Ecommerce Blog

Amazon Testing New Inline “View Cart” Page

Published on August 8th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

As I was buying a book on Amazon.com as a present for one of our support ninjas, I noticed that when I clicked the “Add to Cart” button I was presented with an inline confirmation page instead of being taken to Amazon’s usual cart page. You can see the inline page in the screenshot I took above (click on it for a larger version).

In my opinion they may see a short term decline in sales because it breaks the typical buying process, but then again Amazon is Amazon – they run everything by the numbers so obviously they think this will increase their conversion rate.

Also, my guess is that 90%+ of people on Amazon buy just one item per order, so this is their attempt to get you through their virtual checkout as quickly as they can.

What are your thoughts? Have you seen this before? Like it? Hate it? Want it added to your store?

Let me know in the comments below.

[Video] How to Create Your Own Groupon With Facebook

Published on August 5th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Groupon is all the rage with retailers at the moment, but what about e-commerce vendors who want to get their own piece of the groupon pie?

In this video I share a strategy you can use to create and distribute your own group-activated coupon. You’ll attract more customers (as well as their friends) and your cost per acquisition (CPA) will effectively be zero because you’re relying on potential buyers pulling in their friends from Facebook and Twitter.

[Video] 6 Ideas to WOW Customers After Buying

Published on August 3rd, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

In this video I share six ideas to wow customers after buying. As a business on a budget, you really need to do whatever you can to turn one-time customers into lifetime customers who will tell everyone they know about you, and these six tactics will help you do exactly that.

Even if you only implement one of them, your repeat customer count will grow significantly. The six ideas are:

  1. Call them on the phone and thank them
  2. Upgrade their shipping to express/overnight for free
  3. Include something free (such as a product sample) with their order
  4. Include a hand-written thank you note with their order
  5. Include a 5-20% coupon code on their printed invoice to use for their next order
  6. Refund their shipping cost as store credit to encourage a second order

Head to Head: Product Page Design From Top Online Retailers

Published on July 25th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Arguably the most important pages in your e-commerce store are the product detail pages. You know, the ones with your fancy photos, nice big “Add to Cart” button, description and price? When we created our shopping cart software BigCommerce, we spent a huge amount of time making sure the product pages were perfect.

But what makes a good (high converting) product page? There are certain elements that have been proven to increase conversion rates, such as having a bright, bold “Add to Cart” button shown above the fold (in the first 600 vertical pixels of the page), crisp and detailed product photos and of course good prices.

In this post I want to share product pages from sixteen of the top retailers in America and Australia. You will of course notice a lot of similarities on their product pages, but I’m sure you’ll also notice a lot of small differences. For example, the position and size of the “Add to Cart” button varies quite a lot between retailers.

Numerous studies have been done that show the “Add to Cart” button produces the best conversion rate when it’s shown above the fold in a bright color and toward the right side of the page, so why do some of the biggest retailers in the world show it in other places, potentially costing them millions of dollars in sales every week? Who knows.

Take a look at each of the sixteen product pages below and then leave me a comment to let me know which you prefer in terms of layout and why.

Amazon.com

Zappos.com

Sears.com

BestBuy.com

Dell.com

Audible.com

DealsDirect.com.au

EziBuy.com.au

Shoes.com

Apple.com

DStore.com.au

Sony.com

Walmart.com

Myer.com.au

Macys.com

NeimanMarcus.com

[Video] The Buying Cycle Explained

Published on July 16th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Whether they realize it or not, your customers go through four distinct steps before they buy anything online or off. This process is known as the buying cycle and the four steps are:

  • Realizing you have a need or problem
  • Researching solutions or information
  • Comparing options, price and value
  • Buying the solution to your problem
  • Repeating this process (optional)

In this video I explain the buying cycle and shares strategies you can use to assist your customers regardless of which stage of the buying cycle they’re in. The trick is to make your e-commerce store appropriate no matter which stage your customers are in, so they start with you and end the buying cycle with you, ideally coming back for more the next time they have a need or problem they need to address.

Podcast #7: Your Marketing Questions Answered

Published on July 13th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Length: 17:10

Overview: Today I answer five of the marketing questions that were submitted via fans earlier today on our Facebook page.

