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Testing, 1…2…3…4…5…6…7…

By Solid Cactus on Thu (7/17/08) in E-Commerce Design, Featured Stories | 0 Comments

After you get your store back from your developer, who performed a 100 point QA inspection, what is the first thing you should do? If you said test, test, and then test some more, you are correct. It is a fact that computer code is rendered differently for each browser. It is essential that you test to be sure all of your functions show up on each browser. However, today there are a seemingly unlimited number of browser configurations along with a large array of screen resolutions—testing is a big job and can be a headache. Still, if you aren’t testing on the most popular browsers, you may be segmenting your audience.

Perhaps you’re asking yourself, “Do I really need to run right up to my kids’ room and test my site on their PlayStation Portable?” Probably not. Luckily there are only a handful of popular browsers used by the masses and if you have those covered, you are off to a great start. Internet Explorer, Firefox and Safari are the 3 most popular browsers and 1024×768 reigns supreme for screen resolution. The affordability of flat screen LCD monitors has caused the bulky CRT monitors to become much less prevalent and any PC bought in the last 2 years should be preloaded with IE7. Mac’s native browser, Safari is gaining in popularity, but it is still less than 10% of the market. However, some of you will have the customer who uses Netscape 4 and isn’t afraid to tell you that your site is broken and impossible to order from when using their computer.

If a customer reports an error on your store there are a few pieces of information that you should get from them.

1. Have them explain the error. Often times what your client is describing as an error may be user error. User error that frequently repeats itself should be examined carefully. Any error that is more than an isolated incident should be forwarded to your developer.

2. What page were they on when the error occurred?

3. What actions led up to the error?

4. What Browser were they using?

5. What version of the Browser were they using? Updates are frequent and are often required. (e.g. Firefox 3 had a zero day update that fixed a potential vulnerability. This came less than 24 hours of the initial launch.)

If you can obtain that information, you can get a better understanding of whether you have a true issue on your hands or if the problem is a one off instance. Any customer confusion should be treated seriously, but you shouldn’t hold your web developer accountable for a customer who accessed your store using last century’s technology.

If you only had to worry about 3 browsers and one or two different screen resolutions, what a wonderful world this would be. Sadly, it’s not that simple. Microsoft and Apple are at war for customers and they are fighting it with updated operating systems. As a result, now you need to worry whether your customers are using Windows Vista or Mac OS X Leopard. If you have gotten this far and are feeling so overwhelmed you’re ready to give up, you may want to have someone take on the task of compiling all of these different operating systems, browsers and screen resolutions. Sites like Gomez.com offer “Capture Services” which will allow you to test pages of your site across a long list of combinations.

If all of this browser talk has you ready to run for the hills, don’t let it happen. Testing across a range of browsers is crucial to your business. The bad news is, the number of browsers and configurations is endless and you’ll never test all of them. The good news is, if you cover the major browsers you’ll be ahead of the game - for today…

For more information, visit some of the resources listed below. In addition, don’t forget to check the newly launched Firefox 3 and IE 8 scheduled for release later this year.

References for Browser & Screen Resolution Statistics:

http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp

http://marketshare.hitslink.com/report.aspx?qprid=0

http://www.thecounter.com/stats/

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Solid Cactus, Inc. has designed or redesigned more than 3,000 e-commerce sites. Solid Cactus is an Inc. 500 company and was named one of the "Best Places to Work in Pennsylvania" in 2006 and 2007.

All posts by Solid Cactus | E-Mail the author

Holiday Prep Checklist

By Solid Cactus on Thu (7/17/08) in E-Commerce Operations, Featured Stories | 0 Comments

Serious e-commerce begins with the holidays and getting ready for the holidays begins now. You know what’s at stake. Verisign reported 2007 internet holiday sales were up 25% over 2006. This year your holiday season is even more important. Still ahead are more increases at the gas pump which will ripple through the economy like a cold shiver. So, plenty of shoppers are looking to the internet instead of heading for the malls. How do you get this crucial market shopping with you?

The following guidelines will help you maximize sales.

Get Inside Your Shopper’s Head

Millions of people are just like me. We know the internet is fast, so we procrastinate and shop late.

How can we market
to this type of consumer?

• Hit the pain. Remind them why they’re online. Display a graphic on your homepage that says:

“Avoid the lines and shop with us online! Check out our money-saving holiday specials…”

• List your offers. Make sure your deals connect with your customers.

