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Behaviour-Targeting and Personalization

Webinar ImageI sat in on a webinar today with Sitebrand’s Director of Customer Experience, Carolyn Gardner and eCommerce Business Analyst, John Choo titled: Love, Faith & Hope: Conversion Meets Customer Behavior.

I recently blogged about geo-IP targeting and its potential for ecommerce marketing. The post includes examples of how you could serve up different home pages or offers on your site based on a customer’s location.

Today’s webinar introduced me to another way you can tailor content to the individual - keyword-targeted content.

For example, Danskin’s Title Tag reads like this: “Fitness, Dance and Yoga Apparel for Women and Girls.” This means its home page could appear in search engine results for relevant keyword searches like “yoga apparel” or “dance apparel for girls” in addition to category or product pages. The landing page for the keyword could be the home page.

Wouldn’t it be ideal to serve a home page design that’s targeted to the keyword that referred the visit?

Keyword: “dance apparel for girls”

Girls Dancewear

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Behaviour-Targeting and Personalization »

Continue Shopping Means What?

Continue ShoppingYou’ve added your item to your cart, but you’re not finished shopping. So, you look for the “Continue Shopping” link to thrust you back to…to what? The product page? The category page? The home page?

Most sites don’t give you a clue where you’ll end up. GrokDotCom mentioned this in Grok’s Biggest Gripes about the ecommerce experience, and an informal survey of the author’s contemporaries revealed 100% of them found this irritating.

I’ve observed a number of different ways to handle “Continue Shopping” navigation in my online shopping escapades. I decided to check out 100 of the top internet retailers and round up the methods used and the frequency of each. The following is a rundown on “Continue Shopping” options, frequency and examples for your inspiration, curiosity and comments.

AJAX Pop-Up - 19%

Love or hate Web 2.0, 17 out of 100 retailers use an AJAX popup to indicate an item has been added to the cart. Though this is nice and convenient to keep the shopper on the product page, it can be hard for inexperienced online shoppers to notice what’s happened. Some sites are more obvious than others.

Patagonia and Moosejaw Mountaineering use a roll-out notice in the top right of the product page. You must click to close this box, but both retailers place the close button in the same place, with the same icon. This is Moosejaw’s:

Moosejaw Mountaineering Example

Can you figure out how to close this window?

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Continue Shopping Means What? »

How To Attract Customer Reviews

Customer ReviewerI recently sat in on a Webinar with Lauren Freedman of The Etailing Group and Power Reviews. The Webinar covered a lot of ground, and a companion white paper is available for download if you’d like to drill down into the Webinar’s content.

The Webinar and white paper are based on a study conducted by the Etailing Group involving 1,200 consumers who shop online at least four times per year, and spend $500 or more annually.

We all know review content has many benefits – customer trust, long tail search engine benefits, reduced returns and so on. Customer reviews are a sensible entry into social shopping – the review thread is like an online forum. But populating your site with review content is a challenge for most if not all online retailers. Most customers are annoyed by entering credit card information. How can you motivate them to take time contribute product reviews?

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How To Attract Customer Reviews »

Call To Action Buttons - Does Size Matter?

I came across a website (that will remain nameless) while searching for a good tasting Swiss-water decaf coffee. (Does one exist? Please advise in the comments!) I noticed on the product page that it had perhaps the world’s tiniest Buy button.

Original Product Page

They Say Bigger Is Better

Many conversion optimization cheerleaders who suggest larger buttons convert better, and some tests show even different colors can perform better. Marketing Sherpa credits cart button design as one of 7 tweaks that helped Newegg.com boost online sales by 30%.

#7. Bigger, flashier cart button

“It used to be just a cart with a little arrow. It wasn’t big enough. People’s eyes weren’t going there, so we made it big, bold and very exciting to look at,” said Stuart (Wallock, Marketing Director of NewEgg.com). The team a/b tested several different cart icons before picking the winner, so go check it out.

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Call To Action Buttons - Does Size Matter? »

Amazons Novel Way To Build Customer Loyalty

Do you sell products that lend themselves to repeat purchases? This could be vitamins, pharmacy, contact lenses, hair product, office supplies, grocery or anything that you expect someone to “use up.”

Amazon sells, amongst other things, coffee beans. Check out the offer for free shipping and a 15% discount for customers who want to subscribe to the product:

amazon-product-page.jpg

ama-subscribe.jpg

amazon-offer.jpg

ama-subscribe-and-save.jpg

Here’s what Amazon’s doing right:

1. Offers of free shipping and discount are strong motivators for repeat purchases.
2. Allows you to select the subscription schedule for 1, 2, 3 or 6 months.
3. Provides a customer service, no need to return to the site again, place order and wait when quantities get low.
4. The offer is placed in the product description and right near the cart button. Impossible to miss if you want to buy this product.

I bet you’ll be hard pressed to find many other online retailers taking advantage of this technique.

Facebook Ads Deconstructed: 11 Tips for Marketers

Thinking about running a Facebook advertising campaign? It helps to pick apart what advertisers are already doing. Today we’ll examine several campaigns of online retailers from ad copy and design to landing page and boil them down to 11 tips for Facebook banners and graphic ads.

Apple

Ad

Iphone Ad

I’m not too crazy about the ad text - it seems a bit awkward. It could be shortened to “Hottest Phone, Lowest Price. $399 + Free Shipping from the Apple Store.” Easier to read, capitalized letters are proven to convert higher in PPC - why should this be any different? Oh, and ditch the Christmas messaging, it’s January 21st!