Description: In this, episode 7 of my podcast, I answer marketing questions from fans on our Facebook page. Topics include how to get sales when no one knows who you are, why the first impression of your website can make or break you, how to design high-converting landing pages and how I think e-commerce will change over the next five years. I also debunk a popular myth about Google AdWords and search rankings.

(Apologies for the hissing sounds throughout the podcast. It was recorded using the voice memos app on my iPhone as a test)

Like this podcast? Why not subscribe on iTunes?

[Video] Positioning Around Your Ideal Customer Profile

Published on July 8th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

It doesn’t matter what you sell – if you don’t know exactly who you’re selling to then you’re leaving money on the table. In this video I discuss how you can create an ideal customer profile and use that to position the products you sell in your e-commerce store to significantly increase your conversion rate.

Interview at IRCE 2010: Mitch Talks About Online Marketing With Shawna Fennell

Published on July 2nd, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

When IRCE 2010 was held last month in Chicago, I sat down with ecommerce guru Shawna Fennell (of WebmasterRadio.fm) to discuss different online marketing strategies and to discuss why BigCommerce is different to every other ecommerce platform on the market, as well as how it can help merchants make more money, quicker.

A big thanks to Shawna for organizing the interview. I also met Shawna’s mom, Rene, who is her business partner. They’re an unstoppable duo!

Here’s the recording of the interview if you’d like to listen:

 


11 Years On, Are Businesses Really More Social?

Published on June 29th, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

Back in 1999 a few smart guys from IBM, Sun, the Linux Journal and the NPR got together and created a website called “The Cluetrain Manifesto”. The website went on to become a best-selling book which included ideas around how self-forming markets will change the ways companies do business and communicate with their customers.

Here’s part of a review for the book from Amazon:

“I don’t much care for business books. But this one blows away the category. Business is, after all, not about dollars. It is about people. Dollars are simply a way to keep score. And what could be more human than conversations? The notion that markets are really conversations is so old it’s new. The Cluetrain Manifesto shows how we humans lost our way accepting the command and control structure and format of modern business. We have been engaged in a one-way conversation, with companies doing all the talking, while most folks tuned out the message.”

So, 11 years after the book was first published, have we indeed moved to a more market-driven approach to running and growing businesses? Have social tools enabled previously “trapped” employees to share their voices?

Below I’ve published the 95 theses from the website. The wording is “so 1999″ but the ideas are what count. How many of these theses wouldn’t have come true if Facebook or Twitter didn’t exist?

