Category: Dev & Design


Why?

I recently visited a high street retailers ecommerce site, on the product page it had a banner “Use voucher code freegift with purchases over £50” Use it, use it where?  The promo was to receive a free gift worth £14.99 when I purchased the particular product I wanted to buy.

As a potential buyer my main interest at that point is in the product, the specification (it was a really technical piece of kit – an external hard drive!).  At the point of purchase my mind is almost racing with those last minute thoughts and doubts.  Where & what is their Returns policy?  What if it goes wrong? Do I trust this brand, is this the right decision? Am I really thinking about a code with an ambiguous instruction and if I should be using it? The answer is probably not and if I, as an experienced web user in the trade am not then quite possibly your average customer is unlikely to be either.

The Customer Delusion

How many of you have whilst running a promotion have suffered the consequence of the disillusioned or angry customer, sending in an email of complaint after receiving their order – ‘where’s my free gift? It didn’t arrive!  Why didn’t you send it to me?  If you don’t send it I want a refund!  I’ll never shop with you again and tell everyone I know! ‘ You can really empathise with their frustrations….they didn’t design the product page, nor the functionality. You have created the promotion and placed it on the page and being in the trade you should be working to make every step easy for the customer. If there is any confusion then it is time to get your customer hat on and make some changes.

The Promotion Code Conundrum

How many times have you run promotions using promo codes to get a free gift, and the customer hasn’t taken up the promotion?  If you regularly use promo codes in the form of onsite banners to encourage custom you’ll probably be aware of the apparent lack of uptake of such promotions – even sometimes when they are on a banner at basket level.

Why?  The customer is pre-occupied with their purchase decisions and doubt.  Also they may not understand how the promo works and sometimes only the experienced promo code hunter knows how to capture the deal in the true spirit it was intended.  Great for your margins, less so for the customer.

Possible Solution

Is there an answer?  Well yes, the obvious and ‘proper’ way would be to add the gift to the basket automatically for the customer – job done.  Many ecommerce sites operate this, but certainly not all, the ones that don’t are most likely down to the platform they are on and the underlying functionality – or lack of it.  Another possible solution is to have the promo code box at basket level – this goes half way to prompting the customer there might be a promo code about. This might trigger their memory that they saw a banner on the site either throughout or at product page level but then again it might not.

In my opinion, sites asking customers to add in codes to get ‘free gifts’ to which they are entitled are failing their customer. There is then the chance that the customer may not re-purchase, this will need addressing for the retailer to be in the best position to effectively re-market as well as capture new customers.

Promo codes in the traditional sense of a % off spend absolutely have their place, to draw in potential customers with the offer of a discount, a marketing tactic which works rather well across the web.  However using promo codes to give free gifts where the customer may miss out is poor practice.  E-Commerce sites in 2011 need to step up a gear, the competition is fierce & snapping at your heels.  Don’t forget – for your customer they are all but a few clicks away…

Kevin Galway

Commercial Development Manager

MAD Productions Ltd

A successful E-Commerce design is vital for your website to operate to its optimum potential. There are many pitfalls and easy mistakes to make, so here are a few to watch out for and how to avoid them.

1. Not Enough Product Information

In a high street shop, a customer can pick up and feel the product they’re planning on purchasing and ask a member of staff specific questions. Online, all the potential customer has to go on is your product page. Include as much detail as is possible – assume the reader knows nothing about the product. If something is left uncovered, they’re more likely to try shopping elsewhere.

2. Confusing Checkout Process & Shopping Basket

It should go without saying that the simpler you make it for your customer to purchase, the more likely they are to. The optimum checkout process involves a single, compact page for consumers to check that all billing and shipping information is correct and then a confirmation page before their order is submitted. Anything more than that obstructs a smooth transaction. In addition to this, a functional shopping basket that allows the user the freedom to add or remove products with ease is also highly influential on purchase.

3. Needing an Account to Purchase

Having a customer create an account on your website so that they can receive updates, take advantage of offers and subsequently become returning patrons is a healthy exercise in E-Commerce. The danger comes with making it necessary to create an account for purchase; whilst customer accounts are helpful, you have to compensate for customers that don’t want to sign up and that just want an easy purchase. The more pages the consumer encounters, the less likely they are to endure them.

4. Customer Service & Contact Limitations

If the customer service and contact information is absent or not easily accessible from your site, customers may find it hard to place confidence in your company. They need to know that you can answer their questions and feel safe and secure when they checkout. A Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) page can address the majority of queries, and clear contact information that isn’t hidden can cover everything else.

5. Minimal Product Images & Attention

Relating back to the aforementioned point on product information, shopping online doesn’t endow the customer the chance to hold and feel the product. It is therefore inherent that as much information is included on the product page as possible, and this means there needs to be a huge focus on the product. The images should be large and plentiful – customer confidence increases with the number of angles you show your product from.

6. Lack of Diverse Payment Options

Because Visa and MasterCard aren’t used by everybody, and because some people like to use PayPal and others don’t, your payment options should vary accordingly. If you want to convert as many customers as possible, make sure you have a wide range of ways they can choose to pay you!

7. No Related Products Section

To further optimise the design of your site to increase sales, a Related Products section on the product page can help customers consider additional purchases. It is also a vessel through which potential buyers can find similar products if they hadn’t already settled on the right one, preventing them from closing down your website to go and search elsewhere.

8. Poor Navigation

This is one of the most important aspects of the E-Commerce design of your site. If customers can’t find their way around your site, they aren’t going to stick around. Navigation architecture should be straightforward and easy to follow. Products should be categorised and subcategorised, and the shopping basket should be able to be accessed at all times. If you want your online shop to flourish, make sure your customers can easily find the product they want to buy.

It was announced today that Google are now using site speed in web search ranking.

Google we’re obsessed with speed, in our products  and on the web. As part of that effort, today we’re including a new signal in our search ranking algorithms: site speed. Site speed reflects how quickly a website responds to web requests.

Speeding up websites is important — not just to site owners, but to all Internet users. Faster sites create happy users and we’ve seen in their internal studies that when a site responds slowly, visitors spend less time there. But faster sites don’t just improve user experience; recent data shows that improving site speed also reduces operating costs. Users place a lot of value in speed — that’s why they decided to take site speed into account in our search rankings.

Mad Productions (Sales) Ltd is proud to unveil a completely new & re-vamped website for its valued client Global Foodservice Equipment – www.globalfse.co.uk.

Improved Navigation & Functionality

The site was completely redesigned to give a much cleaner, slick appearance that makes the site much easier to navigate.  Aesthetically the refresh has included bold, attractive new imagery that catches the eye, and the site provides an all-round better shopping experience for customers.

Enhanced Customer Service Section

Also included is an expanded and improved Customer Services section, with extended FAQs and a revised layout. A wealth of buying guides is also available offering even more insight into products and helping to enable a purchase decision.

Careful ongoing analysis will be employed to continually monitor traffic, prospect and conversion rates, to ensure the site is performing to the best of its ability.

The functionality is relatively straight forward, and it increases average order values by analysing the historical sales data over the previous 6 months and serves up to the end user on a product page, and basket, what other customers have actually purchased and what they recommend. As time moves on the system learns from the constantly updated data, and serves up even more relative & associated products.

Since the implementation of the Avail product, Splash have seen a sales increase which has out-performed on expectations, and this is expected to keep growing and improve.

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