What do you think?
Should hosting companies be liable for losses during downtimes failures due to their incompetency?
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What do you think?
Should hosting companies be liable for losses during downtimes failures due to their incompetency?
So, Google does mistakes when it comes to SEO – you can read their score card here.
But they also have some usability/persuasion issues also, on their product details pages on Google Products. Look at the image below. What is Not Specified supposed to mean? Size, shape, color or what?
You got to dig deeper, click link on Technical Specification, and have your brain do some workout to actually understand that Not Specified actually refers to the Service Provider:
Here’s a quick fix for them:
And another one:
This is the second part of the series on the monetary valued of guest checkouts (read the first part here). For the next two parts of the article I will describe a couple of methods that can be used to derive the opportunity loss due to “locked checkouts” – a term I coined; sorry about that – , which are checkouts that require visitors to login or create accounts to finalize the purchase. The first method (which is to be preferred against the second) will generate accurate results and will be based on real numbers, while the second is more likely a forecasting method based on, well, approximations.
The approach described in this article is the only way to compute the exact monetary gains of the guest checkouts and it is actually a split test strategy. You will set up an A/B test, with a conservative split of the traffic, e.g. 90% of your visitors will see the original checkout process (the registration required version) and 10% of the visitors will go through a guest checkout. The conversion page will be the thank you page/receipt page. Keep in mind that to use this method you will need to be able to split the traffic, to two separate paths (URLs).
Let’s suppose this is the first page your visitors will see after clicking on the “Proceed to Checkout” button. This will be the original (A) for your test.
For the variation page (B), you will have to rename the Create New Account to Guest Checkout.
During the next page(s) of the checkout don’t ask for a password or email ID until the end of the process, on the receipt/thank you page. On that page don’t forget to offer an incentive for users to sign up (10% off for the next purchase, personalized offers for members, etc.)
A very good example to follow is actionenvelope.com, on which you can buy as a guest and at the end of the purchase you can create an account:
Compare the conversions and the results by analyzing at the revenue generated by each of the two paths you’re testing! Be amazed!
That’s all folks! It’s not really that complicated, all you need is courage to do it, and some chips and soda for the IT guys :)
PS: Another useful metric to compare is the number of visitors you lose at the sign in page (create account VS proceed as a guest).
In the third part (and the last) of the article, I will describe how you could derive the opportunity loss for guest checkouts, without actually implementing a split test.
This article is about the optimization of what I consider to be one of the lowest hanging fruits for ecommerce websites, the checkout process. It can also relate to other types of web properties that require customers to pass through an online checkout process in order to purchase products or services.
Definitions: a locked checkout is an online process that requires visitors to create an account in order to complete a purchase. Usually requires them to create provide a name and a password before the order is processed. A guest checkout is a checkout that leaves allows shoppers to buy products/services without asking them to create a username and a password.
The article is split in three parts. In the first part we will look at the psychological impact of the non-guest checkouts by utilizing an analogy of a brick and mortar shopping experience and a Sign In page for an online checkout. In the second and third part we look at the numbers needed to evaluate how much money you’re leaving on the table if you don’t offer a guest checkout option.
Part I: The psychological impact of a locked checkout
No matter how much effort you put into paid advertising or other traffic acquisitions strategy, there will be not much value if your website is not converting browsers into customers at an acceptable rate.
For the purpose of our article we’ll assume that you’ve spent resources to improve your landing pages. They are perfect: there’s no flaw between your keywords, ads and landing pages, your ad messages are in alignment with your visitors’ goals, your landing pages are matching their expectations and persona, and so on.
Your visitors are ready to buy from you and they click on the highly desired call to action button, the Add to Cart, and then they proceed to your Secure Checkout. On the first page of the checkout process, or the so called Sign In page, can visitors buy from your store without strings attached, more specifically, can they start the checkout process as guests?
If not, here’s how how a similar “welcome” on the Sign In page could sound in a brick and mortar store:
If you like to buy something from us you first have to create an account – here’s a nice form for you to fill it out -, give us some private details such as your email address and your full name, tell us exactly where you live and share with us your credit card information. If you don’t want to do the aforementioned, sorry, we can’t sell you.
