Ordoro Blog

a practical blog for small business ecommerce merchants

Entries Tagged as 'Webstore'

Big or small – Order management at its core

July 28th, 2010 · No Comments · Inventory, Webstore

I stumbled across this article on Intelligent Supply Management, and I realized that all companies – big or small – are dealing with the same problem when it comes to order management.  The way I see it, in order management there is one important action and that is when a customer places an order.  Every action that follows should be tied and tracked with that initial placing of the order.  However, as this article points out,  65% of all companies running sales order management had as many as 11 order management systems.  I agree with the author – double yikes!

Is this true for online retailers too?  Well, I’m not sure if they are using 11 systems, but what I do know is that many online retailers ‘split’ all the actions tied to an order.  First, they receive the order via their shopping cart.  Next , they copy and paste customer information into their shipping web-site (USPS, Fedex, UPS).  Once they get a tracking number, they email their customer.  Also, at some point they’ll adjust their inventory in another system – many use a spreadsheet.  So, even in this short scenario I’m already counting information tied to one order to be in 4 different systems.  Even more concerning is the fact that these systems don’t talk to each other.   Not only is this a recipe for inventory discrepancies, it’s also a nightmare for customer support.  If a customer calls, where would they go first: email? shopping cart?

What to do?  As the article points out, the biggest challenge is finding the right technology and the funding, but it is…

A Solution That Pays for Itself

While there has been some resistance to invest in given the sorry state of the economy for many businesses, it can pay for itself rather quickly, especially a hosted solution. By consolidating and saving time and money, businesses can free up capital for other new technology projects and purchases.

It also makes a difference customer service-wise. The repetitive and low-margin orders can be handled by Web-based channels and companies can place a higher priority on more human interaction into the higher-dollar-value orders.

And , as they say on TV, that’s not all. Increased accuracy of orders, simple tracking, and scaling your processes closer to your customers, tends to create more return business and better customer retention.

In this new customer-driven environment, it is imperative to improve collaboration by creating more visibility with your trading partners at both ends of your supply chain. One of the best ways to do that is by consolidating your order management processes.

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Sell your webstore products from within Facebook

January 15th, 2010 · 2 Comments · Webstore

Let us say you have built a strong fan following on Facebook via your business fan page. Other than bringing traffic to your webstore, is there an easier way to monetize on this fanbase?  Now there is.

ShopTab is a new way to monetize your popularity on Facebook and to increase your ecommerce sales. ShopTab is a Facebook application that lets your fans browse your webstore catalog and make purchases from within Facebook. The ShopTab app lets you create a facebook “feed” of your product catalog. This is very similar to the Google Products approach that I wrote about a few days ago.

Once you upload your products onto the ShopTab interface, your fans will be able to browse the products directly on Facebook. They are also presented with a “buy now” button and if they click on it, they will be taken to your webstore home page to complete the purchase.

the_pond_warehouse_facebook_shop_tab

ShopTab costs only $10 a month to list 500 products. This flatfee model is great if you do not like the “percentage of sales” model used by platforms such as eBay and Amazon.

More details about this application can be found here.

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What to do with excess holiday merchandise?

January 15th, 2010 · 1 Comment · Inventory, Sales and Marketing, Webstore

Wall Street Journal discusses different ways to deal with excess holiday merchandise.

  1. Sell via consignment stores – What are consignment stores? These are stores that will hold your inventory for you and sell it at a lower price. They take a percentage of the sales revenue. You still own the inventory and therefore you do not get to cash out until your products are sold. ConsignmentShops.com is a good resource to find such outfits for your excess merchandise.
  2. Sell to liquidators – They will buy your inventory in bulk, but often pay less than the wholesale price. However, you no longer own the inventory and therefore you get out to cash out early on. Depending on your cash needs, liquidation may be a more suitable route for you than the consignment route. Liquidation.com is a good resource to find liquidators for your excess inventory.
  3. Sell via online marketplaces – This can be a great route to get rid of inventory, if you are willing to sell at very low prices. You can list your excess inventory on Craigslist, eBay and Overstock.com
  4. Donate to charity - In most cases, you can claim a good amount of tax write-offs via donations to charity. Talk to your accountant to ensure that you are making the best out of your donations.