• Sell their wallets. Consumers don’t want to pay for gas or shipping costs. Whenever possible, offer free shipping.

• Reassure them. Guarantee delivery if offers are made before a certain date. Guarantee delivery with express delivery options.

• Offer Services. Offer free gift wrapping and cards with a personalized message. This saves last minute shoppers some time and is nearly universally embraced by—men.

• Match prices. If there’s a better bargain, match it.

• Use flash. Flash increases consumer confidence and draws attention through movement. Flash allows you to fit more into a small area without crowding.

Merchandise

Start tracking products and trends now. Find out what the big guys in your industry are doing. Feature the hot items prominently on the homepage. Showcase deals in a holiday-themed section.

• Sell suggestively. Feature gifts for Mom, Dad, Him, Her, etc.

Market!

All roads involve search engines.

• Pay-per-click remains the best way to get people from the search engines to your store. You can control when your ads are displayed, what is displayed and where the visitor lands when clicking the ad.

• Comparison Shopping Engines (CSE’s) such as Google Products (formerly Froogle), Nextag, Shopping.com, etc. are increasingly popular. Feed management tools get your products in the engines and provide ROI analytics at a product level. One example is FeedPerfect by Solid Cactus.

• Affiliate programs are typically pay-for-performance; you only pay if they deliver. Arm these programs with holiday graphics and banners showcasing your specials.

• The best customer is a regular customer. Personalize a special coupon code for “preferred customers.” Giving your regulars an exclusive deal goes a long way.

When mass e-mailing, make sure you have the following:

• E-mail programs maximize delivery. Exact Target, Got Campaigner Pro, etc. block spam. Companies trust the e-mail coming from them and more e-mail will reach your intended recipients.

• Use well-designed HTML e-mail, but don’t make it a mirror image of your homepage.

• Personalize. Start the e-mail with “Dear <first name>, as a valued customer of <your store name>…” then go into your offers, showcased items, gift suggestions, etc.

• Call to action. A sign saying “start shopping” or “don’t wait another minute—click here” often work.

• Be consistent. Touch the pain of shopping offline, tell people why they should shop with you, create urgency and have a call to action. Put this message on every page (remember, more people land on the inner pages than the homepage.)

Be Creative on a Shoestring

• Hold a contest. Have visitors submit names, e-mail and mailing addresses for a chance to win a product (make it valuable!) delivered to them, gift-wrapped, before the holidays.

• Use the list that you just created for holiday shoppers. E-mail everyone if they “Shop now for the holidays—Guaranteed delivery if the order is received by 12/xx Midnight.” Show case your offers and don’t forget the call to action.

Inspire Customer Confidence

Offers and pricing won’t matter if people don’t trust you. Dispel their fears up front.

• Identity theft. Install a “click here”
link to explain your site’s security. Yahoo! Store owners should explain why its encryption is important to consumers. Carry your site design and branding through the shopping cart and carry your security messages through checkout.

• Fly-by-night operations. Your “about us” page should eliminate these concerns by including your mission statement, how long you’ve been in business, your location, your customer service goals, a picture of your building and the people who work there. Let customers see who you are.

• State your policies. Shopping cart abandonment often results from the charges at checkout. Explain shipping and tax charges. Explain your exchange and return policies.

• Bad customer service. Make toll-free numbers and contact information prominent on every page of the site and have enough people on those phones. Some online shoppers still need to place orders by phone. Make sure they can.

• Testimonials. A customer’s words speak loudly—showcase glowing reviews on every page.

• Product reviews. Big guys like Amazon are using product reviews for a reason. Amazon praising a product they’re selling won’t be nearly as convincing as a customer saying the same thing.

Prepare the Team

Higher volumes require more people. Most merchants increase customer service and fulfillment staff 25% during the holidays.

• Get your people now so you won’t have to scramble when you need them. A $50 employee bonus for hooking a friend up with a job is a good incentive.

• Train them well. They should know your shipping and tax policies, your values for customer service and answer product questions. Make sure they have cheat sheets for gift ideas, can handle price matching and know your promotions. Sales through in-bound calls will mirror the knowledge of your customer service staff.

Live chat can cut down on customer service calls and allow reps to handle multiple customers with simultaneous chats.

Get Started Now!

Prepare your website, offers, marketing strategy and customer service now for fewer headaches, unexpected problems and potential disappointments.

