A well-crafted buyers guide can help push customers to make purchases, which only serves to benefit your business. A customer might be looking for a particular item in your storefront or online store. However, after reviewing your buyers guide, they might discover another one of your products thats more on-point possibly one that costs a bit more. Known as upselling, this technique of introducing shoppers to more expensive products can generate more revenue. And youve done it simply by suggesting new products to them.
Puhuasheng contains other products and information you need, so please check it out.
Buyers guides can showcase your products and all their benefits just like a salesperson would without hiring someone to fill the role. Customers can go at their own pace reading through the information and evaluating their choices. And for customers who prefer to shop unaided, a buyers guide can ensure the most important information still gets across without interrupting their shopping experience.
Your product buying guides can also be used as tools for cross-selling products. Cross-selling is the practice of encouraging customers to buy products related, or complementary, to ones theyre already considering. Your buying guide might include phrases like Works well with or We also recommend in its product descriptions. This way, you can lead patrons to buy more of your products.
Finally, its a great way to leverage the data from your reporting and analytics and turn it into more sales. If you notice a spike in stocking stuffers around the holidays, those would be a good choice to highlight in a buyers guide for the winter holidays.
Special Note: This article was inspired by an episode of our podcast, Drive & Convert. We go into much more detail here than we did on the show, but you might enjoy listening to the original conversation and subscribing to receive future episodes.
When elite marathoners cross the finish line, they dont high-five the best sign holder (Remember, you paid for this!), wipe their brow, and chug a self-congratulatory beer.
Astoundingly, many of these best-of-the-best runners keep running. They have an entire cool-down process that starts just minutes after they cross the finish line, and they have that process for several reasons:
Sure, they may grab a frothy pint later (nothing wrong with that!) but not until theyve set themselves up for continued success. While novice runners promptly collapse at the finish line, the best see it through a cool down.
Unfortunately, many ecommerce store owners take the novice approach; they run a marathon getting customers to purchase and fall on their face at the order-confirmed finish line. This is understandable its hard work earning a first-time sale!
But, like the less experienced runners who skip post-race recovery, that collapse is also short-sighted. It leads to plenty of painful aches, such as the squeeze you feel when traffic dries up or ad prices jump.
Theres a better option:
Savvy store owners, like the elite marathons, know what they do immediately after a first purchase has a big impact on performance boosting metrics like average order value, customer lifetime value, and overall store revenue.
The most useful definition for post-purchase customer experience is the activities, messages, and brand interactions that a customer experiences after purchasing a product or service from you.
This typically includes communication elements (Ex: and SMS messages) as well as physical elements (Ex: unboxing) and behavior-based elements (Ex: customer service conversations). This guide gives you a step-by-step playbook for building a best in class post-purchase experience that will accelerate your business growth.
This journey has several points, and optimizing each one will create a compounding effect. The more you improve the post-purchase experience and prime repeat purchases, the more dramatically you can accelerate your business growth by increasing customer lifetime value and lifting overall revenue (more on how below).
Plus, this is something you can set up one time that will run continuously. Meaning, the long term gains are exponential compared to the time invested up front.
So, how exactly do you start optimizing and start benefiting?
This guide shows you.
Weve broken out each piece of the post-purchase experience, outlined how you can improve it, and tied in what optimizing this journey can do for your brand.
Heres whats ahead:
Profitwell looked at just under 700 subscription companies and discovered something a bit unsettling the price of acquiring new customers is on the up-and-up.
Compared to five years ago, the costs of getting a new customer on board is up nearly 60%.
New customers, while crucial, take an increasingly enormous amount of time and energy. In contrast, its much easier to get existing customers to complete an additional purchase, and they often spend more money than new customers. The lauded Marketing Metrics textbook states existing customers are 60-70% likely to make a repeat purchase whereas new customers are 5-20% likely to make an initial purchase.
Additional research by Bain indicates that the longer a customer stays with you, the more their average order value increases with subsequent purchases. In apparel, a customers fifth purchase is 40% larger than the first, and repeat customers spend 67% more in months 31-36 with a brand than in month zero-to-six.
Our own data from July-September shows similar findings. When we looked at 13 ecommerce retailers in the home goods, shoes and clothing, and consumables sectors, we found repeat purchasers (who make at least two purchases):
So, weve established that repeat customers are easier to convert and tend to be more valuable over time. You may be asking yourself, well then, how do I get more repeat purchases?
We reached out to Kristen LaFrance, the head of Shopifys Resilient Retail series, for advice:
In ecommerce, you dont have the same face-to-face sales interaction that you would in a retail setting, so you have to take care of some of those steps post-purchase, when you finally have a direct line of communication with the customer.