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24 ways to set up an online business. Which one is yours?

January 11th, 2010 · 7 Comments · Webstore

Every small business owner who is looking for a shopping cart for their ecommerce business is faced with hundreds of options. According to Practical eCommerce magazine, there are about 500 ecommerce shopping cart solutions. How do you decide which one is right for you?

Shopping Carts

This is my attempt to aggregate and list information about the majority of small business ecommerce shopping carts.

The list below is in no particular order -

  1. Shopsite – One of the most popular small business shopping carts. You need either download and run the software on your own servers, or you can find a hosting provider to host your webstore. Lexiconn is one of the popular Shopsite hosting providers.
  2. Shopify – A pure SaaS (hosted) small business shopping cart that focuses on ease of use and simplicity. No installation, backups or upgrades required. Easy to get started. Read a detailed review here. Shopify recently acquired StoreSync, thus extending its ease of use to the iPhone platform. Pricing starts at $24 a month up to $699 a month. Some of the packages have transaction fees.
  3. Miva Merchant – Hosts about 200,000 stores. A preferred shopping cart solution for many small businesses. You can either install and run it on your own, or seek a hosting provider. Recently, the company launched a hosted platform called Miva Merchant SaaS, with monthly prices for it ranging from $59.95 to $129.95. More information here.
  4. ZenCart – Is an open source shopping cart solution but you need to download and install it. ZenCart’s authors claim that their software “can be installed and set-up by anyone with the most basic web site building and computer skills.”
  5. Interspire - This solution includes a shopping cart, an email marketing module and a content management system. More information here.
  6. MightyMerchant – A hosted shopping cart that also provides flexibility to customize according to your needs. The company also offers a web design service for small businesses that want to modify the look and feel of their webstore. More information here.
  7. Volusion – Yet another hosted shopping cart solution. Monthly pricing plans from $25 to $160. More information here and here.
  8. ProductCart – You need to download and run the software on your servers. License fee starting from $695. Additional services for additional fees. More information here.
  9. X-Cart – Not hosted. License fees starting from $115. The company provides installation and customization services starting from $57. Used by 20,000+ live online stores worldwide. The X-Cart shopping cart can be modified by the merchant and by third party developers. More information here.
  10. ShopCreator – They offer three different shopping cart packages targeted towards small to medium businesses. The Transact package charges a percentage of the shop revenues. The StartUp and Retailer packages charge flat monthly fee. All packages are fully hosted.
  11. Magento – Is an open source ecommerce shopping cart platform. Hosts 30,000+ merchants. Since it is open source, there are numerous third party plugins. More information including a video walk through here.
  12. Wahmcart ((Work At Home Mom Cart) – Easy, light-weight, hosted small business shopping cart. Available for $40 a month.
  13. GoECart – Hosted solution. Customizable. Provides good integration with shipping services, payment gateways. More information on the shopping cart can be found herehere and here.
  14. SearchFit – Hosted solution. Starting from $49 to $249 per month. Has a flexible template system that will allow you to customize your web store. The shopping cart also has a strong focus on SEO. Has functionality for email marketing and Google feeds.
  15. ColdFusion Shopping Cart - You have to download and run the shopping cart software on your servers. The company offers installation service for a fee. Requires MS Access, MSSQL or MySQL database running on your servers. Integrated with shipping services, Quickbooks and payment gateways.
  16. Fortune3 – You can download and run the shopping cart on your own. Or you can choose the hosting plans provided by the company. Pricing ranges between $30 an $160 a month with an additional one-time setup fee.
  17. Cubecart – Authors of the cart claim that their ecommerce shopping cart is used by “over 1 million stores worldwide”. You can download and run the ecommerce software on your own. Or use the hosting plan offered by the company.
  18. Network Solutions – Hosted shopping cart with price ranging from $27/month to $100/month. Additional setup fees. The company claims that their shopping cart is SEO friendly and is integrated with payment gateways. The cart also works with Google Analytics and various other third-party software. (Thank you Ross for the suggestion)
  19. BigCommerce shopping cart from Interspire – According to the company, “more than 1000 businesses sign up for BigCommerce every week”. This too is a hosted shopping cart with a monthly fee ranging from $25 to $300 depending on the size of your online store. ($50 set up fee for every plan).
  20. Big Cartel – This is an easy to set up cart marketed towards artists. Their plans range from $10 to $20 a month. No transaction fees are involve. Backseat Vintage is an example store that runs on Big Cartel.
  21. Etsy – This one is more of a community market place targeted towards small businesses selling handicrafts and vintage goods. Like Big Cartel, this site too is geared towards artists. There is a $0.20 listing fee per item and a transaction fee per order processed.
  22. Sell Simply – This cart focuses on set up simplicity. You can list items on Sell Simply via Twitter updates. There is a $1 listing fee. And payments are processed by paypal. An example site is Lisateso’s photography services.
  23. 1shoppingcart – This cart provides email marketing and shopping cart packaged into one solution. Pricing starts at $59/month for the combined package. (Thank you Cristie for the suggestion)
  24. Venderr – This cart claims that it “makes it dead simple for anyone to start selling online”. The team is based in Portugal and their pricing varies from 9 euros/month to 49 euros/month. They also have a pure transaction fee based pricing model. (Thank you Filipe for the suggestion)

