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Up to 70% OFF Black Friday Discount7

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The 10-Step Holiday Sale Launch Checklist for Online Stores

The post The 10-Step Holiday Sale Launch Checklist for Online Stores appeared first on HostGator Blog . The holiday season is coming! For eCommerce businesses, it’s not so much the most wonderful time of the year as it is the most important. For the next couple of months, people will be in spending mode as they collect gifts for loved ones and prepare for various holiday celebrations. For retail businesses, holiday sales account for 20-30% of all sales for the entire year. A lot of your online store’s success for the year could depend on these next few weeks — you don’t want to do anything wrong. And yet, even big sites like Target and Paypal have taken a hit in the past on the biggest shopping days of the year for not being adequately prepared. If your website isn’t doing its job right during the holiday season, you’ll lose sales. Your Holiday Sale Launch Checklist Do everything in your power in the weeks leading up to the holidays to make sure your online store won’t have any issues when it counts most. To make that easier for you, here’s a handy checklist of steps to take.   1. Review last year’s analytics so you know what to expect. You can learn a lot about what to expect this year by looking to last year. Pull up your Google Analytics data from last year’s holiday months to see:       How your traffic volume changed during the holiday season      Which pages got the most traffic      Which products were the most popular      What keywords brought the most people to your website (and are they different during the holiday season than the rest of the year?)      Which channels drove the most traffic (search, social, email, links from other sites, etc.)      The demographic break down of your visitors during the holiday season (and whether it’s different than the rest of the year)      What devices your visitors are coming from All of this information will be useful in forming a more effective strategy for your holiday marketing, If your primary audience is usually 15-year old boys, but during the holiday season you notice their moms are usually the ones visiting your site, then you’ll know it pays to shift your marketing strategy to the audience making the purchases. If your past data shows that paid search ads work especially well the week of Black Friday, then you know to increase your PPC ad spend during that time. Turning to your site analytics during the holidays can provide a wealth of insights that enable you to truly make the most of the season this year.   2. Create a plan for discounts and specials and how you’ll promote them. People are ready to spend money, but that doesn’t mean they don’t still want to save anywhere they can. Your competitors will definitely be offering deals and promotions during the holidays so if you want a chance at winning business, you need to promote attractive offers as well. Decide on the discounts you can offer on popular products this season to get people to buy. Consider other specials that may push potential customers to buy, such as free gift wrapping or shipping. And create a plan for promoting your offers to your target audience(s) on all your main marketing channels (especially those that your analytics showed worked best last year).   3. Make sure your website’s organized for holiday shoppers. For some online stores, the way your website is organized the rest of the year may work just fine for the holiday season. For others, you can benefit from trying to see your store and products with fresh eyes: what pages and categories would someone looking for holiday gifts or items find useful? If you have a lot of small, affordable items, creating a category for Stocking Stuffers or White Elephant Gifts might help your visitors find something specific they need this time of year, and help you optimize for some holiday keywords. Make sure any changes you make to your store’s organization are intuitive — keep your target audience top of mind in this step.   4. Confirm all new holiday pages are optimized for SEO. Every new page you add to your website for the holidays should follow the same SEO best practices you use for the rest of your website. Namely:      Do keyword research to determine the best primary and secondary keywords to target on the page.      Customize the page URL so that it’s both intuitive and includes your primary keyword.      Update the page’s title tag to include the primary keyword.      Update all the heading tags on the page to include keywords, where relevant.      Optimize all your images by including keywords in the file name and alt tags.      Add a meta description with a strong CTA to encourage click-throughs from Google.  But as always, make sure all the elements of your page combine to provide a positive experience for your visitors first, and search engines second. Don’t sacrifice clarity to get your keyword in there a few more times.   