So that period between when someone gives you their money and when they actually receive the product is critical for forming a strong relationship. Educate them, address their questions or concerns, get them excited to rip open that box when it hits their doorstep. Thats what makes the difference between an okay experience and a great one and thats whats ultimately going to make the difference between an okay customer and a great one.
In other words, the best way to increase repeat purchases is to deliver a world-class customer experience right after a customer makes their first purchase. You know, that time where youre probably sending an order confirmation , a shipment tracking andthats about it?
The reason has to do with consumption patterns. When someone initially makes their purchase, Kurt Elster, Shopify Plus Expert at Ethercycle, told us, they are very likely, in the very near future, to make another purchase. When we buy stuff, it kicks off consumption cycles.
For example, you buy a and need a case. You buy running shoes and need a great outfit to hit the pavement in. Thats why Kurt advises, As soon as someone makes a purchase from you and maybe they even need to buy the same thing a second time give them the opportunity, prompt them, give them the excuse.
When Kurt says as soon as someone purchases, he means it.
The very first thing your customer sees post-purchase that unassuming thank you page is a great place to start laying the groundwork for the next purchase.
Take a minute and think about where you upsell customers. If youre like most brands, you do this throughout the purchase process (e.g. on the product page) as well as in cart.
Lets pause right there. While upselling in cart sounds like a great idea, its probably killing your conversions.
The problem is, many brands assume online checkout works like brick-and-mortar checkout. Meaning, they stash high-margin add-ons brand equivalents of candy bars or lottery tickets near the online counter to encourage customers to buy just a few more things and improve that average order value.
But heres the thing: online checkout isnt like brick-and-mortar checkout.
Keep in mind, customer experience drives conversion rates, so adding friction to the customers experience may also negatively impact conversion. Meaning when you upsell in cart and throw a roadblock in the checkout flow, you could actually hurt conversion rates.
So, what can you do instead?
Most brands neglect the small but mighty thank you page. Given 100% of customers visit this page, its a shame so many of them are plain, templated, or only convey bare-bones information. For example, Debenhamss page below:
While confirming the customers order went through is absolutely a good idea, theres so much more you can do here: alleviate post-purchase concerns, engage excited buyers and, yes, even upsell. In fact, upselling on your thank you page is much more effective than upselling in cart.
Jordan Gal, founder of Carthook, explains why: Right after your customer buys something, they are at their most euphoric point, they are at peak happiness, and that is a good time to make an offer. And if you make that offer in a way that is beneficial to both parties, all of a sudden everyone wins. Your customer gets a complimentary product that enhances their experience and increases happiness or satisfaction, and you benefit from not only that additional happiness factor, but also a higher order value for almost no additional expense.
Need a bit of data to back that up? Carthook has driven over $180 million in additional value for its merchants through post-purchase experience upsells.
So, the customer is already committed and primed for action when they reach your thank you page. Once theyre there, you can effectively upsell them a few different ways:
For example, when you order a log splitter from Log Splitter Direct, they suggest earplugs and a branch cutter handy items if youre felling a dead oak out front. They do this via , but you can list equivalent items for your brand on your thank you page:
If youre wondering, yes, but how?, the tool we mentioned above, Carthook, is one answer. Carthook allows you to show complementary products or subscriptions on your thank you page and prompt, would you like to add these to your order? Aside from offering additional value to customers, this helps you improve that average order value without adding friction to the checkout flow.
Of course, you dont have to sell anything on your thank you page. There are plenty of other ways you can use it to reassure customers, build trust, and encourage loyalty.
Remember, when your customer hits a thank you page, theyve just made a purchase. Theyre feeling a range of emotions from squirming excitement (I cannot WAIT for this to arrive.) to gripping anxiety (oh crap, was that really the right decision?).
There are plenty of ways you can engage these emotions to benefit both the customer and your brand.
If youre anything like me, you feel a tinge of buyers remorse on a monthly basis. This is especially likely when purchasing a high-ticket item, such as top top-dollar tech.
However, there are at least three effective ways to alleviate that familiar pit-of-stomach feeling for customers: highlight the good causes the customers money goes towards, remind them of the awesome work environment their purchase supports, and showcase how happy other customers are.
All of these are great ways to say, Hey, dont worry, youve made a really great choice here!:
This logic extends to how you source your materials, too. For example, Allbirds does a good job of highlighting animal welfare. Messaging similar to this is great material for a thank you page.
For a customer that holy-moly-cannot-wait till their shipment arrives, there are a few ways you can stoke that fire.
