Respect for your customers


Lifted this from e.consultancy.com — useful tips for improving product pages for Xmas — see below. Of course what I’d say is simpler and shorter that the ‘trick’ is establishing not just trust, that narrower legalistic term (you trust your energy supplier but you don’t respect them) with your customers but RESPECT. Respect is key. Especially in the ‘long-tail’ niche markets with knowledgable customers who may know way more about the products than you do. So how do you establish ‘respect’?

Well one thing is to show that you know the details matter. For example you may sell software. But does it work on all workstations? Conversely in your user manuals do they really explain each and every step or are there the usual jumped steps where the author has assumed things about the customer, just because ‘they should know’. Respect is a complex thing. I could go on about it but I respect the fact that if you are reading this and wanted to know more you’d make a comment, like the Dell support guy who commented on my posts about problems with my DELL machine. He got my respect, and I’ve never met the guy!



Product page design is vitally important to the success of an e-commerce operation, and with the Christmas season imminent we thought we’d take a deeper look at how retailers can improve their performance by finessing their product pages (thanks to e-consultancy.com).

It doesn’t really matter how consumers find your website – if your product pages suck then they’ll be unlikely to buy from you. These pages play a huge role in determining whether visitors convert into customers.

Yet a surprising number of product pages lack relevant information and do a poor job of selling the product in question.

So we’ll list ten tips for product pages after the jump, to help you convert more people more of the time….

  • TIP #1: Provide clear details of price / delivery times / charges
    These are among the most important factors in a consumer’s purchase decision, so don’t make customers have to search around for this information.

    Consider what happens when you fail to display shipping costs. The customer will enter the checkout to find out how much they need to pay. If it is an unacceptable amount then they’ll drop out, leaving you to wonder what’s wrong with your checkout process. Well, it might be working perfectly. It’s not the forms but the shipping costs they don’t like, only you won’t be aware of this.

    Ideally, this kind of information should be clearly visible and positioned above the fold on the product page. John Lewis provides a good example of this, with price and delivery options clearly visible, as well as providing a product page free of unnecessary distractions.

  • TIP #2: Display quality product photos
    Ok, so this might not be so important for items such as DVDs and books, but with other products good photography is essential.

    This is especially important for clothes and shoes as people cannot try items on as they would in a store. To get around this, quality product photos are a must.

    Consumers should be able to see these kinds of products from every angle, so tools that allow users to zoom in and out, and to spin the product around, are a good idea.

    Shoe retailer Office demonstrates a clear knowledge of best practice, using Flash to let customers see shoes from every angle and zoom in and out. It isn’t necessary to use Flash though - a range of quality photos from different angles would do the job just as well.

  • TIP #3: Use video, dammit!
    With some products, video is much more useful than photography as it displays a product in motion, from a variety of angles, with sound and – if user-generated – user comments / background noise: “Woooo, I love it!” 

    Online gadget retailer Firebox uses videos for many of its products, especially those that move, such as remote controlled helicopters. It must work since we’ve just bought one… 

    Firebox MD Christian Robinson says: “Video has been an incredibly effective tool in helping customers see a product in action, giving a perspective of size and usability – this helps the customer to get closer to the product putting us on a par with high street stores where you can touch and feel’ products, an area that traditional retailers have always scored highest.”

  • TIP #4: Display customer product reviews
    User reviews are increasingly popular among consumers, providing valuable, and hopefully independent, information on which to base their purchase decisions. They are a big win, especially for retailers and travel companies.

    Online retailers are increasingly making use of user reviews - in our recent Social Commerce Report, more than half of all online sellers (51%) said they considered UGC as important to their online strategy, so we should see more of this in the coming years.

    Product reviews can increase consumer trust in a website, as well as providing useful content for search engines. A no brainer.

  • TIP #5: Add links for further information
    As well as displaying technical specifications you need to show customers the benefits / features of the products, and the reasons why they should choose your service over the competition.

    Whatever you do, make sure customers have all the information they need to decide on a product, with links to other relevant parts of your website. These links should include pointers to customer service / contact details, though a good FAQ page will help keep enquiries to a minimum.

  • TIP #6: Show ‘related items’ and ideally, channel-specific navigation
    Showing products that complement the item they are thinking of buying - or accessories worth throwing in the basket - is an excellent way of  increasing average order values.

    The other big win is a ‘customers who bought this item also bought…’ feature, as provided by Amazon. It is an excellent way of cross-selling, and encourages customers to continue searching through your site for more things to buy. 

     

    We also believe that if you are shopping for golf clubs, then it makes sense to make the navigation and promotional content units golf-related.

