Is Your Online Checkout Designed to Sell?
ADOTAS – Consumers remain skittish. Despite recent positive economic signs, the latest Gallup U.S. consumer spending report shows that routine daily expenditures at restaurants, gas stations and online stores are still down from their 2008 highs, falling to $58 per day in January 2011 versus $97 for the same month three years earlier.
What does this mean for online retailers? You need to work smarter and harder to structure your online environment to not only compete for business but maximize sales. And one of the most underrated components in your online arsenal is your payments program.
A well-executed payments strategy can turn what is traditionally seen as a cost center into a revenue driver. But to do so, you need to understand your customer better than ever before and mindfully manage your customer’s payment experience.
So where do you start? The answer? At a place often overlooked from a marketing perspective – your e-commerce payment program, especially your checkout process. Without the right configuration, payment options and purchase best practices in your checkout, you risk frustrating your shopper and increasing the possibility of purchase abandonment.
Research shows, for example, that 30% of all shoppers abandon their purchases due to confusing and overcrowded checkout pages which can be further impacted when their chosen and trusted payment options are unavailable. Mind you, these are shoppers who are willing and ready to buy. Imagine what you could add to your bottom line if you optimized your purchase process and captured even half of those shoppers.
One of the key checkout principles to live by is to “keep it simple.” Bear in mind, during the checkout process your customer is no longer shopping. Don’t clutter the process with up-sells, bundles, pop-ups and redirects – make the journey to the “buy” button as short, smooth and clean as possible.
To optimize your checkout flow, it works best to use a combination of common sense, best practices and metric-based testing. A/B testing is good for broad, sweeping changes; multivariate testing (MVT) is more appropriate where you’re seeking to identify trends among various consumer segments or when granular insights are important. Dynamic personalization allows you to leverage your MVT learnings by creating targeted promotions or customized experiences for specific traffic segments.
You can apply the same “keep it simple” strategy to your payment options. When considering what payment options to include in your checkout, a maximum of four payment options is recommended. Your decision on which options to include should take into account:
- Your Product – What are you selling – is it a digital or physical product – and how is it going to be fulfilled? Downloaded digital products, for example, will not benefit from a delayed payment method.
- Your Price Point – Price points affect the payment methods shoppers will use. No one wants to pay for a $5.00 item with an American Express card or wire transfer.
- Geography – Consider where your consumer is located and offer the preferred payment options that are available to them in that region. In Brazil, a consumer is likely to use Boleto Bancario to complete a purchase versus a credit card; a Japanese shopper, by contrast, will use Kombini, which requires them to take a bar code on the “thank you” page to their local 7-Eleven convenience store and pay Yen over the counter.
- Your Consumer Demographic – Make sure you are offering relevant payment options for the demographic you are selling to. For example, teenage and twenty-something shoppers are more likely to use PayPal than older customers who prefer credit cards.
When you are strategizing about what payment options to offer at checkout, you need to take into consideration that in today’s global e-marketplace, credit cards alone are no longer enough – especially if you want to be successful selling internationally.
Today’s global merchant must think in broader terms. The Asia-Pacific region favors alternative payment options which are often only relevant and useable in their domestic countries versus more internationally accepted and recognized brands like PayPal and bank transfers.
Cash on delivery is popular in China and India. Many Europeans use online banking as a form of transferring payments (most bank transfers require re-directing the consumer during checkout – a process Europeans are comfortable with, but Americans will often resist). When you plan ahead and optimize for cross border traffic, the end result is broader global reach, better conversion rates and lower cart abandonment.
So how does your checkout process stack up against these payments program essentials? Is it designed to sell – is it leading your customers to the buy button or to abandon the sale? Some simple, but mindful, changes can have a major impact to your bottom line.
Reader Comments.
No comments yet
Leave a Comment
Article Sponsor
More Features
-
Loading ...
Latest News
- AdTruth Assembles Industry Leaders in Gambit for a “Mobile Universal Identifier” May 22nd 2012 ADOTAS - Device recognition service AdTruth (a division of fraud [...] more »
- Adobe Announces “Simulcast” Solution to Make Cross-Device Viewing More Like TV May 22nd 2012 ADOTAS - Today, Adobe released an updated version of its [...] more »
- Two Reports: Photo/Video Is the Fastest-Growing App Category May 22nd 2012 DM CONFIDENTIAL – According to recent numbers released by Flurry, [...] more »
- Facebook’s IPO: You Knew It Was Coming May 18th 2012 ADOTAS - It’s been a day of superlatives, as the [...] more »
- Infographic: The Evolution of Marketing Automation May 18th 2012 ADOTAS – Marketing automation — the process of automating a [...] more »
- Welcome Aboard: New Hires at BrightRoll, AdSafe, More May 18th 2012 ADOTAS – While one internet-related company has pretty much dominated [...] more »
- Now You Can Be a Certified Digital Media Sales Pro through the IAB May 17th 2012 ADOTAS – You think you’re a digital sales pro, but [...] more »
Features
- How The New “Call Spammer” Spends Your Mobile Click-to-Call Budgets May 23rd 2012
- Infographic: Where to Sell Online (A Flow Chart) May 22nd 2012
- How Online Measurement Is Transforming the Traditional Ad World May 22nd 2012
- Infographic: The ROI of Tag Management May 21st 2012
- Digital Goes Offline: Can Brands Take Back the Store? May 21st 2012
Spotlight
Sponsormob Leads the Way Into RTB for MobileADOTAS – For more than half a decade, Berlin-based tech firm Sponsormob has remained relevant in an industry characterized by [...] more...
Reader Favorites
Classifieds
- Business Director-IEB-Microsoft Studios (792444)
- Marketing Communications Manager, Senior-IEB-TV &
- Senior Industry Marketing Manager - Media and Ente
- MARKETING DIRECTOR (medical software company)
- Senior Product Marketing Manager
Recent Comments
- The motivations behind gamification: Tapping into psychology | e6be marketing: [...] (http://www.adotas.com/2012/05/starting-simple-with-gamification/) (http://www.informationweek.com/thebrainyard/news/social_networking_private_platforms/231900162) [...]
- David: Photo sharing and video sharing apps are growing at an exponential pace. This is but
- Afternoon Announcements: Seven Essential Email Marketing Tips, How Engagement Can Measure Customer Sentiment & Lessons in Content Strategy From Children's Books | Duncan/Day Advertising: [...] How Much is a Facebook Follower Worth? [Ragan's] How Engagement Can Measure Sentiment &
- Infographic: The ROI of Tag Management - topspur.info | topspur.info: [...] Adotas Posts Related to Infographic: The ROI of Tag ManagementVelti “State of Mobile Advertising”