iEntry 10th Anniversary RSS Newsletter Advertising
Visit Twellow.com
Text: Decrease Font Size Increase Font Size | Print Print Article | Share: Delicious Digg StumbleUpon Post to Twitter Post to Facebook
32 commentsSaturday, May 16, 2009

Stop Making It Hard For People To Give You Their Money

Forcing visitors to register could be costing you a lot

Sometimes one has to state the obvious: You’re in business to make money. You make money by convincing lots of people to give you some of their money. Success depends on making this process as painless as possible*.

But many online businesses may be making it too difficult for customers to hand over the cash, which is a bad business practice by any account.

Here’s what people (especially men) are used to:

I go into a store. I see something I want to buy. I give money to the salesperson. I leave with the thing I wanted to buy.

But what they’re experiencing in online shopping is often different. It goes more like this:

I see something I want to buy. Salesperson asks if I’m a registered user before I can buy thing I want to buy. I don’t remember if I’m in their special club or not, so I try many usernames, emails, and passwords. None of them work. Did I forget my password? Maybe. I’ll tell them my email address and then I’ll go check my email to see if they sent me the magic words that will let me buy the thing I want to buy. I check my email, but regardless of whether the magic words are there, I’ve now lost interest in (run out of time for, been distracted from, irritated about) buying the thing I had wanted to buy because they made it too much trouble to give them my money and leave with the thing I wanted to buy.

Okay, here are some concrete numbers:

  • 75: The percentage of those clicking the “forgot password” button that don’t come back to finish the purchase.
  • 23: The percentage of those abandoning the checkout process at the first sign of a registration prompt.
  • 45: The percentage of registered customers who have bad memories and register multiple times, some as many as 10 times, meaning sites requiring registration might have inflated data.
  • 300 million: The number of lost dollars one major retailer found after taking away the registration button.


Here’s a money quote:

"I'm not here to enter into a relationship. I just want to buy something." – Customer wanting to give money to retailer to buy the thing they wanted to buy.

Best course of action:

Make it easier for people to give you their money by not requiring they register to do so. Give them a choice to register so that it’s easier for them to give you their money more often in the future or to proceed to checkout where they can give you their money immediately without the hassle of becoming your friend.

Don’t believe me? Read these posts and decide for yourself:

The $300 Million Button
Required Registration Lowers Online Conversion Rates
Top 10 Online Retailers
Checkout Inspiration From Top Converting Sites



*Energy, lending, insurance, telecom, and cable businesses excluded.

 

I couldn't agree more

Just wanted to say that as a woman I am also put off by having to register to make a purchase. And while I understand why some require you to give your email information after you've paid and before you receive your product I don't like that either.

When someone wants to buy something, whether they're a man or a woman, you should make it as easy as possible. Then after they've made their purchase and gotten what they paid for you can ask them if they'd like to register. I think this approach is much more customer friendly.

Have these guys purchased online before?

In my experience there are still so many company executives that are out of touch with many things including, believe it or not, using the Internet. I have personally witnessed this at a company I worked for where the CEO made the sales force insist that customers give up their email address before they could complete a sale, not just on the website, but also at the store level! His plan was, of course, to mine that information and use it to email our sales and save on postage! He should have read this article……..

What happened was we ended up with many bogus email addresses, an ISP that gave us grief about the integrity of our email campaigns, and lots of irate customers who “didn’t want to enter into a relationship; they just wanted to buy something!” It was a disaster and alienated people from the site we were so desperately trying to promote.

Hopefully, this CEO and others will realize that the website should make it easy for a customer to spend rather than putting more obstacles in front of the customers.

Publish A Comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
3 + 7 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
SEARCH
Popular WPN Business Resources












Subscribe to WebProNews


Send me relevant info