It's That Time of Season
Sure, it may be summer, but now's a great time to plan for winter sales.
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It's no fun to think about winter while enjoying picnics in
the sunshine. But for your e-marketing strategy, it's the
perfect time to create offers that will drive shoppers into your
online store this holiday season.
For instance, free shipping sells. This offer influenced 39
percent of orders during the 2002 holiday season and will influence
shoppers again this year, according to a recent Bizrate.com study.
But this is no longer viewed as an extraordinary offer.
"Online retailers have created the expectation among consumers
that free shipping is the norm, which puts pressure on retailers to
run free shipping promotions into perpetuity," says Ken
Cassar, former senior analyst at research firm Jupitermedia.
Beyond free shipping, Bizrate.com notes the following features
also inspired holiday orders last winter: clearance page (46
percent), product promotion (44 percent), featured sales item page
(42 percent), suggested items (27 percent) and gift idea
center/personal shopper (25 percent). Most of these efforts require
a separate page or section on your Web site. Design these pages
now, and file them for a few months. Using your time now to develop
new content can alleviate stress during pre-holiday madness and
ensure your winter promotions launch on time.
You can also use seasonal offers to introduce a fresh line of
products. Try a "value pack" promotion—bundle
products together, and include a gift with purchase. For example,
if you sell pet portraits, include a free photo album with orders.
Your customers may buy the album as a stand-alone item after the
holidays. This introduction of a new product boosts holiday sales
and fuels demand for your forthcoming products.
But not all online offers are profitable. FJAproducts.com, an
online retailer of laser toner cartridges, inkjet cartridges,
thermal fax supplies and printer ribbons, promoted a 20 percent
discount per order (up to $10 off) to MasterCard newsletter
subscribers and found those customers spent just enough to get the
maximum discount ($50). This was far below the site's average
order of $98, which meant the promotion attracted customers who
spent less, not more.
"Watch your numbers on special offers closely," warns
Bryan Lewis, partner of the San Marcos, California-based
FJAproducts.com. "If you're running a highly competitive
offer that produces a low return, you could be losing money. What
works on one marketing partner's site may not work on
another's."
Get your customers into the holiday shopping spirit by giving
them multiple offers. The Web lets you swap ideas on the fly to
continually improve your site's performance. And the winter
holidays deliver rushed shoppers who quickly show you which
seasonal goodies entice them. You're given a gift, too-the
insight into your customers' wish lists can be used to craft
marketing campaigns that sell year-round.
Speaker and freelance writer Catherine
Seda owns an Internet marketing agency and is author of Search
Engine Advertising.
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