E-tailer No-brainers – 5 Essentials For Online Stores – Part 2

Last month we started a series of posts on online shopping and some essentials for online retailers. In case you missed it, here is a link to part 1. Now for part 2 (and I apologise in advance for any harsh or abrupt words, this is something I feel strongly about!!!)….

2. FINDABILITY – SITE NAVIGATION AND PRODUCT CATEGORISATION
When it comes to managing your online store, take a step back and ask yourself ‘what is my primary objective?’. Hopefully the answer is to sell products.

If that is the case, then your products need to be the focal point of your online store, and very easy (for your customers) to find.

Is there a clear path to your products, and how many clicks does it take to see a chosen product? Your products need to be as easy to find, in the least amount of clicks as possible.

I’ve seen online stores where products are buried 18 pages deep (maybe a slight exaggeration) with no categorisation! Alarming. You are really making your customers work to find your product.

Your customers are time-poor, and your competitors are just a click away, so make it simple.

Splash Pages / Intro Pages
As pretty, funky or creative as they might be, most customers don’t need to see the fancy ‘splash’ or intro pages that your graphic designer thought would be a great idea at the time. They want to get right to the products, pronto.

Product Categorisation
The way your products are categorised, labelled or organised on your site, plays a major part in a user finding what they’re looking for quickly and easily.  Poor product categorisation can lead to frustration from your potential customers, which means loss of sales.

Examples Of Poor Product Categorisation
Categorising By Your Own Generalisations
I love handbags, all types of handbags, I have a wardrobe full of them, but that is of course never enough. Sometimes I don’t know that I ‘need’ a new one until I see it, so online I go. I come to your handbag site for a ‘browse’, and ideally would like to see your entire range at the click of a button, but no no no. Instead, before seeing a single handbag, I have to decide, based on the categorisation that YOU have created as to which type of handbag I may want.

So now I need to work out… am I interested in a day bag, a shoulder bag, a clutch, a hobo…hmmmm meh too busy, bye!

Lost business due to bad product categorisation or site navigation is common.

Another example, I’m after a dress, I come to your site and before I can see a single dress I need to decide whether I need to click on party dresses, day dresses, evening dresses, blah blah just show me a dress and don’t make me have to think about how YOU have categorised it before showing me anything.

By categorising your products this way you are forcing me to click into each category to see what is behind each one before seeing a single product.

If you insist on categorising your products this way, at least let me click on ‘All Handbags’ or ‘All Dresses’ rather than have to guess whether my idea of a day dress is the same as yours.

Here is an example from a well-known handbag retailer. At first I question the homepage not showing any products as it would be my preference to see product straight away rather than messaging.

strandbags homepage

I also question having to choose from their wide range of choices in their big menu with no option to select ALL BAGS!
strandbags menu

However what I do like is once you have made a choice (assuming you get that far before you leave and head to one of the thousands of other handbag sites) is that you can then tick checkboxes to refine your search. I like this a lot! You can not only select or deselect as many choices of handbag styles as you wish, but you can also refine by colour, material, brand, price.
refine menu

 

Categorising by Collection only – I have seen many designers categorise their images according to how they have named their ‘collection’. In most cases as an online shopper I couldn’t give a damn about some fancy, deeply inspired name you came up with for your collection (sorry), I just want to see Rings, without having to click into each collection to see if there was a ring in that collection……

Categorising by Brand only – I am interested in some new shorts, I don’t really care which brand, I just want to see shorts and lots of them, don’t make me click into every brand to see which ones have shorts before I can see shorts!!!! ARGH 🙂

Good categorisation
In my opinion good categorisation gives me broad options. It lets me view all products as well as making a specific selection if I know what I’m after….

  • new arrivals  – most people want to know what’s new, but make sure your new arrivals are actually ‘new’. I know a site that has had the same 180 new arrivals for the past 6 months!
  • top level category clickable as well as sub categories – sometimes I just want to see everything in that category, please.
  • if you are going to categorise by collection, provide another option to categorise that product by its product type as well
  • categorise by brand (as well as product type)
  • if you must categorise by your own assumptions of day dresses vs evening dresses etc, at least provide a link for ALL DRESSES
  • ability to start by viewing all stock, with options to Refine

Stay tuned for our continued coverage of essentials for online stores. In the meantime if you have any questions please contact us.

