E-Commerce check-list
Ranjit Dhillon Shares Expert Knowledge On E-commerce, E-commerce, E-business E commerce Websites, Online Shops, Website Ecommerce, Shopping Carts, Online Store And Webstores
“Usability is the prerequisite for e-commerce success. …It doesn’t matter how cheap the products are if people can’t find them or if they get stuck on a step in the checkout process.”
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Selling tips and strategies
- Communicate the value of the merchandise.
- Don’t hide product prices.
- Make it easy to see the total.
- Show shipping charges before asking for personal information.
- Keep shipping charges within reason.
- Consider making shipping “free.”
- Consider explaining taxes.
- Provide a wide selection of merchandise.
- Improve site navigation to enhance customers’ perception of your merchandise selection.
- lf customers look for items You don’t sell, either stock those items or make it clear that you don’t carry them.
- Don’t show products that customers can’t buy.
- Show availability information as soon as possible.
- For items not in stock. Show the date when the item will be shipped.
- Don’t automatically substitute items.
- Deliver In-stock items within a few days.
- Estimate the number of days until delivery.
- Provide it choice of shipping methods, and list the carriers.
- Provide additional delivery Information, when necessary.
- Make links to guarantees and policies prominent throughout the site.
- Explain the return policy and process.
- Offer free returns and clearly state that returns are free.
- Accept a variety of credit cards.
- Consider providing payment alternatives.
- Provide a visible means of buying from promotional pages.
- On “What’s New” pages. Emphasize new products rather than site updates.
- Provide sale section.
- Consider offering samples.
- Don’t make important page elements look like adverts.
- Suggest additional items, but don’t put obstacles before the cash register.
- Use opt-in, not opt-out for items the customer hasn’t specifically selected.
- Consider creating a first-time visitors page.
- Make sure that recommendations are relevant to what the customer wants.
- Don’t substitute cleverness for helpfulness.
- Consider the ultimate on-line sales assistant: a person.
- Provide a toll-free phone number.
- Consider selling gift certificates or providing a gift registry.
- Assume that some gifts will be shipped to the sender.
- Let the giver include a personal message.
- Provide options to suppress price and billing information.
- If you offer gift-wrapping keep the price low.
- Provide follow-up delivery information to the sender.
- Consider consistent pricing – and policies – for Store X and storex.com
- Provide a store locator.
- Tell the customer whether the merchandise is available at the local store.
- Clearly distinguish promotions for the physical stores from promotions on the website.
- Offer free shipping when one of your stores is located near the customer.
- Allow free returns to the local store.
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Trust
- Show detailed company information.
- Build on the trust customers have for existing merchants and brands.
- Link to reputable, independent sources.
- Show total cost, including taxes, shipping and handling, as soon as possible.
- Justify prices that appear odd.
- Provide honest information about products.
- Provide balanced second opinions.
- Remove outdated content immediately.
- Eradicate all typos.
- Don’t advertise items that are not available.
- Pursue technical problems vigilantly – and fix them.
- Phrase error messages constructively and politely.
- Use form elements for user input on checkout pages.
- Give users only what they ask for.
- Preserve information the user has entered.
- Present policies and guarantees prominently.
- Offer free returns, and other sales inducements.
- Test your policies to make sure your customers understand them and find them acceptable.
- Ask for sensitive information only if it is absolutely necessary to process the order.
- Explain carefully why you need Information that people consider sensitive.
- Provide a clear and easy-to-find privacy policy.
- Use opt-in for all marketing information sent to customers.
- Allow customers to purchase without registering.
- Do not require registration before or during a purchase – offer it as an option after the purchase.
- Explain the benefits of registration and consider offering an incentive.
- Use secure connections.
- Provide alternative methods of ordering.
- Back key statements with named persons.
- Present a consistent face to each customer.
- Tell the customer when the products will be delivered.
- When there are delays, inform the customer promptly.
- Make sure your order-tracking system is usable.
- Conduct regular checks of delivered product quality.
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Category pages
- Show what merchandise you sell and don’t sell.
- Beware of over-emphasizing promotional items.
- The home page should show tile purpose of the site.
- Don’t hide the catalogue – enable shopping from the home page.
- Reveal the product hierarchy.
- Provide links on the home page to purchasing options, return policy, shipping and delivery information.
- Provide links on the home page to customer service, privacy, and company background information.
- Choose classifications that are useful to your customers.
- Consider multiple classification schemes.
- Provide cross-references.
- Classify items consistently.
- Don’t over-classify.
- Where feasible, limit product listings to two or three pages.
- Scrolling is acceptable on product listing page.
- Use download time to determine the number of products per page.
- Allow customers to sort products by the factors they care about most.
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Show products & services available at a high level
- Show visually similar things together.
- Support navigation by letter for alphabetical lists.
- Use both numbers (or/and letters) and Next/Previous for navigation among pages.
- Image quality should he good enough to identify a known item.
- Images should show the product characteristics that are most important to users.
- Thumbnail images don’t have to answer all the users’ questions.