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Solid Cactus, Inc. has designed or redesigned more than 3,000 e-commerce sites. Solid Cactus is an Inc. 500 company and was named one of the "Best Places to Work in Pennsylvania" in 2006 and 2007.

All posts by Solid Cactus | E-Mail the author

Why “SMALL” is BIG in E-commerce

By Kevin Lynn on Thu (7/17/08) in Featured Stories, Marketing | 0 Comments

I thought I was on a roll at a recent Solid Cactus Boot Camp. I was holding a seminar, extolling the virtues of the “new marketing,” encouraging the attendees to spend less time and money on advertising and more effort on public relations where the advertising is free. Sadly, one person in the audience rained on my parade. She sells aftermarket parts for an auto maker and she was scared because the car manufacturer was initiating its own big push in e-commerce. She assumed the car maker, with its budgets and billions and warehouses full of parts would soon roll right over her. She asked, when the sleeping giants awaken and discover the Internet, how can small companies possibly compete against “the big boys”?

Let me sum up my answer in two words: WITH EASE!

The simple fact is you have a tremendous advantage over the larger, richer, slower brick-and-mortar companies now lumbering into e-commerce. I have worked for big corporations in marketing and advertising. I know what they do well and where they are deficient. They go with what they know. They go with size. Which makes sense, because that’s they’re strength. However, size is no advantage in the nimble world of e-commerce. Your strategy and tactics are just as valuable as theirs and arguably more valuable because in e-commerce, the focus is on small. Trust me; you have nothing to fear from “big.” Below are 7 reasons why smaller is better when it comes to internet marketing and sales.

Reason #1: Now the big boys are playing by YOUR RULES!!!

Never forget the defining law of e-commerce: equality. No matter how rich they are, everyone gets the same one home page. GeneralMotors.com with its international brand gets the same one page in cyberspace as, say, MotorGenerals.com with their home office space. Their billions mean nothing. Their work force means nothing. In that strangely egalitarian world of the Internet, you are exactly equal. Advantage—you.

Reason #2: You are more motivated…

They may have millions, or even billions. Is that an advantage? The larger a company becomes, the more layers they have in their organization. With more layers come more people, each one less invested in the outcome any single process. I’ll explain. Imagine an order comes in to your business and also to a larger one. You have yourself watching every step from the moment the order comes in until a sale goes out. How many people do they have? One for each step of the sales chain? Can that larger process care about the customer as much as you can? Do they have as much invested in a correct order or a happy customer? Can they possibly be as nimble and sensitive as you are? Of course not. They think customers come by the thousands and “someone else” ultimately takes care of them. You know better. They can’t possibly appreciate what they’re doing as much as you appreciate what you’re doing. Advantage—you.

Reason #3: You are more fluid.

Or to put it another way, their bowels are cast in concrete. The larger the organization, the harder it is to get anything done and the longer it takes. Everything requires a meeting and almost nothing gets decided at just one meeting. In large organizations, everyone wants to make sure the “right” people are invited to a meeting or a decision-making moment. Everyone is afraid to proceed because they’re worried to make a step out of place. It’s no surprise that automakers still need years to solve the gas mileage problem. Imagine how many meetings (and how many years) it took to agree there is a problem! You don’t have such worries. At least, you shouldn’t… Advantage—you.

Reason #4:
They never EVER have good ideas.

My father spent his entire life in corporate America. One of his favorite phrases of indictment was: “A camel is a horse, designed by a committee.” In other words, once you start voting and altering and changing, you can screw up almost anything. It happens in advertising every day. I know—I write their ads! Large companies are forever calling me back after an ad submission and they always say, “Kev—we love it. We just want to change two things.” I know before they tell me. They want to “change” the one thing that made the ad interesting and the one thing that made it funny, thereby guaranteeing that it won’t be either interesting or funny. Basically it comes down to this statement.

The majority NEVER makes the right decision, in anything. This gives you and your little autocracy a HUGE advantage over the larger, slower—dumber people you’re competing with.

Reason #5: When someone has a
good idea—they don’t stop until they screw it up.

You don’t have to look very far to see a wonderful advertising idea that has morphed into something grotesque. My current favorite is the AFLAC duck. When the duck first appeared, the quack sounded like the company name and it was brilliant. AFLAC sales soared and the duck became an instant favorite. In that first ad, the duck was in the park, where ducks belong, listening to two guys talk about insurance. The duck quacked “AFLAC!” and the ad worked. How the ads have changed. It’s clever when a duck quacks on cue in a park. It’s something very different when it ends up in your bed, on a roller coaster or behind the wheel of a race car. That isn’t clever, it’s stupid.

