By Jason Chance
The following 10 tips now represent our standard advice to every entrepreneur.
1. Use your Ecommerce Software's Default Layout
Whatever shopping cart you use, the "stock" or default look is fine.
After all, if it wasn't the best layout of all time, why would they
distribute it as "stock" in the first place? Never mind that your site
will look like every other lazy shop owner who decided that product
presentation was overrated. Never mind that it has no flow, coherence,
or style. And you might as well just ignore the fact that it makes you
look like some high school kid in a basement trying to take their money
and run.
You lack design talent? We understand. After all, if you could make
nice Websites, you wouldn't be trying to sell whatever it is you make
online: you'd sell nice Websites instead. Sure, you could get a ready
made, beautiful drop-in template from one of hundreds of sites that
specialize in that sort of thing -- some of them even custom-made for
your cart platform -- for less than $200.00. But hey, you picked a FREE
cart, and darn it, this site is going to be free if it kills you (or
your chances of success). Those people that say you have to spend money
to make money are all full of garbage, right?
2. Don't use Thumbnails
Why would you want to speed up load times for slow connections, or
make your product shots look better? Good looking images are the sign
of professionalism and class, and you surely don't want your site to
have either of those. Sure, successful shop owners say better images
sell more products, but you don't have to listen to those people. After
all, what does a successful shop owner know that you don't?
Forget the fact that every cart on the planet either has the ability
to use thumbnail images built in, or a free and easy-to-install
contribution that handles them beautifully. Keep posting 800k images to
your site, and laugh at those people who talk about "site optimization"
and "load times".
3. Don't optimize your Images in Photoshop
Optimizing your images in Photoshop or some other image editing
program takes time -- your valuable time. Leaving pictures at their
original, huge dimensions and making the customer download 3MB of
images for each page in your site takes time too -- the pesky
customers' time. Everybody knows customers love to wait to buy your
products. Play a game! See how big you can make your images, watch how
your load time suffers, and then see how your conversion rates fare!
Challenge yourself to approach dialup speeds over your cable modem
using your stellar layered, uncompressed image design. I'm sure your
customers will love it!
4. Don't smooth the Checkout Process
People love filling out 8 pages of forms before they can buy stuff.
Better yet, add in a couple more pages to surprise the customer just
when they think they're finally through! You really do need the
customer's age, gender, and the name of his first-born son before you
can sell him your hand-painted dishrags.
Whatever you do, make it as hard as you can for the customer to
complete a sale and pay you money -- that's how you can tell if a
customer is truly dedicated (or if they love pain).
5. Ignore the Market you're "Targeting"
Sure, there are 50,000 computer stores online, but yours is going to
be the best! Market research is for people who don't know what they
want to sell, right? You never researched for a term paper in high
school and you passed. Why should an online business be any different?
Don't invest time or money in unique products or services, and don't
even think of developing some sort of unique selling proposition. Just
bang out a site with the exact same products as your competition, only
make yours more expensive, lesser known, and harder to deal with!
6. Don't add an SSL Certificate
All that junk about customers "Caring about their privacy" and being
"Worried about identity theft" is unfounded. Just ask my friend "John"
from Indonesia. Hey, by the way, he has $30,000,000.00 he wants to send
you. He just needs your credit card number along with your name and
billing address.
Never mind that SSL certificates enable the 128bit encrypted tunnel
between customers' computers and your payment processor. All that stuff
can just be sent plain text across the Internet. SSL certificates cost
money, and you're on a budget. Sure, the customer can sue you after
your Website is found responsible for their identity theft, but that's
not very likely to happen. You treat your customers like they're dumb
and their personally identifiable information is worthless, so they
probably don't have the smarts to hire a lawyer to sue you all the way
to the poor house. After all, $50 is a lot of money for security and
peace of mind!
7. Don't add Terms of Use, Privacy, or Conditions of Sale Statements
Some might say that customers like to know who they are dealing
with, but those people are full of it. Customers don't care about your
return policies, what to do if they receive a broken product, or what
to do if the size they ordered is wrong.
Likewise, they don't care what you're going to do with the
personally identifiable information you collect. I know for a fact
there are people who love SPAM mail: I received an email about it just
the other day. Oddly enough, it had a link for cheap "V I AG RR A" in
it too, whatever that is. Forget that mumbo jumbo about how providing
privacy and terms of sale information is a legal requirement in most
jurisdictions -- like I said, your customers are hardly going to get a
lawyer! Everybody knows that people don't like to sue lazy, complacent
companies for easy money, right?
8. Completely leave out Product Descriptions
All your customers need is a browser-resized, jagged picture of your
product. They don't need to know its features, limitations, or
comparisons to other products. Hey, if they knew all that, they'd
probably go buy your competitor's widget right?
Don't describe your product at all. Be sure to use your own
arbitrary part number scheme too, so customers can't search by the
manufacturer's part number to find the products they already know they
want to buy. Oh, and use some random picture for the product with a
note at the bottom that says, "Picture is a demo, actual product may
vary" so the customer never really knows what they're going to get.
9. Add Flash. Lots of it. Throw in some Java, too.
Flash intros rock. Add two of them, and make sure you don't put one
of those annoying "skip intro" links at the bottom. Heck, if you did
that, nobody would get the chance to experience your Uncle Joe's
mediocre Flash skills. When you finally do let the three customers who
are willing to sit through your tedious intros into your store, make
sure you have a Flash product menu, a Flash header, and random Flash
buttons all over the page. Page animations and moving text equate
directly to quality and usability, and don't you ever forget it!
Now, if all that Flash doesn't slow your site down to a crawl, don't
worry: you can always add Java. Sure, most professional developers and
customers refer to Java as "That Damn Dirty Java", but your customers
are different. Put random Java image switchers and scrollers on every
page. Put that neat-o Java water ripple effect thingy on your homepage,
because that wasn't old and tired enough in 1993. And make sure you
require users to have Java installed, along with Flash, Windows Media
Player, QuickTime, Comet Cursor, and goodness knows what else, in order
to use your site properly. Maybe throw in an ActiveX dialler installer
for good measure -- customers love to wait endlessly for compulsory
ad-ware-laden downloads while trying to spend their money on your
products!
10. Never post your Address or Phone Number
Customers never want to get a hold of you: that's why they buy
online! Plus, if they have a complaint, they have no way of getting in
touch with you other than email, and we all know how easy to ignore
that is. Just think -- without them knowing who you are, where you are,
or how to contact you, your customers can never send product returns,
make complaints, or cause waves. It's brilliant! You can claim customer
satisfaction is 100%, because nobody will ever be able to contact you
to tell you otherwise.
Sure, this might put off about 90% of your potential customers, but
don't let that stop you. That still leaves you 10% of the Internet, and
trust me, the Internet sure is big. Make sure you ship your items from
the shipping store or the post office so there is never a return
address on the box. When the credit card company calls you about a
chargeback, make sure you tell them the customer never called and
complained, and you never received a return.
How Horrible is your Ecommerce Site?
While these "tips" were written in good humor, the above pointers
cover serious advice that is not so much related to the technical
nature of an ecommerce site as it is to product and company
presentation.
Sometimes, the negative aspects of not taking certain actions have
more impact than extolling the virtues of doing it right. This article
is not designed to be a punch in the face to those diligent, passionate
store owners who really care about the service they provide, but as
more of a wake up call to future and existing shop owners and
developers.