Online revenue. Every millisecond counts

Here are some amazing website performance statistics highlighted by Joshua Bixby at Strangeloop in his recent 1 to 1 Media blog post.

I’m calling out a few of the statistics here, but read his entire post for all the glorious detail and links to the research that he has provided.  As Joshua points out, “when it comes to online revenue, every millisecond counts.”

  • A recent Akamai study found that 57 percent of site visitors will bounce after waiting 3 seconds or less for a page to load
  • Microsoft deliberately slowed down its Bing site by two seconds, which led to a 4.3 percent loss in revenue per visitor
  • Shopzilla famously sped up site, accelerating its average page load time from 6 seconds to 1.2 seconds. Without making any other outward changes to the site, Shopzilla experienced a 12 percent increase in revenue and a 25 percent increase in page views
  • Amazon performed its own page speed optimization and announced that, for every 100 milliseconds of improvement, revenues increased by 1 percent.

I love that last one.

Bookmark this content with:

JC Penney + Facebook = eCommerce $’s

I was really excited to see that JC Penney launched a Facebook store this week, a move that will be replicated by many merchants in 2011, as they clamour to increase sales as a result of the social networking sites huge popularity.

I only had time to take a quick glance, and I can’t say that I bothered to go too far through the buying process, but a few things jumped out at me immediately, both good and bad.  On the whole though, I think this type of Facebook application is a sure sign of things to come – so fair play to JC Penney being the first major US retailer to offer proper online shopping on Facebook as opposed to a simple fan page with links.

(Click on images to enlarge)

JC Penney Facebook Homepage

I’ll start with the negative stuff.  As an embedded application, the navigation is slightly ‘awkward’ feeling compared to a conventional eCommerce website.  That’s fairly understandable, plus I believe that as applications like this grow in popularity, users will learn that this is the way apps ‘work’ inside facebook on a desktop.  But the app also felt very ‘mobile-like’ and I wasn’t so keen on this.  I assume it’s this way because of the way the application needs to be served, plus the fact that Facebook is assessed so readily on mobile and smart phones already (so it’s been optimised for these users first and foremost).  But the downside is that content is pretty minimal and simple, and I have to be honest it feels a little strange when I’m on a beefy laptop as opposed to my Smart phone.

JC Penney Category Page

The JC Penney Facebook store claims to be ‘fully integrated’.  I am not sure what that means other than the application is fully ‘enclosed’, i.e. you don’t leave Facebook to browse, register, purchase or recommend or review items.  This is great – and not to be underestimated as an approach – as personally I am not so keen on the hand-off to another domain part way through a transaction and I’d guess I am not alone.

JC Penney Product Details Page

I did spot a few glitches (again possibly understandable given this is very new?) that suggest the ‘integration’ isn’t as complete as many customers might desire.  For instance, a few items I browsed and selected to purchase were not available to buy, although I wasn’t made aware of this when browsing.  That’s frustrating and doesn’t happen on decent conventional eCommerce stores.  And a few images are missing here and there, which combined with the skinny, ‘mobile-feel’ means that the experience isn’t amazing.  Plus I also noticed that with Google Chrome, a few of the alert messages appeared over the application navigation which was a little bit annoying.

But to be fair that’s all sour grapes.  On a positive note what I liked was the proposition consistency – ‘free shipping’ on overs over $69, ‘free shipping to store’, and ‘store returns’ supported.  This is a great confidence booster and possibly hints at further multi-channel integration to follow.  And I also liked the search capability and the faceted / filtered navigation facilities provided.  This gave me confidence and felt natural – a useful combination of a standard eCommerce site and a proper mobile website.   And the way you skip through pages was simple and pretty usable in my opinion (I’d much rather this approach than a page a mile long).  And furthermore a simple, but effective, solution for customer’s on the move is that it’s easy to find a traditional store with the ‘find a store’ facility.

