Entries from December 1, 2007 - January 1, 2008

Trigger Based Emails - 9 Creative Ways TO Sell More

Trigger-based or dynamic transactional emails are emails that are sent out based on customer activity. When you combine them with personalized and rich content, they become incredibly powerful.

Emails that are personal and immediate mean something - our eyes don’t glaze over them like they do with the rest of the spam that fill our inboxes.

Use these ideas to convert browsers and shoppers into long-term, repeat customers.

1) Ask for reviews and testimonials 21 days after the purchase. People love to talk about the benefits of a new purchase while is still fresh & new. Ask me for a review when I am most excited and mostly likely to share. If you add in a contest or promotion for additional motivation, you will have tons of reviews. This will put you well on your way to making your site incredibly valuable for new shoppers. Also, after I have given a review, I will be bonded more closely with your site.

2) Remind people to re-order. Items ranging from running shoes to ink cartridges to batteries to supplements are purchased over and over again on a predictable schedule. It pays to send out reminders for re-orders. For example, if you sold me a 90 days supply of a vitamin, remind me at day 75 that it might be time to re-order. If I have been missing some days, give me the opportunity to request a reminder in another 7 or 14 or 21 days. If you have the actual product page in your email with a strong call to action, your sales will sky rocket.

3) Include personalized product recommendations in your everyday emails. When you send me an order confirmation, show me what other items that I might want to buy. We’ve found if you tie those recommendations to your global purchase history (like how Amazon or MaxEXP does it) your conversion rate can increase by as much as 500%

4) Mine the gold in abandoned shopping carts. If I added an item to my shopping cart and didn’t buy, remind me. Offering a promotion works but be careful not to train your customers to abandon their carts. A better way to increase conversions is to include reviews and testimonials for the exact product(s) they were considering.

5) Use your web site to generate leads. Would you like to do a better job closing big orders? What about that that long-term customer who just quoted out $25k worth of products? Is it worth a phone call? Is it worth an email? Do both. Send a email to your sales rep and another to your customer. San Diego Media has a customer who closes well over 6 figures a month from leads generated off his ecommerce web site. It’s easy to use your ecommerce site to generate leads.

6) When you are running low on stock for a particular item, send an email to everyone who has that item in their cart or wish list. Let them know you are running out and give them some urgency to buy now. This is a great email idea that I found out about on PalmerWebMarketing.

7) For items that are out of stock, put an “email me when back in stock” button on the product page. When you get the item, the sales will roll in immediately and automatically.

8) Make personalized, automatic recommendations to customers who have ordered an item that is on back-order. Don’t have black? Offer brown. Offer a similar item. Offer an item other people purchased with that item. Find a way to make the sale now and satisfy the customer.

9) Promote new items. When you have a new item, send an email out to people who previously purchased a similar or discontinued item

Posted on Tuesday, December 18, 2007 at 04:51PM by San diego Media, Inc. in | 1 Comment

Don’t make Amazon’s Seller Central your crack habit

Focus on building your online business - not theirs.

A couple of years ago, I worked with a merchant with a love/hate relationship with eBay. He used the analogy of being “addicted to eBay like a crack addict”.

He did a ton of business on eBay but that takes a ton of effort. His staff was constantly overwhelmed and worked on little else. They relied so heavily on eBay for sales, they were, in effect, addicted. He was afraid he couldn’t afford (or so it seemed) change.

Most importantly, he wasn’t able to focus on other, more profitable, ways to grow his business.

I covered some of the negative aspects of eBay on my personal blog a couple weeks ago.

But how about selling on Amazon’s seller central? That’s totally different, right?

I mean, how could it be anything but positive? You get to sell to Amazon’s vast customer base, don’t have to pay a penny until something sells and don’t have to deal with eBay’s demanding and cheap users.

Well, just like your mother once told you, there is no such thing as a free lunch. And selling on Amazon’s seller central is no different.

To understand why, I need to explain my simplistic view of ecommerce. I believe there are three things to worry about:

Exposure - Getting in front of as many of the right prospects as possible as cheaply as possible.

Profitable Conversion - Maximizing the profit and revenue generated from those prospects

Ownership - Maybe the most important - is getting them to buy from you again and again and again.

Well, how does Amazon match up?

Exposure? A+ There is nothing like Amazon’s installed base.

Profitable Conversion? Hmmm…. A little more mixed. There are tons of ways to be creative on Seller’s Central, but at the end of the day, you are competing on price. After including your commission, you aren’t making a ton and what worse, most of the cross-selling and up selling opportunities all belong to Amazon. I have a friend who sells Orovo on Amazon and he does better elsewhere.

Ownership? F- Basically, you are paying a 15% commission to build Amazon’s business - if you are selling something with good margins, like Tiffany Lamps, you are doing fine. You do a great job of customer service and offer a product at a great deal? Great! Amazon’s relationship with that customer just got deeper.

The problem is that it all looks easy. It all seems so predictable. You list products; you ship products and you collect the money from Amazon.

But you aren’t building your own business. Think about it – in essence, you are an interchangeable fulfillment house for Amazon. They can (and will) replace you in a blink of an eye.

I have a friend who had some temporary issues with his warehouse outside his control. Despite a couple years of stellar service, Amazon shut him down overnight.

He ended up not just laying off his employees but declaring bankruptcy.

If he had been building his web business, the warehouse issue still would have been painful. He would have lost some customers, but he would still be in business today.

So sure, keep selling on Amazon, but don’t forget to build the rest of your business.

And my friend addicted to eBay? I just talked with him. He is doing great. He’s broken his eBay addiction and business is better (and more solid) than ever.

Posted on Friday, December 7, 2007 at 02:56PM by San diego Media, Inc. in | Post a Comment