A new report by online market research firm
eDigital Research provides some
interesting insights into the performance of merchants’ web sites over the past
seven years. Among its findings is evidence of the impressive progress
multi-channel retailers have made in catching up with their pure-play rivals.
But as experts point out, many online merchants are still failing in areas such
as customer service and delivery.
The latest E-retail Benchmark Study is based on feedback from more than
10,000 profiled internet users who are signed up by eDigital to test web sites
using its eMysteryShopper market research tool.
The research found that all sites have improved significantly since eDigital
published its first report in 2000, when eight per cent of the sample sites were
not even available. However, user expectations are rising too, according to
eDigital co-founder Chris Russell.
“Increasingly, sites are less individualistic with more organised processes,”
Russell said. “Users are becoming more experienced and sophisticated in about
2005 the consumer realised he or she could take control.”
Home pages have also undergone a sea change, becoming clearer and better
structured. EDigital’s retail research manager, Steve Brockway, argued that
companies are realising the home page should be more like a shop window than a
selling tool.
“There used to be an obsession with being able to get everywhere in the site
from the home page,” Brockway explained. “But people are realising you don’t
have to convert off the home page now it should tell customers what you’re
about.”
According to eDigital, multi-channel players are catching up with the
pure-play merchants. In the first few years of the research, pure-play retailers
dominated the top of the league tables, but while this is no longer the case,
online-only stores like Play.com are still innovating and taking market share
from the multi-channel players.
However, although the growth of “multi-channel consumers” over the past seven
years has forced e-retailers to ensure their web channels reflect the brand
identity and there is seamless support between the channels, customer
expectations are not being fulfilled by all, said Russell.
Play.com and Amazon dominated the top of the league tables, which the report
split into categories such as first impressions, range of goods, search,
shopping basket and delivery. John Lewis, Marks & Spencer and Tesco came
just behind these, reflecting the growing online competence of high street
retailers.
But customer service can still be poor, in particular email responses to
enquiries, said Russell. “Argos, for example, gated its email responses before
Christmas,” he explained. “Consumers expect a reply pretty much within 24 hours
now, but this is still an issue for some retailers.”
Search was another area in which many merchants were found wanting, as they
“failed to meet the Googleisation of expectations”, Russell explained.
Availability of stock is also often an issue for customers, according to
independent retail consultant Jane Rome. “Often you will get to the end of the
checkout process without knowing that some of the stock is not available the
best sites would warn you,” she said. “Supply chain management is critical
because customers don’t have much loyalty if they’re frustrated a couple of
times they’ll go and not return.”
Rome argued that delivery can often be below par when ordering online,
ruining the whole experience for the customer, and she called for merchants to
provide greater flexibility in delivery time options.
“The opportunity for things to go wrong at the end is still huge,” Rome
added. “And if the product does have something wrong with it, it should be easy
to return.”
Companies should also ensure that they have a dedicated helpline for any
customer complaints or enquiries, with properly trained staff, although many
fail in this department, Rome said.
“It’s critical that customers have the ability to speak to someone when
something goes wrong,” Rome argued. “Online merchants have an opportunity to be
better than the rest here because at the moment it’s done so badly.”
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