- Allow winnowing by the most useful differentiating factors for that type of product.
- Design comparison tables to highlight differences.
- Let customers choose the products to be compared.
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Search
- Use a text box instead of a link to a search page.
- Put the search box oil every page.
- Learn what your customers actually search for.
- Analyze search logs.
- Adjust your search engine to respond to how your customers actually search.
- Provide special treatment off frequent queries.
- Support search for no product items.
- Tell customers what you don’t have.
- Accept synonyms typically used by your customers.
- Consider offering limited vocabulary search.
- Make your search engine error-tolerant.
- Tolerate spelling errors.
- Support variant forms of keywords.
- Accommodate multiple-word input.
- Recognize all possible search operators.
- Make default search simple to use.
- Provide a clearly marked link to Advanced Search – and back.
- The search default should be “contains” rather than “begins with”
- Explain the scope of the search.
- Add tile selection “All” to all search selection lists – and make “All” the default.
- Provide relevant information about search results.
- Offer appropriate sorting facilities.
- Speak the language of your customers.
- Beware of long lists.
- Avoid one-item lists.
- Show why results are included.
- Give customers only what they ask for.
- Provide constructive advice.
- Allow the user to begin a new search on tile “No Results” page.
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Product pages
- Provide the product details customers want and need.
- Speak the customer’s language; avoid jargon and clever names.
- Be specific.
- Don’t present too much detail at once. Layer the information.
- Consider providing reviews and / or ratings.
- Explain details that can’t be seen in the product image.
- If you must use downloads and plug-ins, make tile installation process as transparent as possible.
- If the technology isn’t reliable, leave it out.
- Provide a recognizable image for familiar items.
- Provide images that are big, detailed, and free of visual distractions.
- Beware of losing details in dark-coloured images.
- Consider showing alternative views of a product.
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Show only what’s included for sale
- Put price (and currency) on both the category page and the product page.
- Show all costs – or lack thereof.
- Link to guarantees and policies.
- Clearly indicate when the customer will get the order.
- Show all options on the same page.
- Use conventional names for colours.
- Show the product image in each available colour.
- Make sure images match colour swatches.
- Have the customer select options before the product goes in the shopping cart.
- Avoid using multilevel lists or menus to select options.
- Don’t make the buyer Specify a “Choice” When there is only one option.
- Show chosen options in the cart.
- Beware of using clever names for the shopping cart and Buy button.
- Use a simple button for the buy mechanism.
- Put a Buy button on enlarged views.
- Provide shopping instructions in the empty cart.
- Provide strong feedback when an item has been put into the cart.
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Check-out and registration
- Show items. all costs. and the subtotal.
- Provide information about return policies and guarantees.
- Provide a “return to shopping” link.
- Provide a Remove button for each item in the cart.
- Provide shopping, Instructions in the empty cart
- Order the steps in the checkout process according to users’ expectations.
- Show the steps of the process.
- Make the next-step button prominent and visually distinct from the site navigation and other page elements.
- Reveal shipping charges before asking for personal information
- Provide exact shipping charges and tax. not formulas.
- Give the user a choice of shipping methods and carriers, if possible.
- Ask for only the information needed to complete the transaction and clearly state how it can be used.
- Use clear labels and show examples of valid entries.
- Make the size of the field indicate the length of the expected Input.
- Differentiate shipping address from billing address.
- Use a type-in field, not a selection list, for the state.
- Save and auto-fill all previously supplied information
- Validate information submitted.
- Expect users to hit the Enter or Return key while filling out forms, handle it gracefully.
- When errors occur, clearly tell how to fix which fields.
- Provide an order summary with all information about the transaction
- Include a prominent link to privacy and security policies.
- Provide an order confirmation page after the purchase.
- Send a confirmation e-mail as soon as possible after the transaction.
- Allow customers to purchase without registering.
- Explain the benefits of registration and consider offering an incentive.
- Clearly explain the privacy policy and make it easy to Find.
- Allow (but don’t require) all e-mail address for the user name.
- Explain how to select a user name and password and why.
- Avoid using secret questions and hints for password recovery.
- Allow new users to register even if they use the returning customer log-in form.
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International users
- Place international shipping information where inexperience users will notice it.
- Place international shipping information where experienced users look for it.
- Offer alternatives if you don’t ship abroad.
- Show both where you ship and where you bill.
- lf different models, prices, or procedures apply in different countries make that clear.
- Warn about potential technical and legal problems with products.
- Show all additional costs, especially shipping as soon as possible.
- Consider offering a built-in currency converter.
- Provide translation of measures to and from metric units.
- Write all text in EASL, (English As a Second Language).
- Provide a glossary for both product and shipping terms.
- Show examples of acceptable and typical information users should enter
- Use the prompt -ZIP / postal code” rather than “ZIP” or “ZIP Code.”
- Explicitly list all countries to which you ship.
- Let the user specify the shipping region first.
- Provide different pages for US and European address formats
- Support international phone number formats.
- Don’t use metaphors that are intimately connected with a specific country.
- Test your site in each target country to find cultural problems