5. Review (and possibly update) your return policy. There are a lot of wonderful things about gift giving (and receiving), but the one big catch is that you usually don’t know for sure what the other person wants. During this time of year more than any other, having a good return policy is important for ensuring your customers choose to buy from you and have a good experience when they do. If your customer excitedly hands your product over to their loved one only to learn it’s the wrong size or something they already own — how will they feel if returning it is a difficult process, or worse, you don’t allow returns at all? If your return policy is at all strict throughout the rest of the year, consider updating it at least through the holiday season. A generous return policy will make people more likely to do their holiday shopping with you and return to your brand for future purchases.   6. Test out the checkout process on your website. If there’s anything about the checkout process on your website that’s difficult or inconvenient, you want to know about it before you lose customers over it. Use a company credit card to make a few test purchases on the site. Don’t just do this once on your usual computer and browser. Try it out on various computers, in different browsers, and on as many mobile devices as you can access. If possible, ask a friend to make some test purchases too so you can get an outsider’s perspective on the process. If you notice anything that slows the checkout process down or makes it even slightly more difficult, change it before the holiday season is in full swing.   7. Test out all important links and forms. If any of your links point to the wrong place, your visitors won’t be able to find what they’re looking for and are more likely to leave the site. And if your forms don’t work properly, you could miss out on important contact attempts and lose sales because of it. Have an employee spend a day going through the website to try out all the links and confirm that they take the user where they should. Test out all the forms on the site, too. As you did with the checkout process, make sure to do so on various devices and in different browsers to be comprehensive.   8. Calculate shipping speeds so you can advertise “delivery by” dates. While people care about how long they have to wait on an order year-round, it becomes especially important once you get into late November and December. Anyone browsing your website close to the main gift-giving dates will want to know they’ll get their items in time. You can increase conversions during that time by providing clear information on when your customers can expect to receive an order based on the shipping option they choose. Here’s an example from Nordstrom: Keep in mind that the winter months bring weather patterns to many areas that can slow packages down, so be prepared with a plan to make amends if a customer doesn’t get a package when they expect to because of a storm or icy roads. Even if the delay isn’t your fault, it’s your job to turn a disappointing experience into a good one.   9. Check that your hosting can handle higher traffic. It’s every online store’s nightmare: your website crashing on one of the biggest shopping days of the year. It even happened to Amazon on Prime Day this year, proving that it can happen to anyone. But you can reduce the risk of it happening to you by upgrading your hosting if you’re expecting a big increase in traffic. If you’re not sure if your website hosting plan can cover the amount of traffic you expect this year, get in touch with them and ask. If they can’t give you the answer you want, consider switching to a new web hosting provider or a more advanced plan.   10. Make sure you have plenty of stock. This one requires moving off your website to check that what’s on the website is accurate. Check your inventory to make sure that every product listed, and especially those you plan to promote heavily, are in stock. Use last year’s analytics to determine if you should buy more of a particular item so you don’t risk leaving money on the table if it runs out too early. Just as importantly, make sure you have all the packaging materials you need to handle the orders that will come in. You don’t want orders held up because you ran out of boxes or tape.   Be Prepared With Our Holiday Sale Launch Checklist Your website has a big job to do, but you have to make sure you’re ready to fulfill everything the website promises to your visitors. Go through our Holiday Sale Launch Checklist to make sure you’re ready for the season this year. A profitable holiday season will put your online store on strong footing as you move into the New Year. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Top Fraud Threats Facing Online Stores This 2018 Holiday Season

The post Top Fraud Threats Facing Online Stores This 2018 Holiday Season appeared first on HostGator Blog . Holiday gift-givers aren’t the only ones who flock to online shops between Black Friday and Christmas Day. Fraudsters know it’s a great time to scam, because merchants—especially smaller ones—are often too busy filling orders to spot fraud attempts. But even sellers who are paying attention can get ripped off by fraudsters who manipulate the order delivery process. Here are two shipping fraud schemes to watch out for this holiday season plus some tips for protecting your store year-round. Prevent Package Rerouting Scams First of all, what is shipping fraud, and why do people commit it? Shipping fraud is a way to beat merchants’ fraud controls, which flag orders with shipping addresses that are known to be associated with fraud or