As a side point on advertising, you have an advantage there, too. Traditional mass advertising costs vastly more and is less effective than ever. But remember we’re dealing with corporations, where they think BIG. Whom do you think gets the most attention from corporate? The guys spending millions on TV ads using movie star voices or the newcomers, the folks in the basement grinding away on the internet? Advantage—you.

Reason #6: You listen. They don’t.

Think about that. When a customer calls you, it counts. When they complain, you pay attention or you’re out of business in a hurry. But when companies get big, who’s listening then? Or is it more likely that whoever hears a complaint will file a well-meaning report that higher-ups might read in a day, or a week, or never? The speed with which concerns are addressed varies inversely with the size of the company fielding the calls. The bigger the company, the longer and slower the process of seeing and dealing with customer issues… Advantage—you.

Reason #7: You know the Internet shopper better than they do.

Big companies often commission demographic surveys because they have lots of money. But do they bother to read or heed them? This is a serious question. Many large companies think it’s enough just to do the study. Even if they do read the surveys, is it an advantage over what you have? You have a pulse. You can feel your business and the industry beyond. Can’t you? Can’t you feel which promotions are working, which products are selling and which services are more popular? You have that sense because you are smaller. You listen to people more closely and their business counts more to you because you are smaller. You can react quickly and change quickly to profit from mini-spikes in activity because you are smaller. You know the internet at a gut level better than the big boys because you are smaller.

The big boys are playing in your court by your rules. You have the advantage in cyberspace. That’s the good news. The bad news is you can’t use the big boys as an excuse for not winning. They’re not better, just bigger. You have an edge in every other area.

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All posts by Kevin Lynn | E-Mail the author

Free Shipping in a Bad Economy

By Donna Talarico on Mon (6/16/08) in E-Commerce Operations, Featured Stories | 0 Comments

Shipping prices have gone up—but many etailers still offer free shipping at the same threshold. What does this mean to your bottom line? Can you continue to offer free shipping when times are tough? What can you do to still gain the sale?

Free shipping adds value to the online shopping experience. But with gas prices soaring, the cost of other services are following suit—including shipping and delivery fees from the major carriers. This presents a challenge to etailers, who have traditionally offered free shipping as a booster for sales.

At the advice of his developer, Reagan Klohn of Brandsport.com recently increased his site’s free shipping threshold to $100, from $50. He made this increase in April, and reports that this increase had little impact on his steady stream of orders and in fact, helped increase his bottom line. “While I still feel there is some intrinsic value in being able to market our site using the ‘free shipping’ terminology, (I’m) convinced the we can raise the free shipping threshold without hurting our business,” Klohn reported in an e-mail to Solid Cactus.

On BrandSport.com’s homepage, a banner in his header touts the free shipping offer. While higher than his previous threshold, this “Free Shipping Over $100” message still communicates extra value. And, with a higher threshold, average order sizes are encouraged to increase as well.

Online retailers could take a cue from BrandSport.com by looking at their own free shipping promotions. Perhaps it’s time to look at an old issue in a fresh way. If the threshold is at $25, perhaps raise it to $50 or $75. Take a look at average order size and make a decision based on that. Your “free shipping” ad is still accurate and simply sets the bar at a new, higher level. You may decide to cancel free shipping altogether. It is true that some online retailers have successfully removed free shipping altogether and have seen little impact on their sales.

In a previous eBiz Insider article we focused on the value of negotiating better rates with the major carriers. If an e-commerce site has the volume, this could also be an option to look into saving on shipping costs. Think about revisiting your busiest shippers and see what they can do for you in exchange for your continued high volume with them. Finally, with products like Solid Cactus’ Shipping Manager, etailers can set shipping rules down to the item level to ensure that they are not losing on shipping, but are instead saving every penny they can possibly save.

Rising fuel prices is not a new problem plaguing e-commerce. Research for this article uncovered articles in the New York Times, C|Net and other online and print publications covering the jump. On August 19, 2005, CNet.com reported that online retailers were beginning to worry about the rising cost of gas. Back then, it had risen to $67 a barrel. Clearly we are looking at newer, vastly higher numbers.

