Posts tagged as:

Marketing

I Don’t Know a Damn Thing About Your Site

by CraftyCoach - Norm Lanier on December 3, 2008

Let’s start off with a story – everyone likes stories right? Back in October I went to my first internet marketing conference with one of the top internet marketers in the country and the people from his team. The price of admission was $2500 for three days – yup I’m serious about this stuff. The marketer is Joel Comm, author of a New York Times best seller and co-owner of a multi-million dollar marketing company.

So at the event they had a hot seat where they did live critiques of attendee’s web sites. I was lucky enough to be chosen and we ripped one of my sites apart. The first suggestion was to eliminate a page where visitors choose one product or another. He said to lose that page and just send them directly to the page most visitors went to anyway. This is something I had been thinking about and it made sense.

The second suggestion was to change all the fonts to sans-serif from serif. So if you don’t know sans-serif fonts are fonts like helvitica and arial that don’t have the little flairs on the tips of the letters. Serif would be a font like times new roman. On the surface the suggestion makes sense because studies show that on a computer monitor sans-serif fonts like arial are easier to read.  The reason I went with serif fonts was that the audience to this web site is older, more suspicious of buying things online and serif fonts look more official and they are more used to reading those fonts like the fonts that would be used in a newspaper.

So you’re probably saying to yourself this is stupid. Changing the font certainly wouldn’t affect my buying decision and most people would probably say the same thing. If you have a website – not a blog – Google has a service where you install a small piece of code on several pages and they will send half of your visitors to one page and send half to a duplicate page you’ve made a change to. By monitoring how many people make it to the goal page you can determine if the change makes any difference. Cool huh?

Well as it currently stands almost 500 visitors have run through the serif/non-serif test and the serif page is converting 12.9% better than the non-serif page. Now all of the studies that say non-serif works better are true, but not on my site. You see those studies don’t know a damn thing about my site or my customers. Was it a valid test to try? Absolutely, but the real problem here is if you can’t test like I did how would you know when someone says you should do this or that?

Not having any sort of analytics is a major issue I have with Etsy. You have no idea what words visitors used to reach your listing, what time of the day you get the most traffic etc. On eBay I used to subscribe to a service and by putting a small piece of code on the listing page I could tell all these things plus what part of the world they were in, if they returned, how long they stayed for and much more. On Etsy it’s almost impossible to tell anything about shop visitors.

The point of this article – if I have thoroughly confused you – is you have to filter any advice you get about marketing based on you knowing your customer. The things I suggest work for most sites but only you can determine if it works or not for you. You also need to be careful about whose giving the advice. I have seen an Etsy marketing guide – not mine :-) – suggest you pay for traffic from Google to get visitors to your Etsy shop. This is just simply reckless advice. Buying traffic can get real expensive real quick and if you can’t tell if that traffic gets additional sales you might as well just burn your money.

Now I’m not implying you shouldn’t try new things. You should, try new ideas even if your not sure if they will help, but you have to watch and listen to what your customers say and do because that’s the only thing that really matters.

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Are You Closing A Sale or Opening a Relationship?

by CraftyCoach - Norm Lanier on October 27, 2008

When you make a sale is it the beginning or the end of sales process? If you aren’t developing relationships with your customers by continuing the conversation after the sale then you are missing a huge opportunity. One of the common questions I get is how can I get more sales. To this I often respond “Do you send updates to your previous customers?” The response sadly is usually “No”. So let me ask a question, do you think it’s easier to sell to new customers whom have never heard of you or to sell to someone that owns a piece of your work and already knows the quality you produce?

Now what I’m talking about is not spamming people but asking each of your customers “would you like to hear about my new work”. Only when they have requested that they want to get updates from you should they be put on a list. Also they should be able to remove themselves from the list easily.

People like doing business with people they like so make the conversation fun. Talk about your work, your family, what makes you tick. If you’re a faceless website with no personality then why would they buy from you instead of from some big-box store? If you really want to blow your customers away, call them about a week after they’ve received their purchase and asked them how they like it. When was the last time that happened to you? What would you think about the crafts person that did that?

In this day and age of isolation people are starving for interaction with real people. Let the conversation begin with the sale, not end.

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