Parson
Member
Dear vendors, I know you're hoping to make more money in 2012 from your web site selling pen supplies, so here's some feedback from a customer who buys weekly from some sites and avoids others like the plague, even though the prices or selection is a little better:
Spend $199 on a good shopping cart program and watch it pay you back month after month. I avoid web sites using cobbled-together and poorly-designed and implemented cart systems (read free or cheap) for a reason... they're not customer friendly!
Regularly ask your customers if navigating your site was easy or if it took a long time to find items to buy. If you're not constantly thinking about ways to improve your customer's experience while on your web site, do not wonder why you are not increasing your online sales each year.
Keep up with your inventory and online listings. If you want to sell it, it must be in stock and available. If not in stock, please mark it in the listing as out of stock with an in-stock anticipation date. Yeah, this takes a lot of time and is a hassle to keep up with, but that's what online retail is all about.
Give me a LOT more pix and info on blanks, kits, bits, taps, dies, boxes, and so forth. Post free articles and how-to's on your site. Don't know how to do what you're wanting an article about? Ask someone one the IAP to do a write-up for you in exchange for some kits or blanks or something else they want and you can provide. [Also, posting html articles on your web site (vs a pdf link) will increase your organic search engine optimization if the content is original and you use a key word or phrase in it enough but not too much.]
Offer customers a free newsletter that teaches new techniques, explains how to use your products, shows customer creations, and so forth. This is also very time consuming and an ongoing time investment, but I can tell you from personal experience (as a business owner with a web site that sells upwards of $100,000 a year in product) that this increases business and also drives up referrals.
What would you, fellow buyer, like to ask vendors to do or not do on their web sites? ... btw, this is not a request for you to gripe about a particular web site or vendor in particular. Those gripes should be sent directly to the site owner or their customer service department!
Spend $199 on a good shopping cart program and watch it pay you back month after month. I avoid web sites using cobbled-together and poorly-designed and implemented cart systems (read free or cheap) for a reason... they're not customer friendly!
Regularly ask your customers if navigating your site was easy or if it took a long time to find items to buy. If you're not constantly thinking about ways to improve your customer's experience while on your web site, do not wonder why you are not increasing your online sales each year.
Keep up with your inventory and online listings. If you want to sell it, it must be in stock and available. If not in stock, please mark it in the listing as out of stock with an in-stock anticipation date. Yeah, this takes a lot of time and is a hassle to keep up with, but that's what online retail is all about.
Give me a LOT more pix and info on blanks, kits, bits, taps, dies, boxes, and so forth. Post free articles and how-to's on your site. Don't know how to do what you're wanting an article about? Ask someone one the IAP to do a write-up for you in exchange for some kits or blanks or something else they want and you can provide. [Also, posting html articles on your web site (vs a pdf link) will increase your organic search engine optimization if the content is original and you use a key word or phrase in it enough but not too much.]
Offer customers a free newsletter that teaches new techniques, explains how to use your products, shows customer creations, and so forth. This is also very time consuming and an ongoing time investment, but I can tell you from personal experience (as a business owner with a web site that sells upwards of $100,000 a year in product) that this increases business and also drives up referrals.
What would you, fellow buyer, like to ask vendors to do or not do on their web sites? ... btw, this is not a request for you to gripe about a particular web site or vendor in particular. Those gripes should be sent directly to the site owner or their customer service department!
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