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Ecommerce design tactic?
Hey All,
I'm just wondering if anyone knows or any articles or sites or any tips on designing the frontpage or homepage of an ecommerce site.
I am interested in reading on cases studies on what other stores have done to their home page to keep users on for longer?
I am using oscommerce and have a pretty stock standard home page, I would like to work on it more to gain more sales.
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Top Reasons for Shopping Cart Abandonment
This example is filled with some of the top reasons why visitors to your website may abandon their shopping carts. A recent study by Vividence Corporation, a Customer Experience Management company, reported the most significant reasons for Internet shopping cart abandonment are:
* High shipping prices or long delivery times
* Comparison shopping and browsing
* Changed Mind
* Total cost of items is too high
* Checkout process is too long
* Checkout requires too much personal information
* Site requires registration before purchase
* Site is unstable or unreliable
* Checkout process is confusing
Seven Shopping Cart Abandonment Solutions for Your Online Business
Although some of these reasons may be outside your control such as a visitor changing their minds, the majority is manageable and can be reduced by incorporating seven improvements into your current shopping cart process.
1. Remove Member Registration until after the sale is completed
Many checkout processes require a visitor to register as a new member before they begin the actual checkout process. A principle of selling is to never stall a visitor from buying once they make the decision to do so. Instead support their decision by clearly and conveniently leading them through your checkout process.
After the sale is complete then offer your customer the opportunity to register. Since you have their personal information from the purchase, you can pre-fill the information (or request less of it). This enhancement removes the visitor’s buying barriers and enables them to perceive the registration as a value-added customer benefit.
2. Show shipping costs and other costs (i.e. applicable taxes)
Show the visitor all costs associated with their product purchase either in the first step of the checkout process or even in the product description. If you offer multiple shipping methods then default the shipping cost to the most popular one. If you apply taxes for certain States then communicate this early in the checkout process. Sometimes for retailers, it is relevant for their market to ask a visitor for their zip code which can be used for calculating tax.
3. Build Confidence and Trust Throughout the Checkout Process
Place your guarantee, return, privacy, delivery, customer service and security policies in visible and relevant areas throughout the entire checkout process. Adding the policies at the very bottom of the web page is not effective since you are causing your visitor to search for it. Add the individual policies next to the information field or line item where it is most relevant to the visitor.
For example, add the privacy policy next to the email address field in the checkout process and add the delivery and return policy next to the shipping cost line item. In addition, add your security policy next to the “checkout” button.
Also, add your physical address and other contact information at the bottom of every web page. Usability studies suggest adding an “About Us” and “Contact Us” links to your navigational structure to build confidence and trust as well.
4. Add a progress indicator on each checkout page
Is it important to let visitors know how many steps are in your checkout process and to show progress as thy work through it. A progress indicator is commonly located at the top of the checkout pages and is clearly numbered with the current step highlighted.
Make sure that you provide visitors the opportunity to review what they did in previous steps without erasing the information they had already entered.
If a visitor enters information incorrectly or forgets a required field, have your checkout process remember their correct information and identify the missing information clearly. Do not make people repeat an entire step because of a missing field.
Surprisingly, the number of steps in your checkout process may not have a significant effect on your visitors’ commitment to purchase. Although for many businesses, a two to three step checkout process is ideal.
5. Provide purchase options
Offer your visitors the opportunity to call a 1-800 number for customer support or online chat like LivePerson during your checkout process.
Visitors may be uncomfortable with completing a purchase online or become confused during checkout so clearly present your 1-800 number and/or online chat support link on every page within your checkout process.
6. Clearly identify what your visitor should click next to complete the step
Clearly indicate the “continue checkout” button. Make it obvious where the visitor should click to move forward in the checkout process and keep it consistent for every step.
7. Use a readable and clear font size and color
The font size and color of your copy may influence your visitor’s desire to complete their purchase. If your font size is too small or the color is too difficult to read forcing a visitor to strain then the potential for abandonment will increase. This is especially serious for online businesses marketing to older populations.
Get to know your shopping cart abandonment rate and start implementing the above improvements. Most importantly, test different strategies and track which ones produce the greatest increases to your sales conversion rate.
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Check out the book "Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability" (2nd Edition) by Steve Krug.
It is a quick fun read (if you enjoy this kind of stuff), that will really help you to increase your Web site's usability.
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Re:Top Reasons For Shopping Cart Abandonment
"* Site requires registration before purchase "
How do you move the registration to the end of the checkout? I'm using VirtueMart and I'd like to make this optional. By the way, I'm a newbie! Can ya tell?
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Great post roban! The book "Don't Make Me Think" is really an excellent read.
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