The good news is that inflated fuel costs will only fuel e-commerce as more would-be shoppers look our way. Clearly, there is much to protect. A survey by Harris Interactive in April found that 57% of surveyed shoppers said it is free shipping that urges them to make an online purchase. This same survey also revealed that 33% of those surveyed are shopping online to save money on gas. Clearly, breaks on shipping will continue to impact consumers’ decisions about where
they buy.

There is no doubt that online sales will continue to soar as people opt for the information super highway rather than the asphalt highway. Online retailers can still be smart and increase sales and revenues by building value in other areas, while not losing on shipping costs.

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Senior Account Mananger at Solid Cactus

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The Positive Effects of Negative Keywords

By Solid Cactus on Mon (6/16/08) in Featured Stories, Marketing | 0 Comments

Anyone who has set up a pay-per-click (PPC) advertising campaign knows the work and care required to target the right set of keywords for your site. However, the irrelevant traffic you worked so hard to avoid is still sneaking in to your account. It’s time to learn about the positive benefits that negative keywords can have on your PPC.

A Keyword Primer

First, let’s have a short lesson on regular keywords. When you bid on a keyword, you have to choose a match type. Match types determine the variety of traffic that your keywords can trigger. Three common varieties of Google Adwords include broad, phrase and exact match types. Broad match keywords bring in the greatest variety of traffic, while phrase and exact are more restrictive. The broad match of “cufflinks” can bring in traffic from users who search all of these phrases: “cufflinks”, “solid gold cuff link”, “kuff link”, and “win free cufflinks”. Broad match is the fastest way to capture a wide selection of relevant traffic, which makes it an important part of your PPC campaigns. However, broad match can also attract a lot of keywords in which you aren’t interested. This is where negative keywords work their magic.

Negative Positives

If you sell cufflinks but you don’t actually have a solid gold pair for sale, then “solid gold” would be a great negative keyword. Additionally, if you aren’t planning on giving them out for free, then “free” is another negative you should add to your account. You can add your negatives directly into individual ad groups, or they can be placed at the campaign level if the negatives are applicable to multiple categories.

Identifying Negatives

Now you can block unwanted traffic, but how do you actually find that traffic in the first place? If you’re not using negative keywords, you can almost guarantee that some of the PPC traffic currently coming to your site is unwanted. There are three great places you can go to start your negative keyword hunt. The first is in your initial keyword research. When you plug your core keywords into a keyword research tool, there are terms you choose not to use. Go back to that tool and take a look at the keywords you didn’t add to your campaigns. Was it because the volume or the cost per click was too high? Or did you pass those keywords by because they had nothing to do with your business? Add those irrelevant keywords to your negative keyword list!

Do Your Homework

The Search Query Report from Google Adwords allows you to see the actual search queries that are triggering your ads. Many of the search queries are the actual keywords on which you are bidding. Keep digging and you’ll start seeing variations that you aren’t bidding on, and this is where it gets interesting. Let’s run a search query report for the cufflinks ad group we were working with earlier. We found some individual styles that you don’t carry: “dragon cufflinks” “copper cufflinks” and “plastic cufflinks”. None of these keywords had a large volume. In fact, blocking them only saved you around $1. But running Search Query Reports and blocking lower traffic keywords can turn into big savings in the long run.

The final tool for researching negative keywords is your own analytics program. Google Analytics allows you to view the keywords driving traffic to your site. You can parse them out by paid (PPC) and non-paid (organic) keywords. Then you can analyze stats that include pages per visit and bounce rate. Not only is analytics a great tool for finding negative keywords, it provides additional insight into how all your keywords are performing.

Update, Update, Update

Like the rest of your keywords, negatives should be periodically reviewed. If you add new inventory to your store, be sure negatives aren’t blocking newly relevant traffic. As your business grows, you may find that you don’t need to be as restrictive with some categories as you once were. Negatives are a critical part in the success of your paid campaigns. Isn’t it time you started feeling the positive effects of negatives on your PPC?

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Solid Cactus, Inc. has designed or redesigned more than 3,000 e-commerce sites. Solid Cactus is an Inc. 500 company and was named one of the "Best Places to Work in Pennsylvania" in 2006 and 2007.

All posts by Solid Cactus | E-Mail the author

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Welcome to eBiz Insider, the official eCommerce magazine of Solid Cactus. We feature cutting edge stories about eCommerce and the world of online retail. We also welcome you to participate in our eCommerce discussion forums. If you already sell online, or are considering selling online, look no further than eBiz Insider.