8 Tips for Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO) Mastery

Retail­ers can increase con­ver­sions by ana­lyz­ing con­ver­sions by device, and with wish lists, email nudges, stored cred­it card infor­ma­tion, and retar­get­ing.

Lisa Lacy By Lisa Lacy. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Aside from sim­ply offer­ing addi­tion­al web­site pay­ment options, retail­ers can increase con­ver­sions in part by emu­lat­ing Ama­zon in terms of site fea­tures and con­sumer out­reach like wish lists, email nudges, stored cred­it card infor­ma­tion, and retar­get­ing.

Dig­i­tal pay­ments com­pa­ny Skrill has released a study that found 28 per­cent of UK con­sumers aban­don online pur­chas­es because the web­site does not offer their pre­ferred method of pay­ment. Per Skrill, this fig­ure ris­es to 32 per­cent among 18- to 24-year-olds who are more like­ly to use pay­ment options like dig­i­tal wal­lets. As a result, Skrill says the les­son for online retail­ers is to pro­vide mul­ti­ple pay­ment options in order to dri­ve growth. “Our data shows while busi­ness­es are invest­ing huge sums get­ting cus­tomers to the point of mak­ing a pur­chas­ing deci­sion, they risk not com­plet­ing the sale if they only accept card pay­ments,” said Chan­tal Willis, vice pres­i­dent of eCom­merce at Skrill, in a release.They must ensure they have sys­tems in place to cater for the half of the pop­u­la­tion who pre­fer alter­na­tive pay­ment meth­ods. Giv­en online stores attract cus­tomers from any­where in the world, the need to offer a wide range of pay­ment options is absolute­ly cru­cial.” But is this real­ly the key to CRO? Accord­ing to Lar­ry Marine, direc­tor of user expe­ri­ence at Intu­itive Design Group, which includes usabil­i­ty, prod­uct inno­va­tion and user expe­ri­ence design con­sul­tants, online retail­ers must first under­stand how con­sumers use ecom­merce sites. “Rarely does some­one go to the web and buy some­thing on the first try. Usu­al­ly they do some inves­ti­ga­tion,” Marine said. “They go to dif­fer­ent web­sites and look at prod­ucts and put things in their carts as way to keep track of the things they select. That accounts for most of the aban­don­ment – they just use the cart to keep track of things they like.” Ergo, Marine said there’s an innate design issue at play because con­sumers still don’t have a way to go to a web­site and keep track of an item they like with­out putting it into a cart. Here are eight expert tips for CRO mas­tery.

1. Enable A Wish List Feature

Even though Marine notes Amazon’s Wish Lists are imper­fect, he also said retail­ers should have some kind of tem­po­rary hold­ing bin such as a wish list fea­ture that lets retail­ers know what con­sumers are inter­est­ed in.

2. Be More Problem-Oriented Than Solution-Oriented

Marine said most retail­ers orga­nize their sites incor­rect­ly and are more solu­tion- than prob­lem-ori­ent­ed. “Most retail­ers think cus­tomers know what they want and orga­nize their web­sites by, ‘Here’s the prod­uct,’ so you have to go look at all the dif­fer­ent infor­ma­tion about the prod­ucts to deter­mine if it’s right for you,” Marine said. He thinks retail­ers should instead adopt an approach like the one used by the Kel­ley Blue Book web­site. “When you go there, they ask ques­tions about what your needs are…how much is my car worth, how much should I pay for used car. Instead of, ‘Here’s info to buy a used car,’ they say, ‘Here’s a but­ton so the user can select what their prob­lem is so they can select the solu­tion,’” he adds. “Often­times, when we go to web­sites, we’re learn­ing about dif­fer­ent aspects of prod­ucts that are use­ful to us. Web­sites are very poor at help­ing con­sumers learn what right prod­uct is for them.”

3. Offer Enough Payment Options, But Not Too Many

In addi­tion, Marine said con­sumers are some­times turned off in the check­out expe­ri­ence because of an unfriend­ly user inter­face that has a cum­ber­some form to fill out for cred­it card infor­ma­tion or the check­out sequence doesn’t seem nor­mal, which makes con­sumers won­der if there’s some­thing fishy going on. “While some peo­ple can’t find the pay­ment method they want, oth­er times they find it, but it doesn’t look right and doesn’t give them a sense of secu­ri­ty and they bail,” Marine said. There­fore, he rec­om­mends look­ing at Ama­zon and Pay­pal, which have famil­iar check­out sequences. For his part, Charles Nicholls, founder of real-time behav­io­r­i­al mar­ket­ing com­pa­ny See­Why, said the Skrill study is a bit sim­plis­tic because con­sumers use mul­ti­ple devices on the path to pur­chase. In fact, per See­Why data, Nicholls says on the 4,000 U.S. ecom­merce sites the firm tracks, con­sumers use an aver­age of 2.6 devices. “It’s rather sim­plis­tic to say you need to offer more pay­ment choic­es. That may or may not be true,” Nicholls said. “If you offer a wide num­ber, the con­ver­sion rate could go down because there’s too much choice.”

