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How Your Online Store Can Reach Millennial Shoppers By Reviewing Your Pricing

The post How Your Online Store Can Reach Millennial Shoppers By Reviewing Your Pricing appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why Now Is a Good Time to Review Your Online Store’s Product Mix and Pricing Millennials are upgrading their lifestyles. Is your store ready to help them do it? Shoppers age 20-36, as we mentioned in our future of e-commerce post, are driving growth in luxury online retail sales . In the US, Europe, and China , young consumers are spending more freely than before on luxe items—and are expected to do so for years to come. This means that if you’ve been holding off on adding more expensive products to your shop, this could be the time to go for it, to keep your customers from leaving you and to see better profit margins. But before you invest in new products, you’ll want to do a market analysis, find your break-even point for those products, come up with a plan to market your luxury items to young adult shoppers, and create an online shopping experience they’ll enjoy and want to experience again. How Can You Analyze the Market for Your Luxury Items? In general, interest in luxury goods is high among young adults. Consultancy Deloitte found that 55% of US Millennials are “very interested” in “high-end fashion or luxury items .” The percentage is even higher in Italy, the UK, and China. But you’ll want more details before you decide whether to invest in high-end products for retail or develop your own brand of luxe goods. Let’s say you sell handmade leather wallets but you’d like to add handmade shoes, which are a much costlier product. Through a combination of surveying your existing customers, studying demographic data, and online marketing research tools , you’ll want to answer these questions: Who are the target customers for your product? Do they need and/or want what you’re planning to offer? Do you have (or expect to attract) enough of these customers to make your investment in the new product profitable? How is the competition presenting these products or similar ones? How can you set your shop apart from competitors selling the same product? (Remember, competing on price is usually a losing proposition .)   What’s Your Break-Even Point? Once you know that there are customers who will buy your handmade shoes, you’ll need to fine-tune how to price them and figure out how many you’ll have to sell before you break even and start turning a profit. To find your break-even point for different retail prices, you can use this clever break-even analysis tool from Harvard Business Review . You’ll need to know, or have a good estimate of, your: Fixed costs , which are the expenses you’ll rack up in developing your shoes, like design software, shoemaking equipment, and the money you’re budgeting for general promotions. (If you’re buying finished products from a supplier, you can substitute the wholesale cost of your initial goods purchase for product development costs). Let’s say setting up your workshop costs you $10,000. Variable costs per product unit , which include the cost of materials and your time to make each pair. Variable costs can also include pay-per-impression digital marketing campaigns. Let’s put your materials, labor, and digital marketing costs at $200 per pair. Revenue per unit , which is your retail price. Small-brand handmade shoes are typically priced around $300 per pair. Unit margin , or how much money you’ll get to keep after each pair sells.  In this case, it’s $100 per pair. Plugging these numbers into HBR’s calculator (or using their equation) yields a break-even point of 100 pairs of shoes sold at $300 per pair. Raise your retail price to $350, and your unit margin rises to $150 while your break-even point drops to 67 pairs, although it may take you longer to reach your break-even point at the higher retail price.   How Can You Market Your Luxury Items to Millennials? With your shoes ready to go, your price set, and your break-even point calculated, it’s time to let luxury shoppers know you’ve got the goods. How can you do that? Start with your email list and social media followers. (If your shop doesn’t have an Instagram , know that it’s a popular channel for major luxury brands trying to reach Millennials. ) In your messaging, you’ll want to include great, share-worthy photos and text that emphasize the “quality and uniqueness” of your items. That’s because Deloitte found those two things matter more to the under-35 luxury shopper than legacy brand names do. Promote your company’s ethics and sustainable practices, too—89% of US Millennial luxury shoppers in Deloitte’s study said they always or sometimes make sure a luxury brand is ethical and sustainable before buying.   How Can You Create a Luxury Customer Experience? There are two basic elements that can take a basic online shopping experience to luxurious new heights: product details and excellent customer service. Deloitte found that a slight majority of young luxury shoppers in the US prefer shopping online to buying in-store. However, these Millennials also said that being able to try products and get a sense of how they feel are important benefits to in-store shopping. If you’re selling your handmade shoes online only, how can you give customers a clear sense of what your goods are like? Invest in high quality product photography , add product videos, and write brief but detailed descriptions of each luxury item you sell. To further encourage new customers to try your products, you’ll want to highlight your fair and reasonable return policies, free shipping and expedited shipping options, and guarantees on what you sell. If you’re doing double duty as chief shoemaker and customer service rep, remember to make each interaction with your customers as positive as possible. Answer questions about products as quickly as you can, and when people do buy from you, make sure the packaging is impressive, too. If your first foray into upscale products goes well, you may want to expand your offerings to include more high-end, high-margin items. In each case, remember to do your market research first so you can get the most return on your luxury-goods efforts. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Customer Testimonials: Why Your Small Business Needs Them

