1. Every site needs
to be easy to navigate. Fundamentally, any site structure should be what customer
needs, not how the organization wants it to look like for internal purposes. Simple,
clear and clean page design (with as little clutter as possible) focused on
moving customers toward completion of their goal should be the focus.
2. Make it easy for
the customer to pay. Many web sites offering products and/or services seem
to be almost embarrassed to mention payment and both hide prices in obscure
pages within the site and fail to give site browsers and easy way to check out.
And there is no excuse for this approach today. If this is not available as a
direct part of the web site design, a redirect or hosted page at which
customers can view a bill digitally or make a payment in many ways is available
from multiple sources.
3. Communicate
product or service offers clearly. Companies need to use clear, concise
wording to describe what they are offering. Once again, clear prices are
critical, including any extra costs that may be applicable. If this is not the
case site browsers are much more likely to abandon the site’s shopping cart (a
massive problem for many organizations when they have already done so much work
to get a customer so close to buying!).
4. Implement methods
to improve your site conversion rate. Conversion rate is the measure how
many browsers become buyers. Conversion
rates average 2.5%-3% but rates that reach 8% are not uncommon and some sites
report conversion rates of even 20%. The very informative article "How To
Sell More on the Web: 30 Tips To Increase Conversion Rates For An Ecommerce
Site" will give you several ideas to improve your conversion rate.
5. Manage customers when
they are about to abandon their shopping carts. By the time an organization
has got a customer into its site shopping cart, they have done the hard work
and need to close out with losing them at this last hurdle. Assuming the
payment checkout experience has been designed to be a smooth and painless one,
one extra step to be taken is to offer direct incentives if a customer still
wants to abandon his or her purchase-this may be a further price decrease or
more benefits or features (or even additional product or service).
6. Provide incentives
to register (and come back). Even the most established web sites are
struggling with increasing their goal of building a large pool of repeat
customers. On average, it is estimated that 95-97% percent of those who visit
sites on average never return, even when they have paid. To prevent this, provide as much incentive as
possible for customers to register so that future emails and alerts can be sent
to visit the site again.
Summary
Ultimately, any businesses aiming to succeed online must
rise above their resource constraints and strive to provide quality e-service. The
above 6 actions sound easy to implement (and they are) but very few organizations
bother to spend the time to do so. Any organization that takes the time and
makes the above changes to their web site will therefore reap considerable
commercial benefits.
This is something really interesting about customer experience. All these actions appear simple and easy to implement. Its necessary for all the organization to work on this factor to gain more profits.
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