Shopping Cart Reviews

There’s an elephant in the room which no one is talking about. Actually, I’m guessing many people haven’t even seen it, but it’s there. The elephant?

Should a shopping cart provider make a product which is good, or one that is profitable?

I’ve probably lost some of you already, so let me give an example. Earlier this year I setup a new shopping cart for a client, migrating from an older product. The new product had a one page checkout that was very slick indeed, so I thought, sure, let’s go with one page. A one page checkout is a feature, and so it sells more products for the shopping cart provider.

When we went live, sales plummeted. All this work, all these promises of increased sales, and what happened? I had a great big L for “loser” on my forehead! I couldn’t work it out at first. It was live for a week or two and sales were down about 30%. On a hunch, I decided to switch from one page checkout to “regular” multipage checkout. Immediately, sales went up about 50% (and order size went up as well, strangely).

In order to make a good cart, the provider would have had to spend substantial time doing user testing, working with beta testers, modifying the product, etc. They may have spent many thousands of dollars, and possibly delayed launch a few weeks. The question is: how many extra units would they have sold because of that hard work? My guess: zero.

There’s still a belief out there, buy bother shopping cart providers and ecommerce owners, that you just set things up how you want them, pump some traffic in, and the products sell themselves. The even bigger elephant in the room is: that doesn’t explain why most ecommerce sites only convert around 2% of their visitors, but some (and not just Amazon) are doing 10 – 20% conversions. There’s clearly a lot more to selling than just pumping people into a “nice” product.

What’s a shopping cart vendor to do though? Make a good cart or make a profitable one?

Responses

Amrendra

September 23rd, 2008

Ya this one is one of the most crucial feature of any online store and it should much more compatible any situations or conditions.

Ron Robinson

September 30th, 2008

This is a very profound question! It’s one we have considered here at 800cart.com using slightly different words. To put the question another way, and in terms that you commonly hear in advertising for internet businesses: is it enough that you can ‘take orders while you sleep’? Or should your ecommerce solution be able to ‘promote your web site *and* take orders while you sleep? I think the right answer to the question is BOTH. Your ecommerce solution should not only be able to take orders while you sleep – it should be constantly promoting your web site and building page rank for you while you sleep.

This is similar in terms to the captioned article: if your ecommerce solution is doing its full job, it will help you be more profitable!

There is yet another way to ask the question: You will work hard today no matter what. You will also work hard four months from now, no matter what. Shouldn’t the hard work you do today not only pay off for you tomorrow, but shouldn’t the hard work you do today leverage you so that your work tomorrow – and your work four months from today – is more efficient and makes you more sales?

Disclosure: I work for a cart sfwr company, 800cart.com. When we designed the new sfwr we released in April, we’d spend 2 years researching how to make a shopping cart solution work for you every day and every night to make sure that you build major page rank *right* with the search engines, especially Google.

It’s not very hard: Google has published lots of pages and content telling you exactly how to do it. We read all that stuff and incorporated it into our new sfwr.

The results were beyond anything we ever dreamed. The test store that we used to test our software ended up not just #1 on Google, it had 7 of the first 10 links. For a test store that doesn’t really sell anything and says it’s a test storte, that is pretty good.

So yes, the question is pertinent – not only that, but we think there is an answer and for us, that answer is ‘YES: BOTH”

Ron Robinson
http://www.800cart.com

Ian

November 28th, 2010

Great Article Mark and you touch on a very, very important point!

Its true! Lets hazard a guess, that at about 90% (give or take) of software developers who build e-commerce stores have never actually sold a product online themselves… EVER! Pretty pathetic statistic I’m sure you’ll agree.

They can talk about cross sells and up sells and usability, blah, blah, blah. All sounds professional but when the reality hits the new store owner when 12 months have passed and they are stuck with a “white elephant” of a website that on average delivers less than 1 buyer in every 100 visitors. And they still haven’t even paid for the website costs.

Incidentally in my testing across your average e-commerce store about 1 in 125-150 will buy.

So what about 1-Page checkouts? Amazing Results! Well they can produce amazing results, IF split testing is carried out. Starting with a basic A-B (normal checkout and 1-Page checkout), then its about multivariate testing on the winner and the winner has to be clear cut before multivariate even begins.

See here’s the thing and one of my favourite e-commerce philosophies: The 3 F’s. Your website and each component of it, has to be: Fast, Functional and Familiar. The main point here I’d like to touch on is Familiar.

If your buyer is used to a 3 or even 5 page checkout process and then they land on your site and BANG… 1 Page! What could happen? Confusion, Fear, Frustration, the emotive list could be very long.

I started testing my first 1-Page checkout in 2005, way before many of the big boys’ employees could even say “cart abandonment”. What I learned is that 1-Page checkouts are great for a younger audience, the linear thinkers (typically older people) such as the process of clicking through a simple to follow pattern, 1 page after the next.

So in essence that’s why testing is imperative, because surprises continually pop up. And from this intensive testing you gain experience, and from this if your radar is calibrated, you gain an enormous amount of intuition.

I’d like to finish with this, to confuse you even more. Refined Intuition can often deliver better results than actual data. This finishes nicely were I started. Its for the guys that build software and have never even sold 1 product online… EVER! Think about that one!

Keep Testing
Ian

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