  1. Markets are conversations.
  2. Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors.
  3. Conversations among human beings sound human. They are conducted in a human voice.
  4. Whether delivering information, opinions, perspectives, dissenting arguments or humorous asides, the human voice is typically open, natural, uncontrived.
  5. People recognize each other as such from the sound of this voice.
  6. The Internet is enabling conversations among human beings that were simply not possible in the era of mass media.
  7. Hyperlinks subvert hierarchy.
  8. In both internetworked markets and among intranetworked employees, people are speaking to each other in a powerful new way.
  9. These networked conversations are enabling powerful new forms of social organization and knowledge exchange to emerge.
  10. As a result, markets are getting smarter, more informed, more organized. Participation in a networked market changes people fundamentally.
  11. People in networked markets have figured out that they get far better information and support from one another than from vendors. So much for corporate rhetoric about adding value to commoditized products.
  12. There are no secrets. The networked market knows more than companies do about their own products. And whether the news is good or bad, they tell everyone.
  13. What’s happening to markets is also happening among employees. A metaphysical construct called “The Company” is the only thing standing between the two.
  14. Corporations do not speak in the same voice as these new networked conversations. To their intended online audiences, companies sound hollow, flat, literally inhuman.
  15. In just a few more years, the current homogenized “voice” of business—the sound of mission statements and brochures—will seem as contrived and artificial as the language of the 18th century French court.
  16. Already, companies that speak in the language of the pitch, the dog-and-pony show, are no longer speaking to anyone.
  17. Companies that assume online markets are the same markets that used to watch their ads on television are kidding themselves.
  18. Companies that don’t realize their markets are now networked person-to-person, getting smarter as a result and deeply joined in conversation are missing their best opportunity.
  19. Companies can now communicate with their markets directly. If they blow it, it could be their last chance.
  20. Companies need to realize their markets are often laughing. At them.
  21. Companies need to lighten up and take themselves less seriously. They need to get a sense of humor.
  22. Getting a sense of humor does not mean putting some jokes on the corporate web site. Rather, it requires big values, a little humility, straight talk, and a genuine point of view.
  23. Companies attempting to “position” themselves need to take a position. Optimally, it should relate to something their market actually cares about.
  24. Bombastic boasts—”We are positioned to become the preeminent provider of XYZ”—do not constitute a position.
  25. Companies need to come down from their Ivory Towers and talk to the people with whom they hope to create relationships.
  26. Public Relations does not relate to the public. Companies are deeply afraid of their markets.
  27. By speaking in language that is distant, uninviting, arrogant, they build walls to keep markets at bay.
  28. Most marketing programs are based on the fear that the market might see what’s really going on inside the company.
  29. Elvis said it best: “We can’t go on together with suspicious minds.”
  30. Brand loyalty is the corporate version of going steady, but the breakup is inevitable—and coming fast. Because they are networked, smart markets are able to renegotiate relationships with blinding speed.
  31. Networked markets can change suppliers overnight. Networked knowledge workers can change employers over lunch. Your own “downsizing initiatives” taught us to ask the question: “Loyalty? What’s that?”
  32. Smart markets will find suppliers who speak their own language.
  33. Learning to speak with a human voice is not a parlor trick. It can’t be “picked up” at some tony conference.
  34. To speak with a human voice, companies must share the concerns of their communities.
  35. But first, they must belong to a community.
  36. Companies must ask themselves where their corporate cultures end.
  37. If their cultures end before the community begins, they will have no market.
  38. Human communities are based on discourse—on human speech about human concerns.
  39. The community of discourse is the market.
  40. Companies that do not belong to a community of discourse will die.
  41. Companies make a religion of security, but this is largely a red herring. Most are protecting less against competitors than against their own market and workforce.
  42. As with networked markets, people are also talking to each other directly inside the company—and not just about rules and regulations, boardroom directives, bottom lines.
  43. Such conversations are taking place today on corporate intranets. But only when the conditions are right.
  44. Companies typically install intranets top-down to distribute HR policies and other corporate information that workers are doing their best to ignore.
  45. Intranets naturally tend to route around boredom. The best are built bottom-up by engaged individuals cooperating to construct something far more valuable: an intranetworked corporate conversation.
  46. A healthy intranet organizes workers in many meanings of the word. Its effect is more radical than the agenda of any union.
  47. While this scares companies witless, they also depend heavily on open intranets to generate and share critical knowledge. They need to resist the urge to “improve” or control these networked conversations.
  48. When corporate intranets are not constrained by fear and legalistic rules, the type of conversation they encourage sounds remarkably like the conversation of the networked marketplace.
  49. Org charts worked in an older economy where plans could be fully understood from atop steep management pyramids and detailed work orders could be handed down from on high.
  50. Today, the org chart is hyperlinked, not hierarchical. Respect for hands-on knowledge wins over respect for abstract authority.
  51. Command-and-control management styles both derive from and reinforce bureaucracy, power tripping and an overall culture of paranoia.
  52. Paranoia kills conversation. That’s its point. But lack of open conversation kills companies.
  53. There are two conversations going on. One inside the company. One with the market.
  54. In most cases, neither conversation is going very well. Almost invariably, the cause of failure can be traced to obsolete notions of command and control.
  55. As policy, these notions are poisonous. As tools, they are broken. Command and control are met with hostility by intranetworked knowledge workers and generate distrust in internetworked markets.
  56. These two conversations want to talk to each other. They are speaking the same language. They recognize each other’s voices.
  57. Smart companies will get out of the way and help the inevitable to happen sooner.
  58. If willingness to get out of the way is taken as a measure of IQ, then very few companies have yet wised up.
  59. However subliminally at the moment, millions of people now online perceive companies as little more than quaint legal fictions that are actively preventing these conversations from intersecting.
  60. This is suicidal. Markets want to talk to companies.
  61. Sadly, the part of the company a networked market wants to talk to is usually hidden behind a smokescreen of hucksterism, of language that rings false—and often is.
  62. Markets do not want to talk to flacks and hucksters. They want to participate in the conversations going on behind the corporate firewall.
  63. De-cloaking, getting personal: We are those markets. We want to talk to you.
  64. We want access to your corporate information, to your plans and strategies, your best thinking, your genuine knowledge. We will not settle for the 4-color brochure, for web sites chock-a-block with eye candy but lacking any substance.
  65. We’re also the workers who make your companies go. We want to talk to customers directly in our own voices, not in platitudes written into a script.
  66. As markets, as workers, both of us are sick to death of getting our information by remote control. Why do we need faceless annual reports and third-hand market research studies to introduce us to each other?
  67. As markets, as workers, we wonder why you’re not listening. You seem to be speaking a different language.
  68. The inflated self-important jargon you sling around—in the press, at your conferences—what’s that got to do with us?
  69. Maybe you’re impressing your investors. Maybe you’re impressing Wall Street. You’re not impressing us.
  70. If you don’t impress us, your investors are going to take a bath. Don’t they understand this? If they did, they wouldn’t let you talk that way.
  71. Your tired notions of “the market” make our eyes glaze over. We don’t recognize ourselves in your projections—perhaps because we know we’re already elsewhere.
  72. We like this new marketplace much better. In fact, we are creating it.
  73. You’re invited, but it’s our world. Take your shoes off at the door. If you want to barter with us, get down off that camel!

