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ecommerce 101


In this series I want to give the benefit of my experiences as both a traditional and online retailer and laterally an ICT Specialist, who has worked with numerous ecommerce businesses of all shapes and sizes.

Getting started

So what is ecommerce?

A stupid place to start you may ask, however the definition of this term is wide and varied and whilst it has become to mean selling “things” (mainly products) electronically, in actuality it covers the whole gamut of online trading – from marketing, selling, delivering, managing and everything else besides (see Wikipedia who say it much better than I could). This is relevant because in my experience many potential businesses see the “selling” part as the be all and end all of ecommerce without due consideration for all that that entails (just think of any traditional “bricks & mortar” business – it’s so much more than just “selling stuff”).

Why go online?

The web opens up the opportunity for businesses to specialise in niche areas and find potential purchasers of that product from all over the world. It also provides the opportunity for more main stream businesses to gain customers from a wider catchment than just their traditional “bricks & mortar” outlets. They see the web as a relatively low cost way of doing this.

Is there a market?

Great ideas are subjective. As such making the decision to develop or source a product to sell online needs to be based on more than gut feel. The beauty of the web is that you can gather so much data to aid your decision making process. This market research is absolutely essential in order to validate your ‘gut feeling or convince you the idea is a no go.

So what sort of market research are we talking about – Proper digital market research

  •  Find out if there are  existing competitors selling related products- (this is actually a good sign – where there are competitors there are customers therefore there is money to be made). Specific tools will give you some real tangible data on how much certain companies are investing in Google Advertising spend.
  •  Find out how people are searching for these types of product or service and in what volume. Analysis of Google Data can reveal numbers of monthly searches on related topics, products, services etc – this tool can give you an indication – https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal
  • Analyse competitors to see how well they rank for related keywords and phrases in this space. Specialist tools can analyse competitor sites to identify how much traffic your competitors are receiving. Further analysis can reveal the commercial value of that traffic by overlaying Google Pay Per Click commercial values etc.

Based on all of this tangible data you should be in a far better position to answer the key question – is there a market?

If it’s a completely new ideas, product, service and there is no competition online then it woudl be advisable to consider market testing before investing large amounts of money in a web build.

Think, Plan, Do, Review

Planning is key. This may be an extension of an existing business or it may be an entirely fresh venture – either way, having a plan with Goals, Targets and costs is key to success – as the old adage goes – “failing to plan is planning to fail”.

Have realistic expectations

“I expect to sell £1M of goods off of my new website but only want to spend £500 on a site and have no money for marketing”. A true story. Whilst there may be examples across the web where a business has managed to achieve this, it’s pretty rare. Whilst the cost of entry is considerably lower than more traditional retailing routes, there’s still a cost of acquisition.

Choose your route to market

Many business I meet who want to start trading online go straight for the bespoke ecommerce build or shopping cart plug-in, as it’s what their developer told them to do. Maybe as a way of testing the water you should look at selling your products through someone else’s site? Through Amazon? Through ebay? Or through one of the many Pay as You Go Cloud based ecommerce solutions. You don’t have to go down the full blown ecommerce platform from Day 1, particularly if cash is tight.

What products?

I come across businesses all the time that see great potential for their product, but haven’t properly researched the market eg selling fresh food products; selling alcohol outside of the UK, high value products sent through normal post, selling concrete ornaments over the web, where the carriage was twice the price of the product! You get the idea!

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

How do I set my price?

One of the areas I’ve seen considerable growth in since the recession is manufacturing businesses wanting to develop their own route to the customer as well as their traditional route of selling to the wholesaler/ retailer. This can be fraught with danger – you don’t want to upset your traditional market by under cutting them, in some instances you don’t want to sell the same products at the same price. Obviously not an issue for a retail only concern, however you still have to get your pricing right. Typical retail pricing in the UK market is cost (e.g. £10) x 2.4 to give you retail including VAT (£24) – i.e. 100% (from £10-£20) markup or a 50% margin. This is all well and good, but there’s a whole bunch of considerations:

  1. What price are other people selling at online?
  2. Does that include P&P or not?
  3. Is it a sensible retail price point?
  4. Can I offer discounts for multiple purchases or offer free delivery for a certain order value? 

Obviously different business areas work to different margins, typically online businesses work to lower margins – it just depends on the market you’re in, so lots of research is required!