that raise other concerns. For example, if a fraudster has stolen a consumer’s payment and address information (thanks to a data breach or account takeover), they can enter that consumer’s delivery address so the order won’t raise fraud flags. Of course, the thief won’t get the goods if they go to the victim’s house so they need to change the address in a way that won’t tip off the merchant that something’s up. That means dealing directly with the shipping company. There are two common ways thieves manipulate the shipping process that you need to watch out for. 1. One is straightforward—the thief contacts the shipper while the package is in transit and asks for the package to be sent to a different address. The merchant may not even know that what’s happened until the victim files a chargeback, by which time the thief and the merchandise are long gone. To prevent this type of rerouting scam, ask your shipping partner to note your account so that all your customers’ rerouting requests have to go through you. That way you can screen the new delivery address for fraud indicators before you approve the delivery change. 2. The other rerouting scam is easier to prevent. If a customer places an order and then asks you to use their preferred shipping service instead of the one listed in your shop, you can simply refuse. This is a common way for fraudsters to get items shipped with a company that they know will reroute package for them after the order is approved.   Find Help Now for Rush Order Fraud-Screening In 2016, the last day for regular Christmas delivery and the last day for express delivery saw spikes in fraudulent orders . Thieves count on merchants spending less time screening for fraud when there are lots of last-minute orders in the queue and lots of customers expecting those packages to arrive on time. The selection of rush delivery can itself be a flag for fraud, because thieves want to get their stolen goods before the fraud is uncovered so the delivery can’t be canceled. But during the holidays there are plenty of good customers requesting rush delivery, too, because they’re strapped for time to get gifts to their friends and family. When you’re backed up on last-minute orders, you really don’t have time to carefully screen them all yourself and follow up to verify questionable orders on the phone. So what do you do? Get help. Even if you can handle your own order screening the rest of the year, the holidays are a time when it makes sense to invest in professional fraud-screening help. When you’re looking for a service, find out if there’s a minimum service period, what their rates are and how they’re calculated, if the service scales up for sales peaks, and whether they cover the cost of any fraudulent chargebacks that get through their system. Find out also if they provide customer service reps to contact shoppers whose orders could be fraudulent, or if they simply kick out all orders that look like they might be fraud (which could end up costing you good orders and customers).   Follow Shipping Best Practices Year-Round If you’re not already doing these things, now is a good time to start. They’ll help protect your store during the holidays and beyond: 1. Use the address verification system provided your bank or payment service to verify billing and delivery addresses before orders are approved. By checking addresses (and other data like the Card Verification Value on the back of the customer’s card) you can screen out some obvious fraud attempts. 2. Ship all orders with a tracking number so you can verify delivery. This can help your store avoid “friendly fraud,” which happens when a customer falsely claims they didn’t get their purchase and files a chargeback. Tracking numbers and other data can provide the evidence you’ll need to get the chargeback claim dismissed. 3. Make sure your shipper won’t reroute packages without talking to you first. This can reduce your risk of shipping fraud. 4. Make a policy to only use the shipping companies you choose , not those requested by individual customers. This cuts your fraud risk and saves you time dealing with unfamiliar shippers. 5. Collect as much transaction data as possible , including customer phone numbers in case you need to call to check the validity of their order. 6. Keep tabs on the riskiest zip codes for e-commerce fraud . Orders originating from or going to those areas need extra screening. Experian updates this information each year, and while the exact locations can vary from one year to the next, port cities in general are riskier than other areas because it’s easier to get stolen merchandise out of the country from those locations. 7. Start researching third-party fraud screening services now to find one to help out during the holidays and other sales peaks. 8. Make sure your store’s web hosting service protects you from data breaches and fraud with malware scans and removal , strong server firewalls, and physical server security. Protect Your Online Store From Fraud This Holiday Season Start your holiday retail season right by protecting your store against fraud. And get your store ready for holiday shoppers with these tips . Protect your site from hackers, malware, and more with Sitelock , starting at just $1.94/month. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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