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Selling Successfully Online: over 300 top tips for running an ecommerce website

Filed under: All Articles > Industry News
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By: NMK Created on: March 26th, 2011
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In his new book, Chris Barling has collected over 300 top tips from 15 years of working in ecommerce and advising other small businesses. The 144 pages provide a guide to making money as an e-retailer, with objective and practical advice for those thinking about starting up, as well as merchants already selling online.

By Chris Barling

The book Selling Successfully Online covers every aspect of selling on the internet, from the selling online on the internet, to marketing a website, and managing operations and customer relations. In terms of marketing, for instance, it is necessary to attract people to the website, facilitating the search and finding of the e-business platform, and using email marketing and social networks. In relation to operations, the company needs to concern with fraud prevention, staying legal and shipping considerations; and in relation to customer relations, it is necessary to demonstrate care, and capacity of interaction and feedback.

Chris Barling 25

In this article, we bring an extract from the section on selling: tips for turning browsers into buyers. Remember, once customers have arrived at your website, the marketing has finished and the selling begins.

Do not ask them to log in

Having to supply any details before they can look at your products will put potential customers off. There will be plenty of time to get their name and address once they have decided to buy something.

It is nice to offer regular customers some form of recognition, like showing their name, but if you ask for it too early, it’s like an over-familiar salesman. Most buyers will leave your site rather than fill in a form. Your job is to eliminate everything that gets in the way of making a sale.

Do not Use Flash, over-large images, front-doors or other gimmicks

If you really need a short introduction, then at least have the grace to offer a ‘Skip intro’ link. Otherwise, 80-90% of your visitors will leave without opening the door. The rest will watch the animation and then leave. Ask yourself – do I need to impress technically, or to sell something?

Do make it easy to find your products & services

If you have a home page, have a clear link such as ‘Shop here’. Clarity is key and particularly avoid flashing images or loud audio – everyone will assume that the rest of the site will give them migraines, and anyone shopping from work will be embarrassed.

Make it easy to recognise what it is that you sell

Have pictures of the sort of products that you sell in each category – some of your buyers may not speak your language, but they know what they want to buy. If you sell branded goods, use the brand logos (get permission) to reinforce your credibility and to speed people through. Link logos to the relevant sales section.

Provide good searching

Bad search kills sales. The two problems are no results and too many or irrelevant results. Use a thesaurus to help – is it a boat or a ship, or a yacht? Use email, live chat and pop ups to try to salvage failed searches.

Make sure that searching is fast and accurate, and provide searching on alternate information such as price range, colour or manufacturer.

Create a drop-down list of the common attributes of your products to supplement your normal keyword searching. If someone is looking for a four-door car on your site, they don’t want to have to guess if you called it ‘four-door’, ‘4-door’, ‘4dr’ or something else.

The sales process should enable your customer to find the product most appropriate for them, and having found it, buy it. Search is an important part of this process.

Keep your site up to date

If you have goods that go out of stock, take them off the site or mark them as ‘temporarily out-of-stock’. Make sure that your terms and conditions explain what happens if items do run out of stock.

The internet is very good at disposing of ‘dead stock’ at discount prices, but keep this in a separate section from your regular items so that you can update it easily. And if you have any fixed term offers, take them down as soon as they have expired.

Have special prices & your fastest moving goods on your entry page

Nothing succeeds like success. You need to grab customers and start taking their orders at the earliest possible point. Your top sellers and best offers will always have the greatest appeal.

Offer to keep the name & address of buyers

You can use a cookie on their browser to avoid security issues. This will allow your customers to checkout without having to type all their details in again. They will appreciate it, as it doesn’t involve yet another password and it’s an incentive to shop again. But do make it clear that a cookie is being used, and give them the option not to store it - after all, they might be in an internet café or library.

Make your promises & guarantees clear & unequivocal

Include them within the checkout process, even if they appear elsewhere on the website. You need to inspire confidence in buyers who have never met you. If you ever have an issue, just refund the customer if that is what they want and save yourself a lot of wasted time.

If possible, provide ways that customers can ask for more information

For instance, you might encourage them to email you questions and make sure that you respond in a timely manner.

Alternatively, you might provide a telephone hotline, or enable an instant messaging service/Live chat so that they can communicate in real time while looking at your store.

Selling Successfully Online is available as an A5 paperback from Amazon for £7.99, or for a limited time as a free PDF download from Actinic.

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