The post Customer Testimonials: Why Your Small Business Needs Them appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why Customer Testimonials Matter for Small Business Prospective customers want to know what other people think of your business before they hand you their cash or their card number. That’s where customer testimonials come in. Done right, testimonials on your website and social media channels provide social proof, raise conversion rates, and even help promote specific products or services you offer. Here are some best practices to make sure your hard-won testimonials work hard for you. How Testimonials Help Your Business First, what is social proof, and why does your business need it? Social proof is a fancy way of saying that we humans like to know that other people have had a good experience with something before we give it a try. Think about your own habits – when you’re trying to choose which product to buy online, do you go with the one with no reviews or the one with a dozen mostly positive reviews? Objectively speaking, your choices may be more or less equal, but you probably choose the one that other people have chosen, because it seems less unfamiliar. The idea behind social proof may sound vague, but marketers can and do measure its impact. One business case study found that adding properly formatted testimonials to a company’s homepage boosted the conversion rate by 34 percent . (Testimonials aren’t the only way to strengthen your business’ social proof. Learn more ways to leverage social proof for your site .) Getting more customers to contact you or buy your products is one way to use testimonials, but you can also use them in more specific ways. For example, if you’re launching a new product or service, testimonials from preview users or beta testers can help overcome that natural human reluctance to be the first to try something new. Keep in mind that there are some ethical guidelines for sharing testimonials from people who tried your stuff for free, which we’ll go over below. You can also use testimonials to raise interest in specific products or services that offer quality but aren’t selling as well as your other offerings.   How To Get Customer Testimonials Getting testimonials from your customers sounds easy—just ask—but some requests are easier than others, so start with those. If you get great feedback via email or on social media from one of your customers, thank them and ask if you can use it on your website. Most of the time, they’ll say yes. You can also embed positive customer reviews from third-party sites like Yelp and Google on your site and let them serve as testimonials, and you don’t need to request any special permission to include those on your site. There’s also straight-up asking your best customers if they wouldn’t mind writing a testimonial for your site. If you have a good working relationship and they’re naturally expressive people, they’ll probably agree to share their feedback. Make your request something short and sweet like, “I’m inviting my best customers to write short testimonials about our widget/service for our website. If you’d like to contribute, I’d really appreciate it.” Be sure to thank them for their time, too. As we mentioned above, you may have preview customers or beta testers for a new product or service, and you can use their testimonials with their permission. However, to stay on the right side of ethics and Federal Trade Commission rules, you must disclose it if the people providing your testimonials got a discount, a free trial, or anything else in exchange for what they’re writing about.   4 Ways To Make Your Customer Testimonials Even More Effective Getting testimonials from clients and customers is just the beginning. To get the most value from their comments, follow these best practices.   1. Use names, faces, and places. Prospective customers seek out testimonials, but more importantly, they seek out testimonials that seem real . In an age of bots and online shenanigans, it’s more important than ever to show that your testimonials are from real people. The simplest way to do that is to include their names (full or just first), photos, and city or company—with their permission, of course.   2. Include specific positive feedback. Prospects check reviews and testimonials to see why other people like your business. If you have the best customer service in town, try to get testimonials that mention it. If your products do something none of your competitors do, get a testimonial that says so. And if you’re easy to work with and deliver great value, let one of your customers sing your praises in their testimonial.   3. Keep testimonials short. The best testimonials are only as long as they need to be to share specific positives about your business, so keep testimonials to a couple of sentences at most. That respects your visitors’ time. It also makes it more likely that local prospects who are searching on their mobile phones will see your testimonials and take action—reading short blurbs is much easier than reading long paragraphs on a phone. What if you get a great testimonial that’s more like a story than a blurb and really makes your company look great? Turn it into a case study and level up your marketing.   4. Update your testimonials. A good testimonial can work for your business for years, but it’s a good idea to check your testimonials every now and then to make sure they refer to products and services you still offer. Keep asking for testimonials as your business grows to cover more aspects of what you do. Asking for feedback is also a way to find out what your customers like best and what they’re only lukewarm about. Those are the areas you can work on until they’re worthy of a testimonial, too.   Testimonials Help Grow Your Business Testimonials are just one way to get the customer feedback you need to help your business thrive. Learn more about listening to your customers to grow your business . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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