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Shopping cart abandonment is one of the most vital problems online businesses face. Want to reduce shopping cart abandonment on your site? Learn here.
Online shopping has been a convenient commerce alternative for a little over the past two decades. Retailers can leverage this for better customer retention. For example, Kohl’s department stores installed kiosks that enable web-based ordering. For items that are not readily available in-store, they use the iPad in kiosk mode to place the order on-the-spot. This is a preventative measure to keep customers from going to competitors.
As many retailers in the past months have had to temporarily close their stores due to COVID-19 shelter-in-place measures, the investment retailers have put into their e-retailer operations stands to pay off.
For those retailers who were hoping more customers would get on board with online shopping, the current economic necessity for web-based alternatives may be your silver bullet.
30% of consumers say they prefer to buy from a website they have already purchased from. Getting that first sale is key. An initial transaction leads to future sales opportunities such as capturing an email address. This helps build a list for email campaigns that encourage repeat business.
But sealing that deal hinges on an order submission button. For a variety of reasons, customers don’t transition through the whole checkout process or sometimes hesitate to make that final click. In fact, the abandoned cart rate over the past 7 years is on average nearly 70%.
So why is this the case?
Tackling the checkout abandonment problem starts with exploring customer behavior. Many reasons are rooted in a competitive marketplace where customers are aware that they have options.
Cart abandonment is also due to friction stemming from issues such as consumer confidence and user experience issues. By examining the top following reasons for why customers decide to abandon their online purchases, we can work to reduce online shopping cart abandonment.
One of the advantages of brick and mortar stores is that consumers can expect to take the products home the same day and pay only what’s on the tag.
With an online order, high shipping costs applied at checkout induce sticker shock. 50% of US consumers surveyed pointed to added costs as the reason for not following through with a purchase.
Slow shipping speed is also a deterrent to online shopping. With stores running out of essential items, people may start online shopping at a competitor website via mobile while still in the store.
Reasonable arrival time is a consolation for not being able to get the product on-demand in the store, especially with immediate need items. 18% of US shoppers surveyed said slow delivery speed was the reason for not completing their order.
Economize shipping costs so you can offer an economical rate. Avoid an unpleasant surprise by being upfront about your rates early in the transaction.
Justify higher shipping costs by attaching the value of faster shipping. When you call it expedited shipping, it’s presented in a way that lets the consumer know they are getting an added benefit for the cost.
However, with so many retailers offering free shipping, consumers may perceive this as a baseline. According to a National Federation Research study, 47% of shoppers said they didn’t move forward with ordering because of a free shipping issue.
Does this mean you should offer free shipping to everyone? Not necessarily. You can leverage free shipping appeal by setting a threshold order amount. In that same study, 51% stated they would add more items to the order if that meant the shipping is free.
Offering shipping rates that meet consumer expectations and reasonable arrival time reduces friction that sends customers in the direction of your competitors.
Another brick and mortar store advantage is customer awareness of return policies and procedures. They have come to expect an instant refund with in-person returns. However, with online sellers, returns can be a wild card.
A simple and clear cut return policy that’s out in the open informs them of recourse if the purchase doesn’t work out. It’s one less answer they’d have to hunt down.
If you happen to offer a generous return policy like free returns, flaunt this on your website so that they have one more reason to complete the order.
Customers want to order from sellers they can trust, so transparency about your return policy reduces purchase completion resistance by letting consumers know that you aren’t about the fine print.
Adding to the cart is a cinch but filling in lines of data and matching passwords is a drag, especially when it’s done on a mobile device.
Encountering a check-out page with a multi-step registration process has some customers throwing up their hands. 21% of US consumers stated that a tedious checkout process is why they bailed on a purchase.
The hassle of creating a new account can lead to procrastination or shopping elsewhere. As more websites present a user-focused design, consumers come to expect ease of use. You reduce abandonment with a truly user-friendly checkout process.
By making checkout design improvements, an eCommerce site stands to see a 35% boost in conversion rate. Optimize your customer’s web experience by making the process as user friendly and as simple as possible.
Suggest an “express lane” with a “guest checkout” option. By reducing the work you propel the customer to wrap up the process.
Auto-fill functionality is also a big help. Device software remembers previously entered information like the full name, phone number, address, email address, credit card info, etc. Auto-fill actions populate all the associated fields with user data. Enable auto-fill to create an easy form completion journey.
Customer hesitation with completing an order may also have to do with doubts that they are making the best choice. When seeking affirmation they typically jump to another resource.
What they may search for:
Giving them what they would seek elsewhere mitigates the temptation to leave your page.
One-stop-shop options:
It may simply come down to personal reasons and preferences. 58.6% leave a site with an item in the cart because they were just looking and not quite ready to buy.
We live in a highly distracted society. When making a purchase on a mobile device, phone calls and notifications divert the user’s attention away completely.
A variety of personal factors may come into play when a user almost finishes a purchase but for some reason doesn’t. Here’s what you can do to combat this cumbersome issue.
Let’s say a customer added an item to their cart on your mobile website, but then Facebook sent a notification that their friend is doing a live stream. They click on the notification to go check out the video feed. When the video ends, they go check their Facebook feed.
Facebook has almost 2.5 billion active monthly users, and the number of users continues to grow around 10% each year. If your website was set up for Facebook retargeting, this customer would likely see your associated ad front and center when scrolling their feed. It’s a little, “Ahem,” to remind them they were about to buy from you.
A retargeted ad acts as a sales agent to move in and close the deal. You need not resort to begging for the sale, but present them with something enticing. This would be an ideal spot to offer something that sweetens the deal, such as an exclusive discount.
If you’re able to capture an email address from a wandering shopper, having an automated email set up helps with shopping cart recovery.
A well-timed email lures them back to the point of sale system. According to Moosend, abandoned cart emails have a 45% open rate and 50% of those return link clicks results in finalizing a purchase.
In an increasingly competitive marketplace and with the short attention span of internet culture, consumers can be difficult to get a grip on.
The frugal will shop around for the cheapest price and lowest shipping.
The cautious will seek reassurance through research.
The impatient will expect an effortless transaction plus fast shipping.
The distracted and indecisive will be all over the place.
But with creative solutions and implementing best practices, you can work to reduce friction by accommodating all of the above and keep all on track toward completing transactions.
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This post was submitted by a TNS experts. Check out our Contributor page for details about how you can share your ideas on digital marketing, SEO, social media, growth hacking and content marketing with our audience.
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