…. I will be adding to this list over the coming days. In the meanwhile, here is a wikipedia article that does a good comparison of shopping cart software.

Please help me complete this list. Please add your entries to the comments section with links to relevant reviews and I will move it to the main article.

If you would like to be notified when I update this list, please follow us on Twitter @ordoroteam

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Are you registered on Google Product Search?

January 8th, 2010 · 1 Comment · Sales and Marketing, Webstore

This is a no-brainer for every ecommerce merchant. Upload your product information into Google Product Search. It’s free, and will improve the chances of your product showing up during Google search.

Google Product Search lets online shoppers compare products and their prices across multiple online retailers. Some of the new features introduced in November 2009 are -

  • A gallery view which displays images of the product
  • A review section with review summaries
  • Video product reviews from YouTube

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How NOT to build an eCommerce iPhone app

January 6th, 2010 · No Comments · Other, Webstore

eMarketer discusses a Zara iPhone app that fails to deliver. The app is just a catalog with pictures of products, but with no option to check the price or to buy the product.

Practical eCommerce has another article that reviews some of the popular ecommerce iPhone apps.

Like I commented on that page, I believe that these apps do not fully utilize the capabilities offered by the iPhone platform. When new technologies arrive, most people blindly copy over their existing model to fit the new platform without fully considering the potential of the new platform. iPhone, being a handheld computer, can offer much more than what a regular web-based catalog can offer.

A good example that utilizes the iPhone platform is the Tesco Wine app. With the Tesco app, you need to just take a picture of a wine bottle, and it will offer you tasting notes and other details about the wine. It’ll then let you buy a bottle via the same app from the ecommerce store.

Another good example is the Shoeboxed iPhone app from Shoeboxed.com. If you are not familiar with Shoeboxed, here is what they do. You can send them all your receipts and business cards packed in an envelope and they will scan them, organize them, and give you online access to them.

iphone_screenshot_progression

So how does their iPhone app work? You just need to photograph the receipt. The iPhone app extracts the data from the photograph and displays it on the iPhone. You can submit it to your online account on the spot.

My point is that ecommerce merchants should try to get a deep understanding of the customer’s mindset and then provide creative solutions that utilize the capabilities of the iPhone platform. That will give you better results than just porting over your current webstore into an iPhone app.

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Buy items online, return items to the local store

January 5th, 2010 · No Comments · Inventory, Sales and Marketing, Webstore

An annual survey conducted by Sterling Commerce highlights the increasing demand for an integrated shopping experience across multiple retail channels.

According to the survey results from January 2009 -

  • 57% of ecommerce customers wanted the ability to return items to a store after purchasing them online. (The number was 41% in 2008)
  • 35% wanted the ability to pick up items at a store after ordering online. (The number was 17% in 2008).
  • 33% wanted both call center and store personnel to have a record of what they have purchased from the retailer in the past, regardless of whether it was from the store, online, or via a call center.

