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Great Ecommerce Ideas

Ten seasoned professionals offer a great idea

By: Practical eCommerce Staff
Comments: 7

Practical eCommerce recently asked 50 industry insiders to share a great, innovative idea that could potentially help an ecommerce firm. Here’s what ten of them had to say.

AL PASCALE
DIRECTOR OF SITELINK SERVICES
DYDACOMP
DYDACOMP.COM
Implement Product Descriptions
Use relevant and informative product descriptions. Not only will those descriptions help the shopper in their buying process but the content of that description will also be indexed by search engines, increasing the visibility of your website.

GREG LAPTEVSKY
SEARCH MARKETING AMBASSADOR
PRIME VISIBILITY
PRIMEVISIBILITY.COM
Research And Exclude Negative Keywords
Invest at least one hour every week to research negative keywords for your pay-per-click campaign. Be sure to exclude keywords such as free, no charge, no cost, problems, trouble, negative, bad, worst, rebate and similar keywords that you don’t want your ads showing up for.

JEFF DAHLBERG
OWNER
CHEAP SEEDS
CHEAPSEEDS.COM
Use Article Directories
Write articles and submit them weekly to Ezinearticles.com and other article directories. Search Google for article directories to find a top 50 list. If you don't have time to write them, hire someone at Elance.com, Guru.com or Getafreelancer.com for $5 to $10 each. This will get you traffic and backlinks.

JEFF MUENDEL
SEARCH ANALYST
NETCONCEPTS, LLC
NETCONCEPTS.COM

Build An Ecommerce Facebook Application
One of the best ways for an ecommerce site to get into the social media game and gain lots of new interest is though Facebook.com. Facebook’s open source policy is designed as an active invitation for creating applications, which has secondarily given birth to widget platforms like Clearspring.com.

ELIZABETH IRELAND
VICE PRESIDENT
NCIRCLE
NCIRCLE.COM
Incorporate Regular PCI Verification
Leverage your PCI compliance efforts every quarter as a benchmark for your overall security posture. When you go through compliance exercises, compare your previous scores and look for consistent reduction in type and number of problems you have to resolve.

Advertisement

KEVIN KOHN
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, MARKETING
LIVE PERSON, INC.
LIVEPERSON.COM
Use Simple Tools To Lower Abandonment
More than half of online shoppers abandon the checkout process before completing their purchase. Counter abandonment by adding simple tools like security certificates, progress bars and live chat to allay customer confusion, fears or frustrations.

MATHEW KEISTER
CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER
SEAMLESS DEVELOPMENT, INC.
SEAMLESSDEV.COM
Inventory Management Is Key To Success
One database means less hassle and less manpower required to keep track of inventory from multiple locations. The right database can also handle inventory from multiple locations. With the right software to manage it, there is no need to go beyond one program to add, remove, and track products.

MERCIA TAPPING
PRESIDENT/CEO
HEALTHY HOME INFORMATION AND PRODUCTS
ALLERGYBUYERSCLUB.COM
Online Chat Service Can Increase Sales
We now have two years experience using online chat services and have just moved to our third vendor. It does not provide the same level of conversion to sales as prospects that phone into our sales department, but it has increased our sales by 10-12 percent.

NIGEL RAVENHILL
MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR
SCANALERT, INC.
SCANALERT.COM
Make Trustmarks Prevalent
Place trustmarks on your home page and all catalog pages; don’t bury them in the shopping cart. The millions of security conscious shoppers who respond positively to trustmarks frequently abandon websites before they even get to the cart.

RICHARD SEXTON
CEO
CAROLINA RUSTICA
CAROLINARUSTICA.COM
Be Sure To Offer Flexibility
E-tailers face a huge challenge in the commoditization of brand-name products, facilitated by comparison shopping sites and other channels that sort products by price only. To survive, smaller e-tailers must offer payment flexibility, fast order handling, and outstanding customer support. Focus on best sellers and initiate quick-ship programs. Customers may pay more if they can get it fast.

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Published on Monday, December 17, 2007

Comments:

Pedestrian commentary at best, lacking insight into what is really driving e-commerce. Example: Inventory management as an "idea". Is it not a basic business requirement? Same thing with PCI compliance monitoring. If this is the best you can do I'll cancel my subscription to the newsletter.

Posted by: Steve
Tuesday, December 18, 2007

I wholeheartedly agree with Richard Sexton: "To survive, smaller e-tailers must offer ... outstanding customer support." This is even true for the offline storefront. One of the best ways to get customers coming back is for them to have a great experience in your store and if you can connect with the customer in some way, they will feel comfortable spending their money with you and price doesn't matter quite as much. Ask yourself the same question when you shop and you might find the same answer.
www.customer-e-service.com

Posted by: Wes
Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Well I am not a seasoned professional to give suggesstions, but yes experience wise this free business blog http://moguling.com/ has helped me grow my ecommecre business to some extent.

Posted by: jack
Tuesday, December 18, 2007

"Elance.com, Guru.com or Getafreelancer.com for $5 to $10 each" per article written? Give me a break. I have never seen an offer less than $150 per article and most people at that price don't write a very good article.

Posted by: Jeffrey
Tuesday, December 18, 2007

I have people who write great articles for less than $15.00 each. I have my newsletter written by someone that charges $100. and I don't have to do anything to it before I send it out. If I didn't know better I would think he owned the company. You have to look at a few sources and when you find someone good either hire them or give them enough work so they do yours right away.

Posted by: Jeff
Wednesday, January 02, 2008

I'm so glad that Greg Laptevsky mentioned negative keywords, which is something that hadn't occurred to me. A great little tweak on my AdWords campaign, and much appreciated advice.

Posted by: Kristen
Sunday, January 06, 2008

I have to offer a few thoughts on sites like Guru and Elance. Consider that the quality of the copy on your Website should be equal to the quality of the copy on your resume; how many quality articles can be written in an hour? As a freelancer, most of your time is spent marketing your services and arranging jobs; these are not billable hours.

Many new freelancers will go to sites like Guru because they think they can cut down on the time that they spend marketing themselves, and offer low rates to “get their foot in the door.” Realistically, a freelancer will spend hours reviewing and bidding jobs and if they bid low enough ($5-$15 per article is a high bid) they might get one out of ten (don’t forget to subtract Guru’s cut). Unless the freelancer is extremely well established, they will have around 1,000 billable hours per year. That makes for pretty easy math ($5 per hour = $5,000 per year). How many quality articles can be written per hour? How comfortable are you with plagiarism on your Website?

Elance has been positioning themselves as a source of quality freelancers by charging multiple fees. They charge freelancers significantly just to be members, they charge for every bid that you make (some bids are included with the membership fee) and they charge a percentage of your earnings. Until recently, Elance had a good thing going, but a recent change to the fee schedule has pushed many good writers away.

Can you get cheap work from these Websites? Absolutely. Do you want it?

Dan Lambert, MBA
Freelance Writer
BackupWriter.com

Posted by: Dan
Tuesday, January 08, 2008

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