Would you buy from stores if they would ask you all of the above? I bet you wouldn’t. Similarly, that is what is going through the minds of your website’s visitors.
When we fill forms (online and offline) we are asked to share pieces of information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and even more sensitive ones like credit card details. Automatically, our brains will enter suspicious mode and will start asking questions such as why do you need my shipping address or why do you need my full name. Some of these questions will have obvious mental answers and will be answered in the unconscious mode. But other questions will trigged F.U.D’s (fears, uncertainties and doubts) which will be affecting goal completion rates and the overall website conversion rate.
Some visitors (and by some I mean lots of them) will ask themselves why are you requiring them to fill certain fields or why do you need them to complete some actions, i.e. why do I need to create an account to buy a product/service or Why do you need my email address to ship me something physical?
And when they start asking themselves, they start to leave/abandon the checkout process. And when they start leaving the checkout process, you start loosing money. How many? Stay tuned and I’ll show you two methods for calculating how much money you’re leaving on the table with locked checkouts.
I see a rising trend for computer generated heatmaps of websites, used for landing page optimization and conversion rate optimization. I am updating an older post regarding such tools.
If you’re using services like feng-gui or attention wizard you should be aware of the following:
And here is how real people will look at the same image: (images and video courtesy of Peter Hartzbech from imotionsglobal.com):
Here’s the video:

Same website heatmap taken at 1920x1200.See the differences? Not sure if it's even technically correct
Here’s a good sample of a poor concept of a registration page (I did not expect searchengineland.com to do such mistakes):
I will point the major problems only:
1. primary action (register button) is below the fold
2. the registration button doesn’t look like a button at all
3. secondary actions have more prominence than the desired purpose of this page (to register and create an account)
Funny thing, when I took the screenshot, the captcha was the bounces :)
To address the issues above you need to:
1. always have the main call to action above the fold
2. CTA buttons should look like buttons
3. identify the primary purpose of each page and make it easy for visitors to reach that goal. Secondary goals should not overwhelm the primary purpose
There’s nothing worse than a government website using free stock photos for it’s website. Especially when using images with people.
Why? In the case of the website below, the “pharmacist” in the picture is found on quite a few of bogus pharmacies. And the website is about medical services plans in BC, Canada. The association of the Government, thru that picture, with fake pharmacies is not a good think for them:
Trust seals is the generic phrase used to depict those images (see collection at the bottom of the article) which online businesses use on their websites to address Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt (FUDs).
Seals can be categorized into privacy seals, business validity seals, PCI compliancy seals, hacksafe seals and other types. It may be useful to know that there are seals which are applicable to certain industries only (like the Pharmacy Checker for Canadian pharmacies) and seals which can be used on most of the websites (business verification seals).
Smart online marketers use seals on websites to transfer trust from a well-know company (i.e. Verisign) to visitors and to make them feel comfortable about their privacy, confidentiality or other concerns. In our terms, we use them to increase the conversion rate of websites.
Do they really have an effect on conversion rate? Yes, they do, but each seal will perform different, simply because your audience is different than the other website. While I do recommend using some of the seals, namely those which anyone will recognize, I advocate for multivariate testing. Most likely, if used correctly the impact on conversion rate should be either positive or neutral. If improperly used (clicking is not working, fake seal, etc) your conversion rate could suffer.
Having 20 trust seals on each page of your website will hurt. Having none, may hurt also. For site wide use, you should display 2 or 3 of them, which are important and recognized by your audience. However, if you’re would like flex you muscles with 10 or more (which I don’t advise), I would recommend creating a dedicated page on your site, where you can lay all of them.
Here are some ideas when it comes to using and testing trust seals:
Additionally:
Those are only some ideas, but you I am sure that you can think of your own tests. One thing in particular (never tested by me thou) is to test the effectiveness of a no-spam seal in email blasts :)
Here’s the collection listed in alphabetical order – click seals to enlarge – (back to top):
If I missed some, let me know. Enjoy testing!
This test is different than the classic button test. Birthday Direct is testing the left navigation: single unit VS shorter, multiple units. Kudos to them! This is the kind of test you should run too!