Omni-channel commerce - The eCommerce Foundation

In today’s article, we are going to look at eCommerce in the traditional sense with a retailer having their own eCommerce site. We will explore the other online channels in future articles.

For most retailers, traditional eCommerce should be the center piece of an omni-channel strategy. Not only does it allow your customer to buy from you at their convenience but it can be the focal point of all of your marketing initiatives, regardless of channel. Your eCommerce website can be the driver of new business, a way to interact with current customers, and even used to drive foot traffic into your brick and mortar store.

The Pros of having your own eCommerce website:

  • You are in control of your customer

  • Promotions, New Product Lines, Seasonal Offerings, etc. can all be easily featured on modern eCommerce sites

  • New customers searching for the products you carry can find you and confirm that you have what they are looking for and make purchases

  • You can cross promote between channels using your eCommerce site as the final link to complete purchases

  • You can drive foot traffic into your brick and mortar store

There are many more but let’s look at these primary ones in a little more detail.

Your are in control of your customer

When a customer makes a purchase on your eCommerce site, you capture essential information about them. Name, address, phone, and email are the basics that will help you turn a new customer into a repeat buyer. On shopping platforms like Amazon, the customer belongs to Amazon, not you. Being able to market to your customer and increase their lifetime value to you is critical to success. An article by John James of Engine Commerce illustrates this point quite clearly: How we built a $100 million eCommerce business using 8th grade math He shows how increasing your margin and reducing expenses, while nice, isn’t the key to explosive growth. Marketing to your customers and turning new customers into repeat customers is and it applies to in-store as well as online customers. If you don’t control your customer, you are losing sales.

Promotions, New Product Lines, Seasonal Offerings, etc. can all be easily featured on modern eCommerce sites

One of the cornerstones of a good omni-channel strategy is to be able to give your customers the same experience wherever and whenever they interact with your store (there are rare exceptions which I will discuss in a bit). Just as you feature items in your shop window to draw in people walking by, the home page on your eCommerce site should entice browsers to click further. Featuring promotions, new products or brands, and popular items and keeping them fresh, just as you do those items in your store window, is crucial. Modern eCommerce platforms have made it much easier to change the content featured on your home page yourself so you should strive to have your home page reflect what you are doing in-store.

New customers searching for the products you carry can find you and confirm that you have what they are looking for and make purchases

As I mentioned in last week’s post, up to 80% of customers research online before walking into a store (or while in-store) to make a purchase. If you don’t have a quality eCommerce site utilizing proper SEO techniques, perhaps augmented with search engine marketing, those customers won’t know you exist and someone else can get the sale you should have had.

You can cross promote between channels using your eCommerce site as the final link to complete purchases

Featuring products in emails, on social media, or through other channels that allow you to link back to your eCommerce site can allow your customers to purchase from your site in as little as two clicks. Making it easy to buy from you is one of the primary purposes of an eCommerce site. Using other channels to drive your customers there only makes sense.

You can drive foot traffic into your brick and mortar store

Even though a consistent experience across all channels is extremely important for a solid omni-channel strategy, there are times when it makes sense to favor one channel over another. Perhaps you have just remodeled your brick and mortar store and would like to encourage people to come in. In that case, offering a coupon on the website that can only be redeemed in-store can help you achieve your goal. In the same vein, you can offer coupons to your in-store patrons that they can only redeem online to drive new visitors to your site.

The Cons of having your own eCommerce website

  • Cost

  • Management

In my mind, eCommerce is so crucial to today’s retailer that cost and management aren’t really cons but things that need to be addressed in a way that makes sense for your business.

Cost

Typically, there are two types of costs directly related to running an eCommerce site: The upfront costs of getting a website setup and running and the ongoing costs associated with maintaining the site.

Setup costs can include software, design and development, and data entry. These costs can range from $0 to $50,000+ depending on the platform and features desired. In reality, no site can be setup for $0 since there is always the business owner’s time involved and even though it may not be out of pocket, it is still an expense that should be considered. How much you should spend on setup depends on your vertical, number of items, long term goals, and the resources (both human and financial) that you have available.

