MyTights.com wins prestigious “Drapers Best Specialist etailer” award
We were so pleased to find out that one of our clients won the Drapers award for Best Specialist eTailer 2010.
The Judges were emphatic in their praise for the site, “This pure-play eTailer was a clear winner, not only due to the selection of product on offer, but for the clean design, layout and usability of the site”.
We are so proud to have been involved with MyTights in the build of their new site – and pleased that the efforts of both MyTights and ourselves have paid off.
Congratulations to the Mytights Team!
Magento Modules – Single Product Category Redirect
Continuing our series on useful Magento modules that we have deployed for customers, today’s is Single Product Category Redirect.
It might not seem like so much of a problem, but if you have a key category that has a single product, then taking your potential customer to a listing page to choose from a list of one looks a bit rubbish! this little module solves the problem nicely by adapting behavoiur so that all single product categories divert the customer directly to the product page. It looks slick, reduces customer annoyance and increases conversion.
Best of all it is completely free!
More details can be found at www.magentocommerce.com/extension/1455/single-product-category-redirect
…. Next Up – currency and location re-directs ….
Magento Modules – Postcode Anywhere
One of the great strengths of Magento is that you can plug in additional functionality in a modular manner. These modules are produced by Magento’s extensive community and are available on both a free and pay basis. It’s a bit like the Apple iPhone and it’s App Store ; Whatever you need -there’s a module for that!
Today we look at an Address autofill module based on the PostCode Anywhere service.
Grassroots Digital launches a new site for Smart Turnout
Grassroots Digital has just launched a new site for Smart Turnout, providers of Old School, University and Regimental clothing and accessories. Smart Turnout required a new platform to replace their Actinic site, improve their operational efficiency and help drive their US expansion.

The new site was developed in partnership with Cogent Design, who provided the initial design and Caked Design who delivered design implementation.
The site includes dual price pointed currency, with automatic routing of customers to the correct site, depending on their location, flash elements on the home page and a dual horizontal and vertical menu structure.
In addition Smart Turnout provided an integration to Smart Turnouts CRM and financial platforms and additional order and inventory management applications. This has allowed Smart Turnout to simplify their fulfilment process and improve the quality of data being captured by their CRM applications.
If you want to find out more about what Grassroots Digital can do for you then call 0333 123 0506 or email info@grassrootsdigital.co.uk
Grassroots Digital launches a new site for MyTights.com
Grassroots Digital is pleased to announce the recent launch of a new site for MyTights.com, the leading online hosiery retailer.
Launched on the Magento ecommerce platform and the site includes a full integration to MNP’s Order Active platform. This allows the use of Magento’s excellent shopping cart and content management platform, combined with Order Active’s best of breed order management functionality.
The project included a number of custom Magento modules for affiliate management, colour swatch handling and order export. In addition Grassroots produced a full payment gateway module for the Commidea platform.
Grassroots Digital also drew on it’s partnership network to deliver this project . Technical development was provided by Flint Technology, design and brand development by Alphabet Advertising and design implementation and other creative was provided by Caked Design.
If you want to find out more about what Grassroots Digital can do for you then call 0333 123 0506 or email info@grassrootsdigital.co.uk
Sales Revenue falling? – Here’s an Analytics Checklist – Part 3
Over the last two posts we looked at the basics of how to analyse problems in your traffic acquisition channels and some of the sudden conversion failures that can occur as traffic comes to your site. In this post we look at a more subtle problem – that of gradual conversion failure, where your conversion rate falls steadily over the course of a few weeks or months.
What Have you missed – Gradual Conversion failure
This can be the most frustrating and hard to identify problem – as there is likely to be no specific event that has caused the drop off – it will either be a gradual misalignment or a combination of factors.
We talked about stock levels in the last posting, and how reductions of stock can affect conversion. This, of course, can have a similar affect over a longer term period. If you let your stock run down gradually then prepare to see you conversion rate follow it. Customers do not wish to wait for items when buying online, they want it now!
Start with your biggest selling products
Your biggest selling products – are they selling well? These are products that are likely to be in a larger majority of baskets – so problems with these products might affect conversion. If you have a range of products that are significantly more expensive, or convert significantly better, than the norm then this might be a first port of call.
Search Terms
A key problem that often happens is that trends come and go and your site does not adapt to take account of it. So how can you tell whether this is happening? One way is to look at Search terms and Keywords. First let’s look at search terms, and by this I mean the search terms that have been used on site – which you can find under “Content” in Google Analytics. What are the biggest search terms? How are they converting. As people using search are statistically more likely to convert (as they are actively looking for something) this conversion rate should be significantly (2 to 3 times) higher that you site wide conversion rate. If they are lower you should ask why – is it because they are not finding what they are looking for? – in which case you may need to look at your navigation – or is it because once they find the item it is not inspiring them to buy – in which case you need to look at your product offering in terms of pricing and copy.
Landing Pages
You should then compare search terms and Pay Per Click keywords with your landing pages – do they correspond? Do you have your content arranged to match what customers are looking for?