How will I fulfil the orders?

Back to the £1M of turnover off of a £500 website example above. Even if you could manage to achieve this, do you have the infrastructure and personnel in place to fulfil? After all that’s a lot of infrastructure. It’s also an awful lot of traffic to the site which means serious investment in SEO and Social Media. In the example, it was a £20 product with an average anticipated spend of £50 – so that’s 20,000 orders – or 385 a week and with the seasonality of the product it could well have been that 10,000 of those orders came in the golden 8 weeks up to Christmas! That’s a lot of picking, packing, invoicing etc. And if you haven’t got the systems to handle this, it’s an impossible task! You could consider a fulfilment house, of which there are many, including Amazon fulfilment, who, for a fee, will handle it all for you. 

How will I generate the traffic?

Also, the traffic required to generate 20,000 orders, even at a very generous 5% conversion to sale (the average is 2% or less and for most ecommerce plays it’s under 1%), you’ll need to drive 400,000 visitors to the site per year (8000 a week) and that’s a lot of time and effort!

Next time, we’ll look at considerations when building and optimising your online presence.

Are these your top 10 biggest website mistakes?

Following on from my last post about building websites to take account of Social Media, I thought, seeing as I spend most of my life reviewing sites that I’d share some of the most common errors I see – these are not in any order and the list is not definitive, but hopefully they may strike a chord!

1) What’s it all about then?

If I see another website where I struggle to understand why on earth it was built in the first place, who it’s for, what it’s supposed to do or what I’m supposed to do on it, then, I will …… have seen an awful lot that fall in to this category. Websites need a purpose!

2) Build it and they will come?!

The key to a successful website is understanding your audience and building a site that offers value to them. Without knowing that, you’re on a hiding to nothing!

3) Accessibility isn’t for me Logo for Positive about Disabled People

There are laws and there are standards – make sure you follow them. Visually impaired and people with other disabilities use the web too you know!

4) Well I know where everything is!

Any usability study will tell you that when people are lost, they leave. Clear, logical navigation and tools to improve (such as breadcrumbs) are key.

5) Looks good in my designer’s office!

It looked great when you saw it on a 25″ widescreen monitor, on a safari browser. Now that you’re looking at it on a 17″ monitor using Internet Explorer 6 – it’s not so great! Ensure that you build for the widest possible audience.

6) They’ll get in touch if they really want to

Image of button saying Talk to UsYou build a site, you attract traffic through Search Engines and other mechanisms and then you leave site visitors to their own devices when it comes to what you want them to do – be clear, be bold. Make specific to the page the visitor is on.

7) Website – done. Now back to the day job.

You have a site which is invisible to the outside world – don’t get me wrong, there are occasions when you don’t want any profile, but most clients build a site to attract business, yet the site has either been built so the Search Engines avoid it like the plague, or there are no links in to it……

8) Build for now, we’ll think about tomorrow, tomorrow!

Think of your site as an apartment block. If you can consider what you’d like the block to look like over a 3-5 year period and then build the site – even if it’s the first storey, then at least you’ve got the architecture to allow you to continue to built. The amount of multi-storey bungalows I see!


9) My developer knows what I want

“I thought the guy knew what he was doing and gave him £1500 and my logo and he built me a site – now I find it has no search engine profile and I can’t update it myself”. True story and oh, so common. Always specify your requirements before starting.

10) We’ll get an enquiry one of these days……Image of magnifying glass over graph

Everyone says that Google Analytics is wonderful – question whether they use it and that’s a different matter. It’s as if by the very fact that Analytics is plugged in that the site will heal itself! Analytics are great, learn how to read them (Google’s Conversion University is great) and make decisions based on the information . Two words of warning – make sure that you filter yourself/ your developer out from the data and make sure that you treat the data with a certain amount of common sense – after all they only tell you what people did – not what they wanted to do!

10 considerations when building a website in this brave new Social World

I’ve been helping businesses to specify their requirements in relation to web sites as effective sales and marketing tools for over 10 years and in that time – apart from the tech, little has changed – until now (well, when I say now, I mean over the last couple of years). If you’re currently looking at improving your website or are in the process of building a new site, then take note, the world has changed and due to the rise (and rise) of Social Media your website today performs a very different role to what it did a few years ago.