JC Penney Shopping Bag

All in all I liked what I saw.  I’ve been waiting for Facebook to be more than a fan-page festival in terms of eCommerce – and here it is.  There is no doubt that M&S, ASOS, Arcadia Group and the like, will be following with their own facebook stores in the very near future simply because there are more than 550M facebookers out there.

Facebook is a channel that won’t be ignored.  And JC Penney is there at the forefront of it all.  Already with 1.3 million fans, they should be about to truly benefit from social commerce in the way that makes most businesses sit up and take notice.  Dollars in the cash register.  All hail f-Commerce!

Bookmark this content with:

Halfords: First mass UK retailer to offer PayPal as a mobile payment method

We were delighted to announce earlier today that Halfords (the UK’s leading specialist retailer for automotive parts and accessories, cycling and leisure) has launched its first ever transactional mobile website, a project we have been planning and working on since the summer.  The project builds on the success of Halfords’ dotmobile site, which went live in August 2010 and is reported on here.


Halfords mCommerce Solution

Since the launch of the dotmobile site, Halfords has seen mobile visitor numbers increase to 8% of Halfords’ dotcom total. Conversion levels have also doubled.  However, the announced enhancements enable customers to pay for orders via their mobile phone.

Chris Corbin, Head of Multichannel at Halfords said:

“More and more of our customers are accessing our site via mobile and we want them to have the same experience as they have from a computer. Smartphones point to how trends in shopping habits are changing fast.”

What was pioneering about this project was that the initiative makes Halfords the first retailer in the UK to offer such a variety of delivery options via a smartphone.

To support true cross channel shopping habits, mobile customers have access to Halfords’ extended range of products – but importantly the same fulfilment options that are offered on the main Halfords.com site, offering a compelling and ultimately valuable shopping experience. This means that mobile customers can choose from a variety of ways to shop;

  • Home/Work Delivery
  • Order & Collect (Free delivery of any item to any store of customers choice)
  • Reserve & Collect (Free reservation of an in-stock item for store collection)

In addition, mobile customers can search for products, read customer reviews, compare products, and find their nearest store with stock.

Payment for goods, a hot topic in mCommerce circles, also saw the Halfords and Salmon teams provide customer choice.  Shoppers can pay by credit/debit card, or by using PayPal; the same payment methods supported by Halfords.com.  In another first, Halfords is the first mass UK retailer to offer PayPal as a mobile payment method.

For those readers who like even more detail, the mobile platform was developed using the same underlying architecture as Halfords.com, namely IBM WebSphere Commerce. Developing the transactional capability involved complex integration by Salmon between the mobile site, DataCash and PayPal to offer 3-D Secure.  Salmon also integrated the mobile site with Multimap (now Bing Maps) , SAP and Store6.

Bookmark this content with:

Endsleigh – eBusiness Award winners!

Endsleigh Award Winners

Congratulations to our client, Endsleigh Insurance Services, who scooped the Insurance Times E Business Award at last night’s gala ceremony.

The winning project, delivered by Salmon and detailed here, ensures Endsleigh’s customers benefit from a truly exceptional online experience that includes the ability to purchase insurance & financial products and services directly via the internet.

The awards, in association with Global Reinsurance and StrategicRisk, hosted more than 100 different companies including some of the biggest international insurers and brokers in addition to a host of regional independent brokers, reinsurers and corporates.  The other award winners are listed here.

Congratulations to Allianz Commercial general manager Chris Hanks, who scooped the Industry Achiever of the Year award.  The much anticipated Insurer Chief Exec’s Chief Exec of the year award was handed to Barry Smith of Ageas. Oval’s Phillip Hodson won the vote in Broker Chief Exec’s Chief Exec equivalent.

And finally, congratulations to both Jennifer Day, the Online Sales Manager at Endsleigh Insurance Services  and our entire project team, who all worked so hard on the pioneering project.

Jennifer Day, Online Sales Manager, Endsleigh with Chris Harvey, CEO, Salmon

Bookmark this content with:

Bookmark and Share

Sue Pratt

Salmon Front End Team