One bright
spot on the economic horizons around the world seems to be continued
consumer spending and ecommerce is clearly a part of this. But, there is a dark cloud
hovering over this sunny ecommerce landscape called poor web
site design. Let's explore some of the reasons why consumers
are not reaching for their credit cards after perusing an ecommerce
web site.
There is
a huge knowledge gap about how the web is really driving online
and offline commerce. An eCommercePulse survey of more
than 33,000 surfers conducted by Nielsen/Net ratings and Harris
Interactive indicates ecommerce sites are driving more purchases
offline (phone, catalogue, retail store sales) than online.
Many consumers are using the web to effortlessly compare features
and pricing – then, calling the company or visiting their
local retail store to make a purchase. Clearly many companies
need to factor this information in when analyzing their online
and offline marketing expenditures and related ROI.
According
to a Zona Research and Keynote Systems Report over $25 Billion (USD) was lost in ecommerce
due to users abandoning the web site prior to a purchase being
made or during the process. The users just gave up because the
load times (the amount of time it takes a page to be displayed
in a browser) were painfully slow. Today's online shoppers aren't
a real patient group, they want information presented in 12-18
seconds, or they are off to another site that works
Unfortunately
many firms have allocated a disproportionate amount of resources for advertising and not enough on good web site design
and back end infrastructure.
It's critical to make the market aware
of a site, but if the potential customers are not presented
with the right navigation and menus (read information architecture)
they will not buy. Case in point, according to recent Dataquest
surveys (and others) between 20-40% of most users don't purchase
because they can't figure out how to easily move around the
web site.
Many firms
fail to properly integrate their ecommerce components with the
overall site design. The in-house developers or outside design
firm concentrate on the sexy parts of the web site design process
(the graphics, branding, look and feel) and only focus on the
ecommerce process after the primary web site design is completed
– making ecommerce an afterthought.
A large
number of ecommerce web sites don't even list a phone number,
arbitrarily forcing people to contact the company electronically
– this is a real problem, as many people don't want to
use e-mail or forms as their primary means of communicating,
they want the immediacy of the telephone.
It's very
surprising, but approx 30% of ecommerce sites don't have a search
capability that actually works - in many cases it just returns
gobblygook. This is a real irritant for many online shoppers
who want to find goods and services quickly and efficiently
– the need for speed should be the ecommerce merchants
marketing mantra and a good search capability gives users a
way to quickly find products.
One of the
most important parts of any web site is the home or index page,
as it aggregates the design elements and information architecture.
So many index page are cluttered and poorly designed, loaded
with poor graphics, bad menu structures, oddball words or my
absolute least favorite, 30-60 second Flash animation sequences
which force the user to sit and stare at a blank screen while
the animation loads.
Privacy
statements are about as exciting as filing taxes (unless you
know your getting a refund) – they are out of necessity
filled with legal terminology that needs to be addressed succinctly
and in a way that makes a consumer feel comfortable about doing
business with an ecommerce web site. Unfortunately, many ecommerce
web site privacy statements look like an afterthought, or, are
so "attorney driven" (three pages – who has
time to read this?) people are turned off by them. It's very
important that a privacy statement be a compromise doc brokered
between legal and marketing.
We are a
full service ad agency so I don't mind shooting arrows in the
direction of my peers – too much attention is being placed
on web site advertising metrics (clickthrough rates, certified
traffic to substantiate ad rates, etc.) and not enough on how
people find and use an ecommerce web site. The industry standard
web site analysis tool is Web Trends, but one of the least understood
aspects of this product is tracking how people find and move
around a web site via reports which can be pulled from the server
log files; i.e. where did the visitors come from, what pages
do they visit, how long do they stay, what are their traffic
patterns, etc.? Ecommerce companies should be analyzing these
"digital customer tracks" to better understand how
to improve their front end marketing processes and back end
web site design.