1) How well are you currently performing online?
And I don’t just mean traffic to the website, but looking at individual channels into the site – What are the bounce and exit rates? Where is most of your traffic coming from?

How many people are converting to one action against one of your defined key performance indicators? Without this information there’s really no point at even looking to change your web site.

2) What is the extent of your Digital estate?
Is it just a website? Have you engaged in other digitial channels? How active are you in these? What’s working well and not so well? Are they the right channels for your business?

3) How does your website fit into this picture?
Your website is no longer an island in a digital ocean with passing traffic from the odd reference on a 3rd party website or search engines delivering traffic based on key terms – your website should be bang in the middle of the shipping lane, with traffic directed towards it from multiple sources. Your website increasingly is not the place where decisions are made, but more often than not will be made outwith your site, with the site itself just nailing the “sale”.

Having said that we’re not there quite yet, so you still have to consider how your website stacks up, how it interacts, but you also have to be aware that individual pages of your site will be referenced across the web and so each key entry page has to work as hard as the Home page, with consistently placed calls to action (although these may vary based on what you’re trying to achieve on any given page). You need to think of your site as a series of landing pages. 

4) What are your competitors up to?
This is very often missed and shouldn’t be, as it gives great insight in to how your competitors interact with their customers. You can use some of the free tools out there such as Yahoo site explorer (http://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com/uk/) to see what 3rd party links they have pointing into them, a keyword density analyser (I use http://www.ranks.nl/tools/spider.html) to see what they’ve optimised individual pages for, and one of the Social Media monitoring tools (there are loads – Addictomatic/ Twazzup etc) to get a feel for what their customers are saying about them and where they are saying it. 

5) What’s the purpose of your site?
Strange question? But I see so many sites that have absolutely no purpose whatsoever other than to look good in the developer’s portfolio. You need to really think what you want to get out of your site, set KPIs so you know when it’s been successful. You also need to understand how the website fits in to your other online activity.

6) Who are your customers? What do they want? Where do they hang out online?Image of 3d stickmen and speech bubbles
Persona development is key to delivering to your customers the information they want (and the information you want them to know) in the environment that they frequent. There are lots of great articles on persona development and that may be worth exploring in a future blog post, but in essence – consider your top 3 types of customer (there’ll be more, but lets focus on the key ones) – who are they? How tech savvy are they? How do they want information delivered? What are the triggers that will make them engage?

You’ll end up with a profile of your key customers and that’s as good a place as any to start building content which addresses their issues.

7) Content, Content, Content
You may think that you have the greatest website on earth, but is this where your primary engagement with your customers will take place?

I’ve recently undertaken an excercise with a couple of clients whereby we got a large sheet of paper (very high tech I know!) and written down the left column all the information (based on the personans) that we believe customers want to know as well as information that we need to tell them. Across the top we then put up their entire digital estate – blog/ Facebook, youtube, flickR etc. We didn’t take this for granted, we saw based on previous interactions which were working best, others which weren’t working as well and others we hadn’t considered up until the persona exercise. We then decided for each piece of information where it sat and what purpose it performed.

Let’s take an example – “recipes” – the call to action takes place on the website where the recipe is downloaded and they sign up to receive regular recipe updates, but the activity to get them to this point takes place across You Tube (“watch the video on how to make the recipe”); Facebook (“lets discuss the recipe and other ways of making it”); Twitter (Tweets relating to the recipe having just been made and how successful or otherwise it turned out) …..you get the idea.

8) Ensure that your relevant web content is syndicatedImage depicting inhouse and outsourcing resource

Lots of websites have great content which never sees the light of day and there are plenty of other places on the web that would just love to have your Presentation, Whitepaper, Press Release, Video, Images – the list goes on – don’t let your content hide on your site, get it out there (a number of my clients use PixelPipe – http://pixelpipe.com).

 

9) Ensure that even if your primary call to action is not fulfilled that an engagement mechanism is

This may be “Sign up for a weekly digest of information”; “Use our RSS feed”; “Follow us on Twitter”; “Like us on Facebook” etc). By allowing the customer to engage on their terms, you then have the opportunity to engage with them.


10) Monitor, measure, react, adapt

Lastly, you need to be able to be able to make decisions and refine your strategy – you can’t do this without measurements in place. Decide at the outset what your KPIs are and what you’re going to measure and then review regularly to ensure that you’re on-message.