January 24, 2014

  7 Questions and Answers to Online Merchandising


As technology progresses and retailers increasingly make use of the Internet, there has never been a stronger need for excellent online merchandising strategies. But what are the most effective and efficient strategies? 


 1. How can I use images effectively? 

Avoid stock images and make high-quality, high-res photos your priority because images are what an online customer sees first. By showcasing your product in the most vivid way possible, you’re giving visitors answers in a visual, immediate way. For example, if you’re selling a couch, set it against a plain backdrop and show how it’s used by photographing a person on it in an audience-appropriate way (for example, a family on a large couch or a hipster on an egg chair). This creates context for your customers and allows them to visualize themselves on it instead of looking at a plain photo of a nondescript item.
















2. Should I use mannequins or models? 


 The choice between mannequins and models is often a personal one, and each has its pros and cons. For example, Old Navy uses mannequins with goofy expressions, which are synonymous with the brand but largely ineffective because they distract from the clothing they’re wearing. Using a live model, on the other hand, helps visitors see exactly how a product looks on an actual person.


 3. What should my home page look like? 


Your home page should be as simple and streamlined as possible. When it comes to websites, the current trend is high minimalism (Google is an excellent example), so only the most basic, concise information is immediately visible. By not overwhelming visitors and giving them easy-to-see navigation options, you have an edge over your competitors in terms of stay rates and click analytics. One of the worst things you can do is present a home page that’s busy and difficult to navigate. With so many other options available, visitors won’t bother with your site anymore. 

 4. Once I’ve set up my home page, how should I arrange the merchandise? 


Categories are a highly efficient way of organizing merchandise and the next logical step in a minimalist home page design. A good way to categorize your merchandise is by use. For example, if you own a clothing store, create categories such as men’s and women’s, brand, upper or lower body garments and length of sleeve or leg. It also helps to cross-reference your products so that visitors won’t miss finding something, as your method of categorizing clothing may be different from theirs. 


 5. How can I sell more expensive items or items that need to be cleared to make way for others? 


Select the items you want to move and feature them alongside searches to cross-sell, upsell and downsell. Using the clothing store example, if a visitor searches for white T-shirts and you’d rather they spend twice as much on black T-shirts, upsell the latter as an alternative. However, if you have an excess of white T-shirts and visitors are searching for black T-shirts, simply reverse the process (downsell). As for cross-selling, feature a row at the bottom that lists the most commonly searched for and purchased items. 


 6. How can I urge visitors to buy “neutral” items?


Reviews are one of the most important, effective ways to help visitors make a purchase. And with today’s tech-savvy visitors being more discriminating than ever, you need to give them real-life proof of the quality of your product. In this way, reviews aren’t simply a nice-to-have option that will set you apart; they’re a necessity, especially since word-of-mouth marketing is the predominant way to spread buzz about your merchandise. 

7. Do I really need good copy if my site is well-designed and easy to navigate? 


Absolutely. While a well-designed site is essential for bringing in traffic, good-quality copy is vital for keeping it there. A clear, high-res image can only say so much about any given product; the copy has to fill in the rest. You should have a catchy headline, a brief yet informative short description, a fleshed-out long description that summarizes the main points and a bulleted features list that outlines all the specs. Each product’s copy should tell a story, but it shouldn’t be the main star. Rather, good-quality copy should seamlessly blend with the product image so that, together, the two create a fully realized guide, with everything the visitor needs to know.

October 16, 2013



Can Playing by SEO Rules help you Win the eCommerce Game? Yes!

Your  online retail store may have become successful by breaking all the rules, but when it comes to SEO, following the rules is the only way to go. Google, the 800-lb gorilla in the search engine marketplace, rewards websites that adhere to the search engine rules they’ve set, and quickly penalizes any rule breaking. That’s a gorilla you don’t want to mess with.
The funny thing is, sticking to SEO rules makes your ecommerce content much more successful with customers, the real success in the marketplace.



Customers Love Dynamic Content

Quality content based on thorough research attracts customers who crave information about subjects they’re searching. Whether it’s detailed product descriptions to aid a buying decision, how-to articles that explain product use, or buying guides that help customers narrow down choices, useful information lends authenticity and authority to your ecommerce site. What’s more, smart content that engages customers is more likely to result in repeated sales and happy consumers who contribute reviews and positive feedback, further enhancing your site.



Good Navigation Leads to Sales

 Smart site architecture with strong ease of use in navigation and the buying process ensures customers can not only find what they want but complete their purchase transactions with no delay. Headlines and subheads that include relevant keywords and metadata help customers hone in on their target products. Search engines can also easily crawl sites built with structured data that enhances listings. Quality links lead to trusted, well-respected web sites and point at pages that contain appropriate keywords. Site taxonomy also plays a part. Product categories and the organization of information helps customers find precisely what they are looking for.



