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Tag Archives: customers
How to create backups (daily and weekly)?
Hi there, Hope you are fine. Right now, I have a few servers, and offer shared hosting to my customers, by default the servers do back… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1734631&goto=newpost Continue reading
How to Create an Ecommerce Return Policy That Makes Customers Happy
The post How to Create an Ecommerce Return Policy That Makes Customers Happy appeared first on HostGator Blog . One of the least glamorous aspects of online commerce is the one that can make or break your business: returns. That’s because e-commerce return rates are a lot higher than return rates for purchases at brick-and-mortar stores. And thanks to the standards set by mega-retailers like Amazon, Nordstrom, and Zappos, customers expect to be able to return their purchases for free. How can your online store offer a competitive return policy without losing money on returns? To create a return policy that works for you and your customers, it helps to understand why online shoppers return so much merch, which types of returns you can reduce, and which returns are just part of the cost of doing business. Why Do Customers Expect Free Returns? Customers look for free returns in part because they can . Online and multichannel retailers like Amazon, Nordstrom, and Zappos have had free return policies for years, so many customers have come to expect it. A UPS report found that 88 percent of online shoppers look at stores’ return policies , so make sure yours is on par with or better than your competitors’. What to do: We all know that “free shipping” isn’t really free because smart retailers build shipping costs into their overall pricing. The same is true for free returns. Factor in your expected return rate and costs when you price your merchandise. Customers also look for free returns because there’s no way to for them to handle the merchandise before they buy. A free return policy reduces the risk that comes with buying a product they haven’t sampled, tried on, or held in their hands. What to do: Put your store’s shipping and return policy on every page of your site. Use clear language and keep it simple. Nordstrom sets the standard: “Free shipping. Free returns. All the time.” They include a link to the full policy for anyone who wants to know more, but that simple message on each page lets shoppers know that buying and returning will be hassle-free. Who Offers Free Returns Now? Any retailer or reseller who wants to stay competitive offers some sort of customer-friendly return policy, and the most ambitious small stores offer free returns to compete with bigger players. Even people who flip estate-sale and thrift-shop items on eBay often provide free returns to stand out from other sellers. What to do: Offer free returns. You can still set rules on how long customers have to return items, whether tags can be removed, etc. Why Do Customers Return Online Purchases? There are three basic reasons customers return items. The product description didn’t include enough information, the customer ordered items that didn’t work for them, and return fraud. 1. To overcome the fact that customers can’t interact with online products before they buy, savvy sellers include lots of product information, like dimensions, weight, reviews, warranty, colors, photos, and videos. Without these details, customers are more likely to buy the wrong item and need to return it. These details can also cut down on the number of customers who order the same item in different sizes with the intention of sending back the ones that don’t fit. What to do: If you’re getting returns from customers who say the item wasn’t what they expected, it’s probably time to improve your product descriptions. You’ll have happier customers and fewer returns. 2. However, you’re selling to humans. Even if you include every possible product detail, busy or distracted customers may miss that information. To justify my thrift-store browsing habit, I resell some of my finds on eBay. Last week a customer bought a dress that had several photos and detailed measurements. However, she overlooked the measurements and the dress didn’t fit. It happens. And sometimes people just change their minds. What to do: In these cases, gracious acknowledgment that we’re all human can go a long way. Take the return if it meets your criteria and let everyone move on. 3. And then there’s fraud. The fear of return fraud, especially customers using or wearing items and then returning them for a refund, is the reason some store owners hesitate on free returns. It’s true that an estimated one percent of returns are fraudulent, but most customers are simply busy people who don’t want to return something unless it doesn’t work for them. What to do: To head off return fraud, you can require that items must be in their original packaging or have tags attached to qualify for free returns. Stickers that cover package seams and large garment tags can make it harder for fraudsters to use your merchandise and send it back. You may also choose to charge a restocking fee if the item shipped was the correct item and wasn’t defective. If you go the restocking fee route, make sure that’s clear from your shipping policies. Another option, adopted by retailers like Sephora, Best Buy, Home Depot, and Victoria’s Secret, is to use a third-party agency to track customers’ returns and flag their accounts if their return habits seem excessive. These customers may have their returns declined for a year. Small online sellers can do something similar by tracking customer returns so you can ban or limit returns from those whose behavior seems fraudulent. However, expect to lose those customers and see them complain on social media. Another option might be to simply decline new orders from those customers. Once you’ve improved your product descriptions, made your return policy clear, and come up with a way to watch for fraud, there’s one more thing you’ll want to do. Choose a shipper that can handle your returns with tracking, so you can verify when your customers have send the items back to you. That also gives your customers peace of mind because they can be sure you received their returns. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged customers, dress, ecommerce, hosting, makes-customers, measurements, merchandise, returns, vodahost
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Choosing the Best eCommerce Loyalty Program for Your Online Store
