Comments on: Abandoned shopping carts an e-tail challenge
Although more e-tail browsers are being converted into buyers, many ditch their shopping carts midway through a transaction, a study shows.
Although more e-tail browsers are being converted into buyers, many ditch their shopping carts midway through a transaction, a study shows.
November 24, 2009 4:00 AM PST
November 24, 2009 4:00 AM PST
November 24, 2009 4:00 AM PST
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R. Shelton
No wonder Amazon and other flat-or-no-fee shipping sites do so well with their simple policies.
I've even abandoned carts in real stores when the checkout lines are too long or they haven't sufficiently stocked and are out of something I really needed. (But I would never do this with groceries because that's just wrong.)
But, honestly, who cares if a cart is abandoned? I expect that often it's for the reasons the previous posters have mentioned and sometimes it's because they're trying the purchase on, but then need time to think it over and see if it makes sense.
But it's not real. It's just clicking on a website. Stop lamenting the "lost" sales and examine why the carts are being abandoned. And for gosh's sakes, do more to preserve our abandoned carts so that we can find them again when we return to the store.
One thought sites could do is to notify users who have items in their carts that go on sale, qualify for a new rebate, or receive free shipping. That would help encourage me to buy something I've been looking at.
- etailers need to stop wearing out the customers!
- by Razzl June 3, 2004 1:38 PM PDT
- I can add another vote to the universal complaint from the previous commentators that shopping carts seem to be the only way to find out what something costs. No doubt some etailers think that bringing you that far into the process will tip sales to completion, but it's been my experience that the multi-level price inquiry that a shopping cart represents is part of a wearying process inflicted on the shopper by bad web site design. It drives me mad, especially with a dial-up connection (which, believe me, I'm happy with given that it fits my household budget) to have to work through 4 pages just to get to product information from a homepage text menu.
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(8 Comments)Etail sites should work more like eBay auction pages where lots of thumbnails are visible on a menu page and clicking one rotates the image into the larger image slot without having to download a whole new page. It may require more sophisticated webpage design, but slowing down the customer slows down the pace of sales. I've given up on many a web shopping evening having not gotten to all of the sites on my list because it took too long to extricate myself from a bad one.