4. Look At The Way Consumers Convert On Different Devices

Con­sumers use dif­fer­ent devices for dif­fer­ent things in both the search­ing and con­ver­sion process and retail­ers need to opti­mize for both phas­es across dif­fer­ent devices, Nicholls said. Accord­ing to Nicholls, for every 100 peo­ple that arrive via desk­top, 11 will get to the cart and 2.6 will con­vert. “Basi­cal­ly that means that about 72 per­cent will bail, hav­ing got to the cart and they don’t go all the way through to con­ver­sion and that’s nor­mal,” Nicholls said. The rea­son con­sumers don’t buy includes because they’re sim­ply not yet ready and it has noth­ing to do with pay­ment choic­es or price, he adds, echo­ing Marine. “They put it in there because it’s eas­i­er than using wish lists,” Nicholls said.

5. Optimize Search For Phones

On smart­phones, on the oth­er hand, Nicholls said “all bets are off.” Of the 100 that arrive via smart­phones only 8 will get to the cart. That sig­nals a need to opti­mize around search­ing on phones and make the process eas­i­er to get through to the cart. The vast major­i­ty of smart­phone users typ­i­cal­ly bail at the page imme­di­ate­ly after the shop­ping cat, which is where users typ­i­cal­ly have to log in or reg­is­ter or enter billing and ship­ping infor­ma­tion. “If you’re hold­ing a phone in your hand, how are you going to hold a cred­it card and enter num­bers?” Nicholls asks. “You need a desk, so you will do it when you get back to a desk­top.”

6. Consider Alternate Payments

There­fore, Nicholls said alter­nate pay­ments can have a dra­mat­ic impact on con­ver­sion rates on smart­phones in par­tic­u­lar, but it’s not as sim­ple as say­ing retail­ers should add more pay­ment choic­es because, as not­ed, too many choic­es can also be a prob­lem. Smart­phones are vital­ly impor­tant because con­sumers spend more time on them than any­where else and con­ver­sion rates are grow­ing 4 times faster than tablets and 14 times faster than desk­tops, Nicholls said. Alter­nate pay­ments on smart­phones can yield a dou­bling of con­ver­sion rate on the device, but, at the same time, there’s no obvi­ous sin­gle alter­nate pay­ment retail­ers should use. Pay­pal has the most crit­i­cal mass, but con­sumers have “neg­a­tive bag­gage asso­ci­at­ed with Pay­pal,” Nicholls said. Apple Pay could also be inter­est­ing, as could the sim­ple option of stor­ing cred­it card details on a web­site, he adds.

7. Find A Way To Cross Devices

Per Nicholls, Ama­zon is doing 7 times more mobile rev­enue than its near­est com­peti­tor because it com­bines remar­ket­ing with email nudges, which are fre­quent­ly opened on smart­phones and help car­ry the iden­ti­ty of the per­son and the con­text across devices. “This is real­ly slick – they have crossed devices,” Nicholls said. “So I was look­ing at a new pair of shoes on my desk­top, but now I’m on my smart­phone and I receive an email, but now I’m on my mobile and [they are] tap­ping into a few spare min­utes, which elim­i­nates the search­ing process. I hit one but­ton and add [the item] to the cart and in the Ama­zon expe­ri­ence, I hit one more but­ton to check out…” This process makes it incred­i­bly sim­ple for con­sumers, but Nicholls said many retail­ers don’t want to have to deal with PCI com­pli­ance even though “the sin­gle [best] way to dri­ve con­ver­sions is to com­bine remar­ket­ing and stored account details as a way to cross chan­nels.” How­ev­er, if a retail­er can’t do that, Nicholls rec­om­mends look­ing at alter­nate pay­ments, but, again, said to be aware of con­sumer bag­gage relat­ed to Pay­Pal and to not offer a huge mul­ti­tude of pay­ment options. “If you do too much, it caus­es prob­lems on the small screen,” he adds.

8. Pay Attention To The Time Of Day

Per Nicholls, in gen­er­al, the con­ver­sion rate on desk­top is high­er at most times of day than on smart­phones and tablets. The excep­tion, how­ev­er, is around 10 p.m. ET, which Nicholls dubs “the chardon­nay effect,” which means it’s the end of the day, con­sumers are on the couch and they may be watch­ing TV and/or using a tablet and are more relaxed and con­ver­sion rates on tablets go up. “They may be hav­ing a glass of some­thing, too, and, need­less to say, it loosens up the purse strings and away you go,” he said. “If you’re brows­ing some­thing at work at lunchtime, you decide you’ll look lat­er, and then you’re nice and relaxed and bang, bang, bang, out it goes.”

Lisa Lacy

Written by Lisa Lacy

Lisa is a senior features writer for Inked. She also previously covered digital marketing for Incisive Media. Her background includes editorial positions at Dow Jones, the Financial Times, the Huffington Post, AOL, Amazon, Hearst, Martha Stewart Living and the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

Inked is published by Linkdex, the SEO platform of choice for professional marketers.

Discover why brands and agencies choose Linkdex

  • Get started fast with easy onboarding & training
  • Import and connect data from other platforms
  • Scale with your business, websites and markets
  • Up-skill teams with training & accreditation
  • Build workflows with tasks, reporting and alerts

Get a free induction and experience of Linkdex.

Just fill out this form, and one of our team members will get in touch to arrange your own, personalized demo.