29
Nov
2007
Showing holiday shipping cutoff dates on your web site makes sense for many reasons. First, it sets the customer’s delivery expectation. Second of all, it will reduce the number of calls you’ll get asking if an order will be delivered by the holidays.
You should show this information in 2 places — the homepage and in checkout. I typically favor a rather prominent link on the homepage to a dedicated page that discusses holiday shipping. In checkout, you’ll want some messaging saying something like “Order by December xx to ensure holiday delivery.”
One thing we do effectively on the Virginia Favorites site is to list the estimated shipping date on every product page. This, combined with the holiday shipping information that lists cutoff dates, helps the customer determine if their order will arrive in time.
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Posted in Ecommerce issues, Holiday Ecommerce Optimization, Uncategorized
16
Nov
2007
Before traffic starts to spike for the holidays, audit your paid search program (Google Adwords, etc.) for bids, new keyword combinations, and ad copy. You may want to create multiple ads for each ad group so you can quickly see which ad performs better. Also, make sure each of your ads click to a relevant page on your site.
For example, if you are bidding on “buy widgets,” make sure your ad headline has “buy widgets” in it and the ad, when clicked, goes directly to a page on your site that sells widgets. The homepage of your site is often not the best destination for a paid search engine ad.
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Posted in Holiday Ecommerce Optimization, Uncategorized
15
Nov
2007
It’s common convention for customers to register in order to check out, but many customers want to skip that step. While this may involve some IT involvement to make it happen, you can always ask the customer to save their information in an account after the purchase has been made.
If you must require customers to register, make sure they know the benefits of doing so, such as the ability to see order history, track orders as they ship, save shipping addresses, etc. When putting messaging on the screen to this effect, be succinct but descriptive.
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Posted in Holiday Ecommerce Optimization, Uncategorized
14
Nov
2007
Shipping costs are a barrier to online shopping, so offering free shipping can be a great way to increase sales if it doesn’t significantly erode your profits. Sometimes, sites offer “free shipping on orders over $x” to prevent significant profit erosion. You may also choose to offer this only to e-mail subscribers, best customers or promote this for a short period of time (one day, for example).
My clients have had good success with exclusive free shipping offers as well as “free shipping on orders over $x.” If you opt for “free shipping on orders over $x,” find an appropriate dollar cutoff by finding out what your site’s average order size is, then increase it by a small amount.
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Posted in Holiday Ecommerce Optimization, Uncategorized
13
Nov
2007
Customers get confused when sites don’t make it obvious that they’ve added something to their shopping cart. These days, it’s common for sites to have a “persistent shopping cart” — or a running tally of the number of items and total price of items in their cart — on every page. If your site has a persistent cart, make sure your site alerts the customer that they have added something to their shopping cart.
Many sites simply add the product with no alert, while others alert customers with messages that go unnoticed. This results in the customer asking “Did this product get added to my cart or not?” I recommend sending the customer to a shopping cart page when they click add to cart. If you choose not to do this, consider putting a bold, shaded message at the top center of the page just below your site’s main category links. Then add a link to the shopping cart just after the message.
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Posted in Holiday Ecommerce Optimization, Uncategorized
12
Nov
2007
Putting links to “similar items,” “related items,” “best sellers” or accessories on individual product pages helps provide a logical next step when a customer realizes that a product might not fit their needs.
Be careful though — this can be detrimental if these cross-sells take up more real estate and draw more attention than the actual product you’re trying to sell. Remember that product images draw the eye’s attention, so use them sparingly or use small thumbnails when advertising cross-sells.
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Posted in Holiday Ecommerce Optimization, Uncategorized