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Coleen
#1 Posted : Friday, November 30, 2007 2:09:10 PM(UTC)
Coleen

Rank: Member

Joined: 4/30/2007(UTC)
Posts: 383

We're going okay so far on the conversion rates but we're hoping it will improve. If you were to get 500 unique visitors to your site what would be an acceptable rate of conversions either online or offline?
MitchA
#2 Posted : Friday, November 30, 2007 2:43:34 PM(UTC)
MitchA

Rank: Member

Joined: 3/3/2006(UTC)
Posts: 1,737

Apples and Oysters. My conversion rate for cu$tom furniture won't compare well for a site's conversion rate for 1 lb bags of coffee. Perhaps there is an industry-specific forum that will get you closer to an apples to apples comparison.

For the record, I don't know or care what my conversion rate is. I make plenty of money, my customers and happy and my site is getting better every day in eye-appeal and function. As long as my site looks better and is easier to use (shopper side) than my competitor's, I'm happy. 'sides, much of my business is still from off-line recources.
Optimists invent airplanes,
Pessimists buy parachutes.
Coleen
#3 Posted : Friday, November 30, 2007 3:43:42 PM(UTC)
Coleen

Rank: Member

Joined: 4/30/2007(UTC)
Posts: 383

Mitch our average purchase size is probably comparable.

It wasn't a specific question but I am surprised to hear you don't care about conversion rates unless you're essentially running an online catalog.

I'm mainly looking for responses from those that are interested in closing actual sales online, is 1% normal, 5% etc for most of you? Joe, Attachedtobaby etc.



Thanks
birdsafe
#4 Posted : Friday, November 30, 2007 9:27:55 PM(UTC)
birdsafe

Rank: Member

Joined: 2/21/2007(UTC)
Posts: 1,113

I'm averaging a rate of about 10 percent right now -- as documented by Google Analytics. I have one product area that alone gets a conversion rate of plus-25 percent because I'm simply the best place for this product (or range of products by the same manufacturer), so that one category is bringing the overall rate up -- but that product area also has a lower margin.
Coleen
#5 Posted : Friday, November 30, 2007 11:12:45 PM(UTC)
Coleen

Rank: Member

Joined: 4/30/2007(UTC)
Posts: 383

Cool, we're around 3% so far but our products are complex and the checkout process befuddles many...if we could get to your 10%...I'd be thrilled.
dotnetdiva
#6 Posted : Saturday, December 1, 2007 2:10:03 AM(UTC)
dotnetdiva

Rank: Member

Joined: 6/26/2006(UTC)
Posts: 351

I'm dead tired right now, did a phenomenol promotion today, whew!

I would guess about 2-3%. Baby slings is something to be researched, so we offer tons of pre-sales support (and during and post). Also, alot of people just come to look at photos of the slings, these mamas are really obsessed, its like collecting shoes or purses or diaper bags but on an unbelievable level. So people come to our site, and just lust alot. I'll get back with the right percentages if I'm off though.

Also, redoing my store home page design, hopefully that will increase the conversion and I have all sorts of ideas in addition to help.
Angela
Attached to Baby

http://www.attachedtobaby.com

"closer to your heart... do you don't miss a beat."

Coleen
#7 Posted : Saturday, December 1, 2007 10:20:54 AM(UTC)
Coleen

Rank: Member

Joined: 4/30/2007(UTC)
Posts: 383

Angela, who did your site redesign, I really like it. I think our numbers are fairly similar for different reasons. Mainly I was looking for general opinions from established merchants which is what you all have provided.

Thanks
scott.mech
#8 Posted : Wednesday, January 2, 2008 10:55:55 AM(UTC)
scott.mech

Rank: Member

Joined: 4/4/2004(UTC)
Posts: 670

@Mitch: My personal opinion is that you should know and care what your conversion rate is as well as many other metrics. Measuring the impact of changes to design, layout, taxonomny, etc... is essential to meeting business goals. Establishing metrics and a baseline is something we do first for each new client we take on. Honestly, why work harder to make the same number of sales?

Scott Mech
[email protected]
Marcus
#9 Posted : Wednesday, January 2, 2008 1:18:20 PM(UTC)
Marcus

Rank: Member

Joined: 11/5/2003(UTC)
Posts: 1,786

Our research indicates that the online retail market averages between 2% and 3% conversions to visitors.
MitchA
#10 Posted : Wednesday, January 2, 2008 4:08:02 PM(UTC)
MitchA

Rank: Member

Joined: 3/3/2006(UTC)
Posts: 1,737

Scott, I hear you... My conversion is approx. 2%. Give the product away to make the number double. By itself, it's a meaningless stat. Tell me someone is getting 12% conversion, I'll show you someone giving the product away and spending his key money on marketing. Don't chase this number, it'll kill you.

In 30+ years of retailing I've yet to see a satisfied number pull out his credit card and hand it to a cashier.

Not to hijack the thread, but:
One of my MBA professors said numbers were everything. I switched professors. I wonder if he taught the guys at Enron too.
Optimists invent airplanes,
Pessimists buy parachutes.
[email protected]
#11 Posted : Wednesday, January 9, 2008 10:17:40 AM(UTC)
info@cpapsupplyusa.com

Rank: Member

Joined: 7/21/2005(UTC)
Posts: 320

We run at 3-5%, some months are good, others as average. But I agree with Mitch, it means nothing.
M. Hall
CPAP Supply USA

http://www.cpapsupplyusa.com
Coleen
#12 Posted : Wednesday, January 9, 2008 10:47:32 AM(UTC)
Coleen

Rank: Member

Joined: 4/30/2007(UTC)
Posts: 383

I think Scott hit it on the head in most cases. I think Mitch is selling a real high dollar item which will obviously be different than the rest of us.

But I asked because our numbers felt low. We made modifications and things are we're we'd expect them to be. Overall visitors to conversions is still low but that's partially a function of competitors shopping our site.
birdsafe
#13 Posted : Wednesday, January 9, 2008 11:51:07 AM(UTC)
birdsafe

Rank: Member

Joined: 2/21/2007(UTC)
Posts: 1,113

plus if you are in an industry with high click fraud (and Google and Yahoo really do nothing about this), then your numbers will be off (actually they should show lower than what it actually is)
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