A recent client was having a gradual fall off in conversion, and noticed that they had no specific landing page for their biggest search term. They had plenty of products that were relevant, but they were not arranged in a manner that showed them off to their best advantage when the customer arrived onsite. Creating a specific landing page for that search term had a marked and rapid effect on conversion
Another example of this is a case where it transpired that the top search term was for a product type where they only had 3 items – all of which were priced in excess of the average order value (ie were relatively expensive items). The company knew that this was a problem but had rather put their head in the sand. There were two options – either source a wider range of product (which proved difficult in the short term) or encourage the customer to look at an alternative/substitute product. In the short term they chose the latter course of action – they created a landing page for the search term (and a search redirect), added in the products they had that exactly matched the search term, and also added in some suitable, and lower priced substitute products. The result was that their conversion rate for the search term improved – which dramatically helped their overall conversion.
Keywords and phrases
You should also ensure that your on-site search terms and your PPC terms match each other, or if they do not that you have ensured that your PPC visitors arrive at a fully relevant landing page (and hence don’t have to use search). On site search terms are also a useful guide to keywords and phrases you should consider bidding on in PPC.
Coming Up Next
In the next post we will look at Average Order Value and consider ways to benchmark your performance. If you have any further questions, or need advice or solutions, then email me – justin@grassrootsdigital.co.uk or call 0333 123 0506
Sales Revenue falling? – Here’s an Analytics Checklist – Part 2
Previously we looked at factors that affect the visitor numbers to your site (www.grassrootsdigital.co.uk/sales-revenue-falling-heres-an-analytics-checklist ), but if these have held up then your problem is one of conversion.
Conversion – On Site Performance
If your traffic levels are unaffected and your traffic composition is unchanged then you need to start looking at the performance of your site, and the headline metrics for this are conversion rate and average order value. As the key aim of the site is to convert visitors into customers – being able to systematically analysis on site performance is key – as this represents wasted marketing spend. Again you should first ascertain whether the drop off has been gradual or sudden. If the former then you might ask – “What have I missed”, if sudden ask “What have I changed”.
Getting the tools of the trade right
It all very well identifying the problem when you suddenly have no orders – as something has obviously gone kaput – but its more difficult when your conversion rate has reduced significantly (but not to nothing). It’s back to your analytics (and lets face it – if you’re reading this then its good old Google Analytics!) to ascertain the problem. When it comes to analytics it is identifying change that is the name of the game and to do that you have to know what things were like in the past. This means that your analytics package has to be properly configured before you have a problem – it’s no use getting round to configuring it as the problem starts – as retrospective changes are not on the agenda. So what do you need to configure?
- Goals & Funnels
- Search Query parameters
- Ecommerce Functionality (be careful if you do multi currency transactions!)
- Affiliate URL tags
- Filters to exclude internal traffic
What Have You Changed? – Sudden Conversion Failure
There are a number of potential problems here
Bottlenecks – checkout process/payment methods and Pageload times
Bottleneck somewhere on your site do happen – and the quickest way to identify them is through the Google Analytics ‘Top exit ‘pages (are there any unusual items on the list?). If the checkout process is the problem it will show up in the Funnel Visualisation tool (so make sure you have set it up!). Customers get bored pretty quickly and slow loading pages will do that pretty effectively. If your server is on go slow (either due to traffic capacity or due to database problems) then your customers are not going to hang about. You can check page load times really easily – have a look at the excellent Pingdom for a solution http://tools.pingdom.com/. This problem will usually be accompanied by an increase in the bounce rate.
Stock Levels
One of the biggest “Conversion Killers” is stock levels. As a rule of thumb if you halve your stock then expect your conversion rate to be half as well. An additional issue with stock problems is that they don’t show up on your analytics package. An excellent and recent illustration came from a retailer that was moving fulfilment in-house. In order to save on the cost of moving and to smooth the move process they had new stock delivered to their new in-house warehouse and ran down stock at their operational warehouse. While this produced a smooth handover, it had a disastrous and remarkably sudden effect on their conversion rate – and in the end they lost far more in lost sales margin than they saved in moving costs. The good news was that as soon as they brought all their stock back on line and levels up to their normal level, their conversion rate returned to normal.
Coming Up Next
In the next post we will look at gradual conversion failure – the “What have I missed” section. If you have any further questions in the meantime, or need advice or solutions, then email me – justin@grassrootsdigital.co.uk.
Sales Revenue falling? – Here’s an Analytics Checklist – Part 1
If your sales revenue has just dropped off a cliff it can be pretty scary – and sometimes quite difficult to see where the problem lies. If you don’t have an analytics package in place (at a minimum Google Analytics) you will have an almost impossible time trying to ascertain the problem – it’s like driving at night with no lights!For some basic advice on the importance of Data Analysis see our white paper at Data Analysis for SME Retailers (105) and for detailed information on what data analysis package to buy you can do no better than going to eConsultancy and reading their latest analytics buyers guide (http://econsultancy.com/reports/web-analytics-buyer-s-guide-2008).
Back to the present though – and assuming you have an analytics package, how can you use it to ascertain where the problem lies? The first step you need to take is to see whether the problem is in traffic levels or conversion – Have the numbers of people coming to your site dropped off or are they still coming to the site in the same numbers but for some reason are not buying? Read more
Magento SEO
Magento is an excellent platform from and SEO point of view – but with a few tweaks and some good coding practice it can be awesome.
An excellent guide to Magento SEO is available at
Magento SEO – Yoast – Tweaking Websites.
This guy knows what he’s taking about!
Hope this helps
Magento Spotting
New sites using Magento are popping up all over the place as retailers increasingly look to Open Source platforms to deliver value, flexibility and portability – without sacrificing retail functionality. Have a look at Magento – Blog – eCommerce Software for Growth.