Improve the Customer Experience on Your Web Site
Whether you're launching a new Web site or making enhancements to your current one, stop and think about how you can improve your site and make it easier for people to use. The customer experience is one aspect of Web development that often gets lost somewhere between the HTML and the FTP. + C7 q7 f! U! u# E- Y
8 C: C( Q8 T# F0 V3 _Ignore the customer experience and you'll pay the price. In its report, "Why Web Sites Fail," analyst group Forester Research says that every customer who has a bad experience on a Web site tells 10 other people about it. And according to consulting firm Creative Good, you can kiss frustrated customers Related Articles9 r1 l! c9 @* S: j" \9 w, Y( {
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goodbye. In one of its e-commerce surveys, Creative Good found that 62 percent of online shoppers have given up at least once while looking for products on a Web site. And 42 percent of those shoppers actually abandoned the Internet and made their purchases through traditional retail channels.
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! M+ j& X5 R4 u( N* J' r8 XThe more you improve the overall customer experience on your Web site, the more you'll improve your order-conversion rate, the metric used to describe the rate at which Web-store visitors become paying customers. There are several things you can do to make your Web site more customer friendly:
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: f3 {" c- }/ e: T4 C! tPost Your Contact Information
& C1 f8 u1 l/ d7 A% l& RYour customer service contact information (or a link to it) should appear on every page of your site. If people get confused or need additional information, they should be able to easily find your phone number and email address.
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Along with your company's address, phone number, fax number and email address, list your hours and days of operation. The Web gives people 24/7 access to your business, but that doesn't mean you can answer their questions and ship their orders around the clock. It's also a good idea to let customers know how long it will take you to process their orders or email requests. Don't leave people hanging: Fast response time is an important feature of any Web site.
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Hone Navigation and Search Functionality3 T# n. }* k; v2 O% _ l) \
If you expect people to transact, you need to have a Web site where customers can find what they want. Make your site's hierarchy logical, and base it on your customers' wants and needs, not on your company's organizational structure. Make it easy for consumers to find prices and information about products, payment methods, and return and exchange policies. 4 ?7 ?" J0 }4 D* N
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To get ideas on how a good Web site is structured, go to the site of a big e-commerce company, such as Amazon.com, and a catalog site, like L.L.Bean. Both of these companies have clean, uncomplicated designs that make it easy to locate products. And don't forget to tune up your search engine. Studies show that many Internet users don't bother to click through a site; they go directly to the search engine and type in what they're looking for.