Ongoing costs include fees for hosting for your site, the costs associated with maintaining the database and home page, and any other fees you may incur like credit card processing fees. If you do most of the work yourself and don’t do many online transactions, you might get by for as little as $50/month in out of pocket expenses. Using employees to maintain the database, using a more feature rich eCommerce platform, and including a marketing budget to promote the site can drive monthly costs easily into the thousands of dollars. That is fine if the sales you are making (or planning on making) support those kinds of numbers.

Management

Hand in hand with the ongoing costs is the effort it takes to maintain the site properly. Item entry, inventory accuracy, ability to coordinate marketing efforts across channels, customer addition and maintenance and ease of home page maintenance all play a part in a successful eCommerce effort.

eCommerce platforms that integrate directly with your in-store POS can make a huge difference by essentially automating items, inventory counts, and customer data but tend to be more expensive than non-integrated options on a monthly basis. In my first post, I go into more detail about considering integrated eCommerce and why.

Marketing should be planned and executed according to that plan. With the competition in today’s eCommerce landscape, just because you build a great website doesn’t mean it will succeed.

Like your shop window, your home page will need consistent attention. Whether you are hiring someone to do this or doing it yourself, you will still be the one determining what sales, products, and brands to feature.

The bottom line is an eCommerce site can require (and should receive) as much of your time and energy as a new brick and mortar location.

With a solid eCommerce website presence, you will be able to grow your business utilizing the website and other channels in concert.

Good luck selling!

Jim

To Integrate Or Not To Integrate... That is the eCommerce question of the week

Integrated vs Non-integrated eCommerce

So you know that you need to offer your products online in order to succeed in today’s digital retail world. As a small business owner, your next question needs to be, “should I go with integrated ecommerce or not?”. Integrated ecommerce tends to cost more than non-integrated solutions so it is an important decision to get right.

For the sake of this discussion, integrated eCommerce is when your eCommerce website is connected to your in-store point of sale system and keeps inventory counts, items, and customers updated between the two (and any other sales channel you might be using).

For many smaller retailers, keeping costs down is crucial for survival. However, you don’t want to be “penny wise and pound foolish”.

To determine if you need integrated ecommerce, ask yourself the following questions:

  1. Do I have more than 30-50 items to offer for sale online?

  2. Will I be handling more than 1-3 orders per day?

  3. Does my current point of sale system have a built-in integration to an eCommerce website or do good 3rd party integrations exist for my point of sale and one or more of the main stand alone ecommerce options (like Magento or Shopify)?

  4. What is my budget?

If you answered “Yes” to either of the first two questions and the answer is “Yes” to the third, then you definitely need to take a look at integrating your eCommerce site with your point of sale system. If you answered “Yes” to BOTH of the first two questions and the answer to the third was “No”, you need to seriously consider a different point of sale system for your business as having integrated eCommerce will be that crucial to your ongoing success.

For a small business with a limited number of items that are either a) “one of a kind” or b) will always be in stock, non-integrated ecommerce can be an inexpensive way to get started with online selling. Keeping inventory levels accurate in either situation isn’t difficult and until the daily number of online orders starts growing, the additional work to maintain the site and process the orders won’t be overbearing.

HOWEVER, if you are going to maintain more items and inventory count accuracy matters or if you are processing several orders a day, integrated eCommerce begins to be important, if not necessary, to running your business successfully. Integrated eCommerce can save you a lot of time and trouble by removing the need to maintain two databases of item information, manual entry of your online orders into your point of sale system for sales and inventory tracking, and improving your customer’s online shopping experience by virtually eliminating issues like selling items that are out of stock.

Finally, you need to consider your budget. Even if you answered “No” to the first two questions, I am an advocate of integrated eCommerce if you can afford it. If you grow your online sales over time, you won’t have to change ecommerce platforms in the future if you are already integrated. If you do choose not to use integration initially, at least try to select an eCommerce platform that you can integrate with later if your business grows. Switching eCommerce platforms is almost always painful from both a time investment perspective and from lost page ranking as your new site is re-indexed by the search engines. If you answered “No” to the first two questions and don’t plan on trying to expand your business via eCommerce then a non-integrated eCommerce website can work for you.

To learn more about both integrated and non-integrated eCommerce options, feel free to contact me.

Good Luck Selling!

Jim