Bob Holdeman

Just this past week I went to a website that is well-known in its niche industry, comes up #1 on Google search engine results page, and offers fantastic items for sale, with a customized eCommerce approach that seems designed circa 1955.  OK, you caught me… no internet in 1955, so it must have been near the end of the last Century.   But the point is: it was the last Century!

I was able to shop by category, with all of the products visible as I scrolled down the page… and scrolled down the page… and scrolled… well, you get the picture!   I wanted to click on  the product image and see a larger view, but that apparently was a frivilous desire, according to their web designer.  I wanted to click on a button to add it to my shopping cart, but the designer must have thought that was just too easy.  Instead I scrolled down to the bottom of the page and clicked on the subtle link to make my purchase.

By now, I’m thinking, “Do I want this stuff?”  and  “Can they make this more difficult?”   Right about then the order form came up on my screen and the answer was obvious, “Yes and yes.”    The order form required me to type in each product’s inventory number, description, and price.   I had to go back and forth from each of the 3 category pages where I found the items to copy the product information.   So far my experience as a customer rivalled standing in line at the DMV, but just like my driver’s license, I had to have it!

As I typed in my credit card number, I knew it was secure because the little padlock  icon was visible in my browser, so I knew no hacker could get my personal info.  Now I only had to worry about the internal security of the company whose website offered me such a unique shopping experience… night cleaning crews, disgruntled employees, etc.  The possibility that they might be outright thieves crossed my mind. 

It’s hard to believe that there are websites out there that offer this type of shopping experience, but this really happened to me last week.  I don’t know if this story will have a happy ending and I won’t really know even after I receive my items.  All I know is that my credit card info is on file at some company in some other state, either in electronic form or even on paper, in what I hope is a secure environment.  It’s OK; I’ve got faith.

As we develop eCommerce websites for our clients we recommend they take advantage of a payment gateway, such as PayPal or Authorize.net, to process online transactions, putting the collection and storage of sensitive credit card info on their big shoulders and ensuring customers’ data is safe behind the layers of security they provide.

Of course, there is more to the shopping experience than simple security, but that’s what it adds up to… trust.  An online merchant must rely on the shopping experience their website provides to close the sale, and online shoppers need to trust where they spend their money.  When those two things come together you have made a sale.

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As eCommerce and online sales revenues have grown over the past 15 years, so have the tools to develop, stock, and maintain an online store.  Where once all online stores were developed as custom sites that had to be maintained by your web designer, today the most successful stores start with a full-featured eCommerce engine that is then customized by your web developer and managed by anyone on your staff familiar with Microsoft Windows applications.

At one time, if you had a web design firm develop your online store you had difficulty moving your website to another host, making your website a virtual prisoner to them.  We have found that due to bad experiences with other vendors, those who are coming to Comstar bring this up as a major concern. (We, of course, do not use a proprietary eCommerce approach, so that our clients could take their website to any Microsoft compliant hosting provider.)

Today there are so many eCommerce engines that they cannot be counted.  One of the challenges we face as web developers is choosing the right one for our clients’ needs.  We do this by conducting workshops with our clients to find out about their business model and how it aligns with their vision of their online store.  Then we match the solution to their vision.

While specific features can vary, all eCommerce engines we put into play have much the same basic functionality, utilizing best practices to build assets for our clients.  They all include a familiar shopping cart experience, large and small photos, descriptions, an ability to pay through a payment gateway, etc. 

The solutions we use most have additional features that can be turned on as needed, such as a Featured Product area, a Top Seller area, or cross-selling of products.  Coupons, discounts, and special pricing for designated customers are often utilized, valuable features, as well.  Emailing customers, supporting Affiliate sellers, and contacting vendors can be especially important.  Inventory control, order fulfillment, and shipping are also a big part of any eCommerce solution that can benefit from professional advice.

That’s one thing about my job at Comstar, I see lots of ideas for online businesses.  Some you wonder about and some you just know will be big money-makers.  But you know none will succeed without an ability to generate sales online, 24/7.

As you contemplate selling online or improving your online sales in the coming year your online store will only be an asset if it is both useful and gets used by buyers looking for what you offer. 

Check back for more info on how to build a real asset of an online store in Part Three!

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It was only about 15 years ago that most of us were wondering how anyone could make money with this new internet thing.  The slow speed of dial-up access kept a regulator on the numbers of web users and what could be done online.  But there were many who tried and some who were successful, surviving the “dot.com” bust of the late 90’s.  These hearty souls were perfecting the art of selling online and when technology caught up in the form of high-speed access and more powerful personal computers, they were poised to reap what they had sown.

eCommerce had been named and was out of its infancy by the first few years of the new millennium.  Amazon.com, Ebay, and its subsidiary PayPal, made the online credit card transaction commonplace.  Most websites that offered products for sale were custom built and were either very sophisticated, if operated by a major brick-and-mortar retailer, or very simple, if operated by a small business.  eCommerce was something many businesses aspired to, but which some could never successfully master.

Then along came the boys at Google (and I do mean boys) who revolutionized how buyers and sellers connected… by means of an efficient way to search for what you wanted coupled with a way to display paid ads to you based on your own interests.  And guess what?  They made lots of money on the web in ways no one thought of in 1995!

Even as every year online sales continue to rise, there are those who project the slowing down of that growth.  In mid-2007 the so-called experts were projecting that the year’s annual online revenue would be $116 Billion (that’s 5% of total retail sales folks) and was about to peak, so that the next few years would see a down-turn in that revenue.

Since then we have seen it rise to 6% of overall retail sales in 2008 (a growth rate of 13%) and there are predictions of 7%, or $156 Billion this year.  With the interest we have had in the past six months to a year at Comstar in eCommerce website development, the trend is probably not going to change soon.

With such growth you are probably thinking “I have to get in on this eCommerce thing!”  You’re probably right.

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