Landing Page

This is a great landing page choice - leading right to the conversion page for the product advertised. BUT this is the Apple.com store, and the ad was served to me as a Canadian. Geo-targeting is available, please use it. It’s not clear that this is the US store unless you check the address bar. Especially disappointing as the iPhone requires “hacking” to be used in Canada. Can the average Facebook user figure this all out?

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Facebook Ads Deconstructed: 11 Tips for Marketers »

Hack Week Part 2 - Using Google Trends for International Search Marketing

Swiss Army KnifeGoogle Trends is just one of the nifty tools the Big G hath bestowed upon the Internet marketing community. Basically to type in keywords to compare their search volumes against each other over time. There’s also a “what’s hot” element, each day there’s a list of “Today’s Hot Trends.” Some of them are really hard to believe that they are remotely search-worthy, but clicking on a keyword will show

But I digress…Back to the Hack!

If you run separate online stores for different countries, you need to understand that sometimes a couch is a chesterfield, sneakers are trainers, french fries are chips, and candy bars are chocolate bars. Google Trends lets you enter a number of variations of keywords that essentially describe the same product and figure out which countries use which term more often.

Example 1:

“flash drive” vs. “USB drive” vs. “memory stick”

USB Trends

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Hack Week Part 2 - Using Google Trends for International Search Marketing »

20 Valentines Day Marketing Ideas for Ecommerce

Valentine CountdownToday is January 14th, which means we’re only one month away from what some believe is the 2nd largest retailing event of the year. Last year, Valentine’s Day raked in $905 Million in online sales.

Though men are expected to spend the most on Valentine gifts and are stereotypically procrastinators, ecommerce marketers should not run a last-minute Valentine’s campaign. Today we’ll talk about ways you can sell lovin’ through email, social media and your website.

Interesting Statistics

Last year, Discovery Card conducted a Valentine’s Day Shopping Survey and found that:

  • Men expected to spend an average of $127 on their ladies, and the ladies $74. Of the women, 53% said they would purchase gadgets for their men.

  • 65% would make their purchase one week before February 14
  • 10% of men would wait until February 14
  • 39% of women planned on spending nothing
  • 22% of men and 15% of women planned to purchase a gift online

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20 Valentines Day Marketing Ideas for Ecommerce »

Sizes In Stock - Great Usability for Your Clearance Section

Post-Christmas clearance sales are still enticing shoppers, yet stock of this bargain basement booty is dwindling day-by-day. What a great customer service and usability idea to show available sizes from the clearance page so customers don’t get excited at a fabulous deal only to discover it’s only available in extra-extra-jumbo or super-teenie-weenie. Here’s an example from C28.com:

C28 Clearance Items Screenshot

C28 shows sizes in stock for all products, not just sale items, but it’s especially useful for the clearance section. It gives customers a better user experience, and customers can scan the entire page of bargains, honing in on the items that are available in their size. C28 also provides drop-down menus where customers can narrow clearance items to just their size.

Fabulous!

Cross-Selling Tips for Online Retailers

Cross-SellingCross-selling (offering items related to the product like accessories and warranties) and up-selling (suggesting more expensive alternatives) are effective merchandising tools both online and offline. You could think of cross-selling as an etailer’s answer to “would you like fries with that?”

Cross-Selling and up-selling have a number of benefits, and can increase:

  • average order value

  • conversion rates by guiding customers to appropriate alternatives if a product they’re viewing isn’t right
  • exposure for high margin items
  • customer satisfaction by suggesting related items to enhance or augment the product and user experience
  • awareness about the depth of your product offering

There are many places on your website where you can cross-sell, the most common being the product page and on the view cart page - right before checkout. You can also cross-sell on the home page (if you logged a user’s last visit or they sign in) or in a post-purchase email. Today we’ll just focus on the product pages and view cart.

Not all retailers use cross-selling in both areas, some only cross-sell on the product pages to avoid confusion, indecision and cart abandonment upon checkout. It’s important to cross-sell wisely on view cart pages as this is a valid concern - let’s look at some dos and don’ts for both product pages and view cart pages, and then dig into some real life examples from top retailers.

Cross-Selling Dos

  • Show relevant items whether they are accessories or alternatives to the same product

  • Show larger sizes or other same-product up-sells when possible (Example: Tiger Direct)
  • Use personal words like “you” rather than “we” - “You Might Also Like” vs. “We Suggest”
  • Use emotional words like “need” and “want” (Examples: Palm.com “Need accessories?” and McDonald’s “Do you want fries with that?”)
  • Use words like “Special Offers,” “Special Offers for You” or “Great Deals” to communicate savings and value
  • Create urgency with “Limited Time Offer” or “Limited Quantities” (Example: Tiger Direct)
  • Do save your sale / low margin items for the view cart page. Show regular priced / high margin alternatives from the product pages.
  • Make it easy to return to the product page after you add a suggested item - even better to keep shopper on the product page but clearly let the shopper know an item was added to the cart
  • Offer a mix of price points when suggesting items on the view cart page
  • Show “no brainers” like gift cards, warranties, batteries et cetera that are easily understood by the customer, don’t require a click away from the page and are easy sellers
  • Offer discounts on one item when you buy another item on the “view cart/bag/basket” page (Examples: Blue Nile and Macy’s)
  • Provide enough detail on add-ons (thumbnail, price and description) so customer is less likely to click away from cart page
  • Let the customer check off add-ons from the view cart page rather than buttons for each product. Customers may think adding a product to the cart will take them away from the cart page and they’ll get lost (Example: Palm.com)
  • It’s a good idea to show “top rated” suggestions along with review content to build trust and catch interest. I haven’t found an example of this, please comment if you’ve seen one

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Cross-Selling Tips for Online Retailers »

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