Online shopping has quickly outstretched
high street shopping for popularity and overall spend. One of the big advantages
that consumers gain is the ability to comparison shop for a better deal.
However, for the e-store owner or service provider, this can make it difficult
to survive without offering the lowest prices and the greatest deals. Decreasing
prices has an obvious effect on your revenue and profit so it is vital that you
aim for the right target market and attempt to build customer loyalty.
Customer loyalty means repeat
business and repeat customers offer the lowest marketing spend requirements. As
such, improving customer loyalty can vastly reduce your spend and increase your
ROI. Many of the methods of retaining customers for your website are developed
from tried and trusted methods used by large organizations and businesses
offline.
Know Your Target Markets
By really getting to know and understand your target markets you will have a
much greater understanding what it is that they're after. By learning this kind
of information you will be better placed to send out relevant after-sales
communication and entice your buyers to buy more.
Know Your Competitors
Knowing what your competitors are selling and for how much will help you
determine the best prices for your own products. If you have a good customer
retention rate it is often possible to increase the amount you pay for a new
customer or reduce your prices without affecting your overall profit too much.
Customer Service
Perhaps the first aspect that many of us consider when looking at customer
retention rates is customer service. You must supply a high level of customer
service. If you go the extra mile for your customer, they will go the extra mile
to come back to your site. Being polite in all communications is only a very
small part of good customer service. Everything from your website content to
complaint responses need to be well thought out and geared towards retaining
customers.
Branding
The more synonymous your website becomes with the products or services you sell,
the more likely that people will return to your site. Make sure that all of your
web pages, emails, newsletters, invoices, and other forms of communication
include your web address at the very least. Make it memorable and don't chop and
change designs and logos unless a re-branding is deemed absolutely necessary.
After-Sales Communication
There is an art to after sales communication, and it is an art that you need to
learn to master. So, your website operates online, but that doesn't mean that
the whole of your business has to. If you sell digital products that are
downloaded then ensure that emails and all online communication includes your
branding. If you sell physical products, then your paper invoices, and
everything down to your packing labels should also be branded.
Get Your Visitors Involved
Involving your site visitors will help to bring them back to your site time and
time again. Web 2.0 applications provide a plethora of ways to involve site
visitors. Blogs, forums, and any interactive tool will help to make your site
bookmarkable. Even for visitors that don't take action while on your site, you
will attract them back more frequently, and the more exposure a visitor has to
your website, the more likely they become to make a purchase.
Why Customer Loyalty Is Important To Your Business Website
Return visitors or return customers are one of your greatest assets. You've
already done a lot of the hard work with your preliminary marketing campaigns.
Ensure that everything from your website to your email newsletter to your
packing slips are effectively branded with your website details and always
uphold the highest level of customer service and communication. If you can get
your site visitors more involved in your site then you stand to profit even more
from customer loyalty.
Omaro Ailoch is a senior software engineer, an entrepreneur and the founder
of OC IT Services a highly skilled
California based web development, design, and search engine optimization firm.