The post Choosing the Best eCommerce Loyalty Program for Your Online Store appeared first on HostGator Blog . eCommerce Loyalty Programs: Why Your Online Store Needs One E-commerce is an easy way for small businesses to reach more customers, as long as you don’t lose them to big players like Amazon and Walmart. Amazon alone took in 44% of the e-commerce in the US in 2017. To compete with major retailers’ selection and price, you probably already know that your online business needs to stand out by offering unique items, expertise in product selection, and excellent service. Another way to appeal to new customers and keep current ones coming back is with an e-commerce loyalty program. What Can an E-commerce Loyalty Program Do for Your Online Store? We often think of loyalty programs as tools to get customers to come back, but that’s not all a loyalty plan can do. Here are five more benefits to e-commerce loyalty programs. 1. Get new customers on board. Don’t make your customers wait until they’ve spent a certain dollar amount or placed several orders to start getting the benefits of loyalty program membership. Offer your customers an immediate discount or bonus item for joining your loyalty program and they’re more likely to sign on and make a purchase. 2. Collect marketing data. A good loyalty program will provide analytics on your members so you can see which products they prefer, when they buy, how much they spend, and other information you can use to refine your marketing efforts. Smarter offers can lead to more sales and higher order values. 3. Increase the lifetime value of your current customers. With your loyalty program marketing data and targeted offers, your business should be able to not only retain customers but earn more from them. Exclusive product offers, previews, and upsells of related items are easier when you have accurate information and your customers’ trust. That trust is valuable—Invesp found that established customers are 50% more likely to buy a new product from a business than new customers are, and those existing customers spend about 30% more when they buy. 4. Keep your customer acquisition costs in check. By using your digital loyalty program to target offers to your existing customers, you can boost revenue from those shoppers and reduce the amount you need to spend on new-customer acquisition to keep your revenue stream flowing. And when you do look for new customers, your loyalty program data can help you identify target audiences similar to your most loyal and lucrative customers. 5. Win back customers. Sometimes an existing customer just stops shopping with you, and you don’t know why. Rather than write off that customer, you can use your e-commerce loyalty program to craft a custom email offer to bring them back to your store. Think about which of these goals is most important to your business, and take stock of the channels that you use most often to reach current customers and new customers. Depending on your goals and customer habits, you may be able to do well with a straightforward points-for-purchase loyalty program, or you may need a program that includes social media reward options, tiered reward levels, and other advanced features. Setting Up Your E-commerce Loyalty Program There are several tools you can use to add an e-commerce loyalty program to your online store. Your options will depend on the e-commerce hosting platform you use and your budget as well as your goals and customer habits. Here are a few options to show you what’s available and what you can expect to spend. WordPress E-commerce Loyalty Program Plugins If you have a WordPress-based store that uses the WooCommerce e-commerce plugin , there are several loyalty program extensions you can choose from. 1. WooCommerce Points and Rewards WooCommerce Points and Rewards lets you set up a points-per-purchase loyalty program with customizable settings for point values and maximum discount amounts. You can make points retroactive for past purchases, use points as incentives for sign-ups and reviews, and more. One one-year subscription for a single site is $129. 2. SUMO SUMO is another option for WordPress/WooCommerce stores. In addition to points for purchases and reviews, SUMO gives you the option to award points for referring new customers, sharing on social media, blogging, commenting, using coupons, and making charitable donations. You can also set points to expire after a certain amount of time. A regular license for a single store costs $49. 3. Beans Beans is a WooCommerce extension that offers more than twenty reward options, including rewards on customer birthdays, social media likes and shares, referrals, and reviews in addition to shopping. Beans also makes it easy to set up time-limited offers for loyalty program members, create custom rewards, and set automatic point balance reminders to encourage customers to visit your store. Unlike SUMO and WooCommerce Points and Rewards, Beans has a tiered pricing structure with five levels ranging from free to customized enterprise plans. The free plan offers rewards for purchases and signups, point redemption for discounts, a welcome email to new members, and a rewards widget and program page. Prices for the other plans range from $348 to $4,788 per year, and each comes with an increased number of reward options and a higher monthly transaction limit. Magento E-commerce Loyalty Program Extensions Magento has several extensions that work with it, including Loyalty Program by Amasty and programs for Magento 1 and Magento 2 by Aheadworks. 1. Amasty Amasty ‘s program for stores on Magento 1’s Community platform makes it easy to create multiple levels of benefits for your loyalty program members based on their purchase histories, to award free shipping to VIP members, and to create customized promotions. The Community edition is $129. 2. Aheadworks Aheadworks’ Points & Rewards for Magento 1 lets you adjust the rate at which customers earn points for certain actions. It also offers options to award points for uploading user-created videos, answering product questions from other shoppers, and answering polls, along with other reward features for shopping and referrals. Auto-reminders are part of this extension, too. The price for this version is $299. Reward Points for Magento 2 includes pre- and post-sales tax point settings and analytics on spend rates by segment and individual customer. This edition integrates with ConnectPOS to sync customer rewards across your online and in-store channels. The price tag for this Aheadworks extension is $349. Choosing Your E-commerce Loyalty Program Before you invest in an extension or a loyalty platform subscription, take the time to read the reviews, and double-check that it offers the features you want for your marketing program. Decide if you’ll want to purchase extended customer support as you set up and refine your loyalty program. The better you get at rewarding your customers, the more rewarding your loyalty program will be for your business. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
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Tagged amazon, commerce-points, customers, loyalty-program, marketing, new-customers, online, online-store, points, rewards, social-media, web hosting tips
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