
GJG wrote: » I don't think that Ireland is such a special snowflake or that conditions are so different; you can assume the same will be installed on Irish websites over time.