  • TIP #7: Reinforce customer trust
    Kitemarks, third part verification logos, and visible customer support options all convey trust and respectability. They ease the mind of the prospective buyer, who might not know your brand.

    And as we have already mentioned, user reviews are great at engendering trust.

  • TIP #8: Provide breadcrumb trails
    This allows customers to see the steps they have taken so far to reach the product page, and provides them with a shortcut back to a previous point in their search.

    Comet provides an example of this:


    Breadcrumb trails also deliver the added benefit of allowing customers to refine their product searches by removing or revising certain product features, and saves them the hassle of beginning the search all over again.

    It is of course completely acceptable to remove breadcrumb trails from the checkout process…

  • TIP #9: Don’t let customers begin to purchase out of stock items
    If a product is out of stock, don’t allow customers to add the item to their basket, as this will only annoy and frustrate them once they reach the checkout. You will have wasted their time. Some people won’t forgive you for such a crime…

    Laura Ashley has made this mistake in the past – I know this from personal experience:

     

  • TIP #10: Have a CLEAR CALL TO ACTION
    Display the buy it now / add to basket button prominently above the fold -don’t make your customers search for it.

    All buttons which lead the customer further along the purchase process should be the most prominent on view.

    Also, make the meaning clear – avoid vague phrases such as ‘submit’ or ‘next step’, and give instructions like ‘buy it now’ or ‘place your order’.

Agree? Disagree? Any findings to share? Do let us know…

Ancestry website offers DNA tests



DNA molecule (BBC)
DNA testing will be used to identify family connections

A family history website has launched a new service to help track down people’s unknown relatives using DNA tests.

Ancestry.co.uk says it can help people identify living genetic cousins and learn about the ethnic roots of their distant ancestors.

PS: So when my cousin asked my Shirley (in that so sweet way) if she
“had any black blood in her” we can now scientifically evidence her reply.

Seven years online


Today marks seven year’s with my own website, starting with m-power. Just renewed the domain today in fact, after a reminder from Charles Parsons of Wham-e Ltd, based in Street.

Barack gets bitchy?


Stuart,

I’m leaving the Tonight Show studio and I wanted to share something.

Jay Leno just asked if it bothers me that some of the Washington pundits are declaring Hillary Clinton the winner of this election before a single vote has been cast.

I’ll tell you what I told him: Hillary is not the first politician in Washington to declare “Mission Accomplished” a little too soon.

We started this week $2.1 million behind the Clinton campaign — a lead they built in large part with contributions from Washington lobbyists and special interest PACs.

We don’t accept money from federal lobbyists or PACs. But we’ve already cut that advantage in half with small donations from people like you.

Let’s close the rest of that gap now. Please make a donation of $25:

https://donate.barackobama.com/closethegap

Thank you,

Barack

Jackass of all trades


Stefan is a dork. Give him anything to do and he’ll screw it up. Jackass of all trades.

If Kaka ain’t going to Real, he certainly ain’t going to Chelsea!


July 21 Update

Well blow me, there’s a silly report that the Russian billionaire wants to offer silly money to get Kaka to Chelsea. Surely not!

…………………………………………………………………………………

Look sorry, but back in May I reported rumours (which turned out to be true — see below — in the sense Real made an approach) that Kaka was going to leave for Real Madrid, and they never turned into reality. So dream on, it’s just not going to happen that he & Caroline going to leave the best league in the world to come to Chelsea, and the wonders of the Premiership.

Report from the Press Association

AC Milan vice-president Adriano Galliani has strongly denied that his club has received an offer from Chelsea for Brazilian midfielder Kaka.

Reports in England claimed FIFA’s World Player of the Year nominee could be on the move to the Premier League outfit in a

Chimps kissing ladies


OK, that’s enough of the run of serious posts, it’s time to get silly, very silly. Cue ladies kissing chimps (by accident).

PS: but if you prefer here’s the link to Howard Rheingold’s DIY Media site.

Does Gore deserve the Nobel Prize?


Enjoyed the Channel 4 News debate last night between Professor Hume, Jon Snow and Tony Juniper. I could see what Professor Hulme was saying, that the issue was more complex than Gore had portrayed it. Couldn’t help but feel that everyone seemed to have a portion of the truth, but no one had the monopoly on it. Also can’t help but feeling we’re looking at it like a technical problem, with technical solutions, which bearing in mind that’s the mindset is probably as good as it gets. But I guess there’s always the unexpectedly creative solution, but that’s got to be hard to come by. Be interesting to see how the great and the good respond over time to climate change, bearing in mind the complexity and what’s at stake.