Build Trust with Unique Content

Even if your site doesn’t have a long history on the web, you can build trust through transparency and unique content like high resolution images and product videos. Search engines down rank duplicate content, but more importantly, customers quickly recognize stale and common content that fails to inspire or answer their questions. The cost of generating unique content is small compared to the great gains that accrue to a website where custom content addresses customer needs in words that speak directly to them. Often, this means taking the thin product information supplied by manufacturers or vendors and beefing it up with additional research and some top quality copywriting. Syndicated copy that is duplicated on other vendor sites, or content that comes from a data warehouse is not only limited in how it presents your products but Google’s search engine algorithms penalize copy it finds elsewhere.
An investment in quality content pays off almost immediately in increased sales and returning customers. Customers come back because they know they can trust what they read on your site.



Create Lasting Customer Relationships

The social aspects of your site should not be overlooked, either. Once you’ve engaged customers, gained their trust, and established your site as their best source for products they want, further that relationship with sharing buttons, comment and review sections, and customer testimonials. Sometimes a customer who is not quite convinced your product is their best choice can be swayed by reading another customer’s positive experience with your company and your products. The more your site is shared, the stronger the SEO results, too. Link your site and sales campaigns through social media tools to be listed as favourites or cited in social networks. The greater your connections across the web, the more authority your site will hold, resulting in higher search engine rankings. It makes the gorilla happy, too.


For easy reference and a good reminder, this Periodic Table of SEO Success Factors will help you ensure you’re playing by all the SEO rules.

September 30, 2013

How will Google’s new Hummingbird Algorithm impact your eCommerce SEO efforts?



How will Google’s new Hummingbird Algorithm impact your eCommerce SEO efforts?


Date: September 30, 2013

Google recently announced that its new Hummingbird search algorithm has been up and in place for approximately a month. The release of this new algorithm, coinciding with the company’s 15 birthday, raises questions for eCommerce Directors about the potential impact it may have on search engine results page rankings and ultimately online conversion.
The dramatically revised algorithm, aptly named Humming bird, is purported to be “precise and fast” and designed to provide query results quickly. Yet it’s not its speed that has everyone talking, but the announcement that it’s based on semantic searches as opposed to individual search terms.
According to Search Engine Land’s Danny Sullivan, “Hummingbird is paying more attention to each word in a query, ensuring that the whole query – the whole sentence or conversation or meaning – is taken into account, rather than particular words. The goal is that pages matching the meaning do better, rather than pages matching just a few words.”

So how does this “conversational” search impact search engine optimization for retailers?



More, now than ever, content is king when it comes to improved search engine optimization. High-quality, original content that addresses the needs of both search engines and users is one of the most powerful tools eCommerce Directors can use in their quest for to drive traffic to their online shops. Feature-benefit driven product descriptions, informative buying guides and how-to guides with rich, customer-focused content offer opportunities for retailers to connect directly with target markets and convert browsers into buyers. 

The emphasis is less about keywords and more on customer engagement and intent ­– this means that online retailers need to focus on appealing, shareable content that can cross over to other platforms such as mobile and social media. The attention to longer and more complex search strings creates great opportunities for businesses that focus website and product content on solving customers’ problems and meeting customers’ needs.
One of the greatest changes that may come out of the new algorithm will be the elimination of irrelevant links and resources from search engine result pages, rewarding businesses that provide well-thought-out, intuitive content with higher page rankings over those that rely on simple keywords or repetitive content.
To some, the algorithm change is no surprise and even considered a long overdue response to meeting the changing ways users conduct searches and the changing expectations consumers’ have toward trusting businesses to provide the answers to the questions they want to know.

****************
geekspeak is an eCommerce services company that helps online retailers convert online browsers into loyal buyers through specialized eCommerce product content, product imaging, content SEO, catalogue management and more. www.thinkgeekspeak.com 

October 22, 2012


 Web-commerce: Industry Best Practices..task analysis, taxonomy, UX and much more..!

There is currently a great deal of competition among e-commerce retailers to capture and hold the attention of buyers. Further, the push for customer retention after acquiring that buying customer is even more critical. With the effortlessness of shopping on the  web, customers CAN go to any on-line store for any reason. However, they still will return and be loyal to a store that meets their needs and makes their buying experience smooth, easy and cost effective for the amount of time invested.

While value-conscious customers may search for the best price initially, the process and workflow of making a purchase on a site leaves a lasting impression. In the end, it all comes down to user experience: did the customer find what they were looking for and conclude their purchase satisfactorily? The experience must be not only useful but pleasant, even enjoyable.

The key to an outstanding user experience is meeting the user's needs at every step of the workflow.