  74. If you want us to talk to you, tell us something. Make it something interesting for a change.
  75. We’ve got some ideas for you too: some new tools we need, some better service. Stuff we’d be willing to pay for. Got a minute?
  76. You’re too busy “doing business” to answer our email? Oh gosh, sorry, gee, we’ll come back later. Maybe.
  77. You want us to pay? We want you to pay attention.
  78. We want you to drop your trip, come out of your neurotic self-involvement, join the party.
  79. Don’t worry, you can still make money. That is, as long as it’s not the only thing on your mind.
  80. Have you noticed that, in itself, money is kind of one-dimensional and boring? What else can we talk about?
  81. Your product broke. Why? We’d like to ask the guy who made it. Your corporate strategy makes no sense. We’d like to have a chat with your CEO. What do you mean she’s not in?
  82. We want you to take 50 million of us as seriously as you take one reporter from The Wall Street Journal.
  83. We know some people from your company. They’re pretty cool online. Do you have any more like that you’re hiding? Can they come out and play?
  84. When we have questions we turn to each other for answers. If you didn’t have such a tight rein on “your people” maybe they’d be among the people we’d turn to.
  85. When we’re not busy being your “target market,” many of us are your people. We’d rather be talking to friends online than watching the clock. That would get your name around better than your entire million dollar web site. But you tell us speaking to the market is Marketing’s job.
  86. We’d like it if you got what’s going on here. That’d be real nice. But it would be a big mistake to think we’re holding our breath.
  87. We have better things to do than worry about whether you’ll change in time to get our business. Business is only a part of our lives. It seems to be all of yours. Think about it: who needs whom?
  88. We have real power and we know it. If you don’t quite see the light, some other outfit will come along that’s more attentive, more interesting, more fun to play with.
  89. Even at its worst, our newfound conversation is more interesting than most trade shows, more entertaining than any TV sitcom, and certainly more true-to-life than the corporate web sites we’ve been seeing.
  90. Our allegiance is to ourselves—our friends, our new allies and acquaintances, even our sparring partners. Companies that have no part in this world, also have no future.
  91. Companies are spending billions of dollars on Y2K. Why can’t they hear this market timebomb ticking? The stakes are even higher.
  92. We’re both inside companies and outside them. The boundaries that separate our conversations look like the Berlin Wall today, but they’re really just an annoyance. We know they’re coming down. We’re going to work from both sides to take them down.
  93. To traditional corporations, networked conversations may appear confused, may sound confusing. But we are organizing faster than they are. We have better tools, more new ideas, no rules to slow us down.
  94. We are waking up and linking to each other. We are watching. But we are not waiting.

[Video] 6 Tips for Running a Successful Contest

Published on June 3rd, 2010 by Mitchell Harper

If you’ve been on our website lately then you’ll know that we’re currently running our $35,000 ecommerce makeover contest which will give one lucky store owner the chance to completely revamp their existing online store and move over to BigCommerce. I’ve already shown you my thought process behind the marketing campaign we’re running for the contest, and now I want to teach you how to run your own contest.

In this video I share 6 tips that will teach you how to run a successful contest. Contests are a great way to drive traffic to your website, increase your brand visibility and most important increase your sales and word-of-mouth marketing using tools like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

After watching the video above, do you think you’ll launch a contest?