A great amount of time is spent designing
online shopping experiences with great emphasis on having product availability
online.
Despite the best efforts of Information
Architects, Graphic Designers, Marketers and yes Strategists over 70% of
shopping carts are abandoned online.
There is a huge commitment issue there (which is a whole other story),
but amuse yourself about thinking if that’s what actually happened at a place
like a grocery stores. That’s a lot of
restocking to be done.
Email is a great mechanism to help
convert that sale. You know what the
customer was interested in, and it’s inexpensive communication. Here is an example of a recent experience I
had at happysocks.com after just browsing – not adding anything to my cart.
I went to happysocks.com, browsed and not
feeling ready to buy anything provided my email address to receive promotions /
communications.
Exactly 4 weeks later I received the
offer below – 50% off any order of 10 items or more. A pretty good deal. I didn't click through, but I did forward
the message to a couple of people.
7 days following that I received another
email, with an even more compelling offer – 50% off any purchase, no minimum. I didn't click through – but was
interested to see that they dropped the minimum order requirement
7 days following that I received another
email, with their best offer yet – 70% off any purchase, no minimum. I clicked through, found some great socks
and added them to my cart.
I was interested to see how far they
would take this, so I closed my browser window after putting in some order
information (but no payment)
That afternoon, I received a follow up
email from them. It noted that I had abandoned my cart (had a link back
to it) and encouraged me to tell them if there was anything wrong they could
help me with and included a promo code for free shipping for me to use to
complete my order.
This sort of escalating follow up is a
great way to see a customer through to close the sale. They know I am
interested, they know I am ready to buy. I'm going to assume (okay, hope) they
are capturing these interactions to develop an optimal communications model
and offer combinations to ensure everyone wears colourful socks.
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