Task Analysis

Knowing the Customer

Customers shop online for 4 basic reasons:
  • find a specific item they want to purchase
  • find the best or lowest price for an item they want to purchase
  • research an item they might want to purchase later that meets a need for them
  • browse areas of interest for inspiration ("window-shopping")

All of these can be described as tasks the user wants to complete on the site. Good task analysis ensures every type of customer is acknowledged and provided for.

Recommendation: Define users (who they are), goals (what they want to do), and tasks (how they want to do it).


Bill Payment

Show total costs on the bill, and make checking out easy with printable receipts, even duplicate of receipt sent by e-mail.

Finalize site registration AFTER bill payment since you already have most of the information.

Getting Support

Users should be able to quickly get support via multiple methods. If you have a "Live Chat" option, it should connect immediately to an operator.


Error Correction

Making changes to their purchases -- editing the shopping cart, changing quantities, customizing their order, changing their minds in any respect should be easy and informative. Fixing errors on input forms should be very easy as well.

Taxonomy

The categories, labels, and associations users apply to the items they are looking for need to be correctly identified. Just imposing the manufacturers' categories and labels is not sufficient. Card sorting and tree testing methods of developing taxonomy provide greater levels of confidence that the naming convention works for any visitor to the site.

For example, "fans and heatsinks" may be the industry term, but if users are looking for "cooling" or "overheating", the user will be disappointed unless those terms are linked to the right products. A "not found" error is unacceptable.


Usability

Navigation

Customers approach a site with a task. They want to acquire something, answer a question or solve a problem. Navigation that supports task completion while minimizing user errors or frustration is necessary for any successful site. For ecommerce sites it is even more critical as users will quickly jump to a competitor (and a bad experience will linger in their memory) when thwarted in accomplishing their task.

Searching

Most users do not have sophisticated search skills. Many do not even know that enclosing a search string in quotation marks will provide an exact match to their query. If they cannot find what they want, it might as well not even be there. Users will go to another site rather than take the time to reformulate their search. Therefore, any site search capability must deliver successful searches in spite of users' inability to use search tools.


Menus

The "horizontal super menu" or top navigation that is in vogue is largely a result of eye-tracking studies that indicate users view web pages in an "F" pattern, and usability studies that show users love the top navigation. Keep it free from advertising and promotions to allow the user to get closer to why they came to the site in the first place.

The left side navigation menu (left rail) is still useful for filtering of results. Filters should update automatically.

Flyout menus give users greater menu options without taking up screen real estate.
  

 

Breadcrumbs

Users need to be able to adjust their search quickly and easily without having to back out step by step using the browser's Back function.


Sorting

Users like to sort by various criteria to help them compare products and make decisions.

Filtering

When a site has multiple products in the same category, filtering is absolutely necessary to help the user narrow down their search.

Interface


Look and Feel

Appears correct visually, no matter what browser or system specs. Clean, easy to read layout. Good type size.

                                                                                            Fewer clicks to get where they want to go.

Remember preferences, such as number of items on screen I want to view.
Remember form input. If an error comes up, keep all correct fields filled and highlight the error.

Show input formats for dates, postal codes, etc. Very frustrating for users to enter a credit card number with spaces or dashes only to be given an error message that requires the number to be one long string.

Good Content

Since buying online is an information experience where the user is attracted and convinced purely by the information available about the product, the information provided must be compelling and thorough. Bad content -- thin, uninformative, repetitive, boring -- can quickly convince a customer to shop elsewhere.

Duplicate content not only turns off the customer, it diminishes the SEO value of the site as search engines treat duplicate content as stale and without value.

Product information must include availability, product options, images, and total cost.


Visuals

Customers shopping online cannot see, feel or otherwise experience the product; the tactile experience of shopping is missing. Therefore, good quality, scalable photos are necessary. The customer should be able to make the photo(s) of the product dramatically bigger so they can see all the details of the item.

Customer Loyalty

Customers will often go to a site they already know rather than search for a product using a search engine. If they know they have successfully found and acquired a product that pleases them, they will first go to that same site to have their need met again.

More importantly, they will return to a site where their preferences have been captured and their contact/payment information is already on file. However, users don't like up front registration; capture their details when they make a purchase (or save a wish list) and complete the registration process at the time they exit the site.

Registration further allows you to market to that customer later, in other ways, as well as enhance the customer experience via mobile, e-mail newsletters, and customer support.

SEO


Back-links

Back-links represent connections to other websites. Make sure the back-links are relevant and valid, not internet marketing spam. Similarly, customer reviews should be valid. Review these from time to time to ensure they are contributing to the site, not interfering with SEO.


Original Content

Original, compelling and informative content is crucial for improving the online buying experience for users. Customers want MORE information about the product they cannot see or touch prior to ordering.


Plain Language URLS

As recommended in the article http://www.poweredbysearch.com/the-great-canadian-pc-e-commerce-showdown/  URLs should contain plain language keywords rather than Item IDs.