Archive for the ‘Ecommerce’ Category

Establishing Trust With Your Website Visitors

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Getting visitors to your website is one thing, getting them to purchase something is altogether different.

The most important thing you can do to is to develop a trust relationship with your visitors.

Before I, as a prospective customer, will fork over my credit card number to you, I need to have a reasonable belief that you are a legitimate and trustworthy business.

Let me ask you a trick question:

What is the best way to get people to trust you?

The answer, of course, is to be trustworthy.

This actually eludes many people, but it’s really a no brainer. If I want people to believe that I’m an honest and ethical businessman…it would be a great start to actually be the honest and ethical person which I’m trying to portray.

Most people are really pretty bright, and won’t be fooled for long about who and what they are really dealing with. You might make a few big scores through dishonesty, but it’s not the way to build a lasting business.

Now, of course, if you are a legitimate and trustworthy business, you need to show it. There are a few ways to do this online.

A really simple way to do this is to put your street address and telephone number on the site. Crooks very seldom give you their address or phone number, but legitimate business people do, and folks know this.

Another thing you can do is to let the visitor get to know you. It’s not all about the product. Unless you are amazon.com or walmart.com, you’re visitor won’t have a clue who you are. Tell them. Use your About Us page, or your home page to let them get to know you a bit.

Another way to inspire trust is to write some articles about your area of expertise. This let’s you establish yourself as an expert in your field. People trust experts.

Yet another way to inspire confidence is through testimonials or product reviews.

123 eCart has both an article manager module and a product reviews module to help you implement these methods and gain the trust of your visitors. Trust means sales, and sales means money.

How To SEO Your Shopping Cart

Monday, February 4th, 2008

So you’ve visited the 123 eCart site, signed up for an online store, built your catalog and now have 1 cool store ready to launch on an unsuspecting world.

Now what?

Well…you’ll need to get shoppers into your store. For that to happen, they’ll need to find you.

“Easy enough” you say. ” I’ll submit the site to the search engines”.

You submit, and you wait. You check your logs every day (sometimes every hour) to see if anyone has visited, but very few people have set foot on the premises.

The problem, most likely, is that your site is listed in the search engines, but is not showing up very high in the results returned.

To remedy this, an entire industry - the search engine optimization industry - has come into existence. The professionals in this industry are called SEO Consultants. They can charge a great deal of money, or be extremely reasonable. If you have the money, finding an SEO can be a great investment.

What if you don’t have the money? Well - there’s a wealth of information out there regarding how to optimize your own website. A little time on Google can get you up to speed rather quickly.

One issue that ecommerce store owners often encounter is that their shopping cart software  isn’t flexible enought to allow them to optimize their site correctly.

If you are a 123 eCart store owner, you’ll find the opposite to be true.

123 eCart allows you to insert your own meta tags on every category and product page, and builds the name of the product or category right into the page URL so as to make it easier for search engines to find specific products on your site.

With a little work and the proper tools - like those included in your 123 eCart Storefront - You should be quite successful.

Increaing The Odds Of Making An Online Sale

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

The issue of whether online marketing is an art or science has been hotly debated by proponents of either view.

My own belief is that there are elements of both science, and art, in the marketing of goods and services online.

The true e-commerce guru has a natural and instinctual grasp of the principles which decide success or failure, and executes those principles in a truly exquisite form -almost in an artistic fashion.

The rest of us - those not born with an instinct for marketing - are reduced to laboriously studying and implementing those same principles - often through trial and error.

Being in the latter group, I have attempted to discover which factors come into play when determining the likelihood of making a sale online. Based on the factors which I have observed, I’ve devised a formula which I believe can be used to accurately predict the probability of making an online sale.

For sheer vanity sake, I have named my formula “Dozier’s Law of Ecommerce Probability”.

The formula is written like so:

P = ( D + U + DV + CF ) / 100

In plain English the law can be verbalized as so:

There are four factors which determine the likelihood of a purchase being made online. These factors are the buyers desire [D] for the product, the buyers urgency [U] in procuring the product, The Perceived Value of the deal [DV] as presented, and the amount of confidence [CF] the buyer has in the ability of the seller to satisfy his desire. If one assigns a value from 0 to 25 to each of these factors, adds the values of all four factors and divides the sum by 100 - one may accurately predict the probability of a purchase occurring.

Let’s look at an example:

Joe Blow is in need of a widget. He absolutely needs the widget for a school project which is due in six weeks. Joe goes to a website which sells widgets, and finds a widget for $39.95. Joe seems to recall seeing a similar widget for sale somewhere else for $29.95 - but isn’t sure where. The website seems fairly well designed, but he’s not familiar with the company.

Let’s add up the numbers.

Because Joe absolutely must buy a widget, we’ll assign a score of 25 to value D.

However - although he must buy a widget, Joe has a little time available to shop around, so we’ll assign a value of 5 to value U.

The price seems a little high to Joe. Not out of line, but he thinks he might do better, so we’ll assign a value of 10 to value DV.

The website looks like it was professionally designed, but Joe isn’t familiar with this particular widget vendor, so we’ll assign a value of 8 to value CF.

Our formula now looks like so:

P = ( 25 + 5 + 10 + 8) / 100

This calculates to 0.48 - or a 48% probability that Joe will purchase the widget.

By raising any of the factor values, we would raise the likelihood of a purchase.

If Joe only had two weeks to purchase, the website inspired a little more confidence, and the deal was just slightly better, the probability of a purchase would be substantially increased.

The trick for the e-commerce merchant is to raise the value of each of these factors to a level where Joe reaches the tipping point and pulls out his credit card.

You might be tempted to believe that only two of these factors - deal value and confidence - may be influenced by the merchant. This is not correct. All four factors may be influenced, to some degree, by successful marketing.

Desire may be enhanced by skillfully displaying and describing the product and the benefits which the purchaser will derive from this particular widget. This particular widget might improve Joe’s life in ways which he never dreamed possible. As an ecommerce merchant, it’s my responsibility to point this out to Joe.

Urgency may be introduced by making a limited time offer.

Perceived Deal Value may be increased by pricing, special offers, better selling, etc.

This brings us to the Confidence Factor.

Internet buyers are a skittish lot, and must be constantly reassured. This may be accomplished through several different techniques.

Most importantly - you must have a professionally designed website. Your buyer has very little to judge you by, and how professional your site looks tells a visitor oodles about the company behind the site. Unless you are a well known company, a prospective buyer doesn’t know if you are a legitimate business, a 14 year old doing business after school and before bedtime, or an identity thief out to steal their credit card. A well designed website goes a long ways toward alleviating fears.

Along the same lines - please don’t think that good graphics, alone, will do the trick. How’s your spelling? It’s impossible to tell how many sales have been lost because a misspelled word spooked the buyer. Use a spell checker and get someone to proofread your site.

Testimonials can inspire confidence, as can product reviews.

Another interesting area is the color scheme of your site. An entire field of psychology is devoted to studying the effect of various colors on the human psyche. Some colors tend to make people anxious, and some colors inspire trust.

Finally, let people know that there is a real person or a real company behind the website. If you are a one man (or woman) show, you can use frequent articles or a blog to assure the prospect that not only are the lights on - but somebody is actually home.

Every factor in the probability formula may be- and should be - influenced by you to some degree.