 

E-tailer No-brainers – 5 Essentials For Online Stores – Part 1

From a shoppers perspective, the internet provides access to as many stores as you wish.  Hundreds, thousands, maybe millions of stores. And more opening every day.

If you’re an online retailer, this means your (many) competitors are just a click away.  So if your site isn’t user-friendly, or your products aren’t easy to find, it is oh so simple to leave your store and go to the next one.  So it’s important your site gets some simple things right – at the very least.

We’ve compiled a list of essentials that online shopping sites MUST get right, if they want to stay competitive in the online retail space.

Before we get started, there’s one over-arching principle that online retailers must keep top of mind whilst considering everything else, putting yourself in a shoppers shoes!

Forget what you know about the product you’re selling. Forget that you’ve seen it, felt it, held it up, smelt it, or whatever people do when observing a product they’re interested in.

Your online customers can’t do that. So you need to fill that gap, and motivate them to send money over the web, to someone they’ve never met,  for something they can’t touch or try on.

5 ESSENTIALS FOR ONLINE STORES...

1. PRODUCT IMAGES AND INFORMATION
Online shoppers want to see images and information of a product they’d like to buy. It’s a fact. They can’t hold it, they can’t try it on, so they need photos and info to help them make a decision.

As an online retailer you’ve gone to the trouble and expense of getting a website developed, spent time and money buying products for your store, you’ve more than likely spent money on SEO and/or online advertising, maybe business cards, maybe offline advertising. But for some reason, once all of that is done, you don’t put any time into taking pictures of, or describing your products.

Do you expect that your stock is going to walk out the door with next to no effort put in to actually promoting the products on your site?

As an online shopper, if I’m searching for a product or I see something I like whilst browsing, I want to see images and information before deciding to hand over my hard earned cash. Don’t you?

If it’s a dress, I want to see it from all angles. And preferably on a model so I can see where and how it sits on your body. If it’s a handbag, I want to see all angles and inside please. I want to know if it has handy pockets and compartments inside.

I can’t believe how many online stores don’t provide this information.

If I can’t find the images or information I need to be able to make an informed decision, I will search for them. Meaning, I will leave your site, google the product, and find a site that is providing the information and images I need and make my purchase there.

If I can’t find the images and information elsewhere, and I really ‘need’ that dress, you might just get lucky and win my business, but otherwise I will buy from the shop that showed me the images and information.

If online retailers are unsure of how to promote their products on their online stores, why not look to some of the more successful fashion e-tailers for example, ASOS, Net-a-Porter, or Birdsnest, for some ideas.

ASOS is particularly helpful by providing a video of a model wearing the clothing on a catwalk (screenshots below). For an online shopper, this functionality is invaluable in your decision making process!

We can’t afford video I hear you say! Most likely the camera you are using to (hopefully) take images of your products, not only takes pretty pictures, but also in most cases has video capabilities!  And you don’t need a fancy catwalk, why not use the street?

ASOS Online Shopping UsabilityASOS Catwalk Feature

Birdsnest are also very helpful where they show complete ‘styled’ outfits. Let’s face it, many of us struggle when it comes to putting an outfit together, so any help we can get will definitely be appreciated. Not only do Birdsnest visually show you styled outfits, but allow you to click on the outfit and add the whole thing to your bag at one time! User-friendly for the customer and smart for the business, as I imagine this would also help their sales – ka ching!

Birdsnest Styled Outfits

Some tips when it comes to providing product images and information:

  • good and consistent lighting and background  (this also makes your site look great)
  • as many images / angles as you can
  • if the item comes in various colours, show me images of the colours please
  • close ups of special features, details or the fabric etc
  • present the images in consistent sizes on your site (this also helps with the visual layout and balance of your store)
  • tell me as much about the product as you possibly can – measurements, fabric, colour, sizing, special features
  • I’d love for you to even tell me how and where to wear it (suitable for wedding, event etc)
  • it would be helpful to know about the brand as well
  • anything that you can think of that someone who has never seen this product might need to know

ESSENTIALS For Online Stores, to be continued………