Though these results are from a year ago, they highlight the increasing need for an integrated inventory management system for multi-channel e-commerce merchants.

How are multi channel retailers responding to this trend? According to a survey conducted by AMR Research -

  • 34% of retailers offered a buy online, pick up in-store program in 2009
  • 44% expected to implement such a service by the end of 2010

via eMarketer.com

Related Posts:

  1. What is Order Management?

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Wall Street Journal : 5% jump in online sales for holiday season of 2009

December 30th, 2009 · No Comments · Sales and Marketing, Webstore

The original article is behind the pay wall. You can access the Comscore press release mentioned in the article here.

Below are my findings from the two articles -

Online sales for the 2009 holiday season (November 1 – December 24) was $27 billion. This is a 5% increase compared to the same period for 2008.

However, we had a additional shopping day this year since Thanksgiving fell on Nov 26 (compared to Nov 27 in 2008). Adjusting for the additional shopping day the increase was only 3.5%.

If you consider year-to-year change, the holiday season online sales had fallen by 3% from 2007 to 2008. So this 5% growth is a positive change for online retailers.

However, there is more to it than just this aggregate number. On the down side, Comscore says that amount spent per buyer was lower in 2009 compared to 2008.

They attribute the 5% jump to the following factors -

  1. Overall increase in the number of people buying online. (Resulting in lower spending per person)
  2. The snowstorms during the Dec 19-20 weekend helped online sales.
  3. Free shipping by retailers helped. (Read more about free shipping here)
  4. Large retailers outperformed small businesses. (See more on this below)
  5. Aggressive marketing by merchants.

The product categories that had strong sales this year were -

  • Consumer electronics – Growth of 20%
  • Jewelry and Watches

Large retailers outperformed small businesses

Dallas Morning News points out that 55% of online sales this year was conducted through the top 100 internet retailers. Big online retailers such as Amazon and Walmart fared better than small business online retailers this year. These big companies are performing better on pricing. They also have higher customer satisfaction ratings because they have the spending power to improve web shopping experience.

- If you liked this article, please help promote it by retweeting the link. Thank you.

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Yahoo! Stores is down this afternoon

December 28th, 2009 · 1 Comment · Webstore

Just yesterday I wrote about some of the leading ecommerce stores being down during the holidays.

This just in. The Yahoo! Stores has been down since about 3:00 pm PST today. For latest news go to Yahoo! Small Business System Status web page.

Yahoo store is down

Update: Yahoo reported that this issue was resolved about 3 hours later.

Screen shot 2009-12-29 at 11.15.18 AM

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Amazon, Wal-mart, Gap, Yahoo! web outage during Christmas

December 26th, 2009 · 2 Comments · Webstore

Amazon, Wal-mart and Gap were all affected by a hacker attack on the west-coast internet traffic.

Folks attempting last-minute shopping at Amazon, Wal-Mart, the Gap, and the travel site Expedia were ankled by outages and slow web browsing as a result of the DDoS attack. Other websites impacted include Salesforce.com and Linden Labs (maker of the game Second Life)….

The websites were only down for about an hour — but needless to say at a very inopportune time for some. Neustar said that it first detected the trouble around 4:45 p.m. Pacific Time (12:45 AM Thursday, GMT).

Two days after Christmas, the Yahoo! Stores too went down for a few hours. I reported that here.

But all of that is minor compared to the Yahoo! Store outage on the cyber monday of 2007.

45,000 small businesses that host their web-stores on Yahoo! Stores lost 4 hours of sales on the biggest e-commerce volume day of the year (Monday, Nov 26, 2007)

Merchants I have spoken to say they noticed a problem with transaction completion beginning at 6 am PST today. At 8:31am, Yahoo posted the first message on its Merchant Solutions website: “Some merchants are reporting that shoppers are receiving an error message indicating ‘system unavailable’ during the checkout process. We are aware of this issue and are currently investigating. More information will be provided as it becomes available.”

“It’s very frustrating. It starts with your investment in marketing the month prior to the holiday shopping season as well as how you schedule your inventory position.”

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