If youre not really sure whats going through your customers head at this point (Excitement? Regret? Hunger?), the thank you page is a great place to ask them!
Turns out, this is a surprisingly simple opportunity to identify friction in the customer experience (and remember, friction hurts conversions). Nick told us about several different scenarios hes come across in his experiences.
For example, customers might:
This is seriously valuable information. Disabato emphasized, You get a lot of insights and there are a lot of implications for it. Sometimes its cut and dry this didnt work, lets fix it. Other times, you uncover customer motivation that helps you optimize your product detail page. Either way, youre figuring out what you dont know and improving future customer experiences and conversions.
Whatever you opt for on your thank you page, remember to A/B test your changes. One ecommerce site may have a winning thank you page that consistently generates repeat customers, but that same page may not work as well for another brand with a different target audience. Dont just copy your competitors youve no idea how their page is working out for them.
Once you complete this step, youve dialed your thank you page, and reassured the customer theyre not only amazing theyve just made an amazing purchase.
What opportunities are next?
After the thank you page, the customers post-purchase experience moves off your site and into their inbox.
Narvar conducted a study of 1,543 shoppers between ages 21 and 65. They found 83% of the respondents expect regular updates about their purchases. Many brands give those updates, but the problem is, way too many of those brands use the off-the-shelf templates and timings their ecommerce platform provides.
Thats a huge missed opportunity!
How?
Unbounce found customers open transactional emails at twice the rate of promotional emails. And that initial thank you ? Klayvio found its open rate is a staggering 67%! For comparison, the average open rate is 15-25%.
Contact us to discuss your requirements of t-post spacing. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.
Turns out, customers are opening and reading post-purchase emails way more than anything else you send them.
Which begs the question: Are you making the most of them?
To find out, read through the six emails that amount to huge opportunities for post-purchase optimization below. Use this breakdown to audit the emails youre currently sending and identify specific ways you can improve.
And, if you get the feeling this is a lot of work (it can be!), remember you can always carve out a day to set up and automate these emails using a tool like Privy or Klayvio. A bit of upfront work and then youll be seeing the ROI indefinitely.
The order confirmation should be the first your customer receives after purchase. It assures your customer their order went through, payment processed, someones working on it, and nothing got lost in an internet black hole.
When to send it: As soon as payment clears.
How to think about it: More than any other transactional you send, this one gets crazy high open rates. Its an opportunity to alleviate customer anxiety and doubt, set expectations for what happens next, and even cross sellif you do it tactfully.
Something else you want to keep in mind here is youre setting a precedent. If this is delightful and provides value to the customer, theyre more likely to open later emails you send, too. So, its important to get this one right.
How to do it: Youll want your to check at least the first four bullets below:
Heres a great example of the basics from Roark. They confirm the order, include a tracking link, reference customer service, and tell you whats coming next (we will send you another as soon as it ships).
They dont use this to upsell or cross-sell, and thats fine.
If upselling is something you want to explore, though, heres how to do it:
On episode five of the Drive and Convert podcast, our CEO Jon MacDonald tells a great confirmation story. He had just purchased a set of lights. On the thank you page, they asked if he wanted to add more. At the time, he didnt. But when he received the order confirmation , it reminded him, hey, if you change your mind, you have four hours from when this is sent to add a few more before were going to start packing up your order. It gave him the option to, Click here to add four more, eight more or twelve more.
When Jon chose four, he was whisked to his cart with an order number, new total, and no extra shipping (a nice incentive!).
Ritual does something similar for existing subscription customers. The below was sent to a customer already stocked up on womens vitamins. Instead of pitching more womens vitamins, Ritual sent a next-of-kin offer on mens vitamins.
You can also use the confirmation to pitch a subscription. Fullscript does this with a friendly and unobtrusive reminder:
Also worth noting: compared to the subscribe and save model many brands default to, Fullscript pitches convenience instead of price as the main incentive.
The second your customer receives post-purchase is shipping confirmation. It notifies the customer their order is on its merry way.
When to send it: Right when the item ships.
How to think about it: This builds on the customer experience you provided in your first . Youre continuing to alleviate anxiety (we didnt steal your money!), deliver assurance, and build trust. Youre paving the way for the great review youll request a few emails down the road.
How to do it: Make sure and include these pieces of information in your shipping confirmation:
What kind of additional resources?
Anything that helps your customer engage with and use the product youre sending. Remember, if the product sits unopened in the box or stuffed onto a dusty closet shelf, you and the customer are both missing out on a lot of value. So, give your customer everything they need to experience the Aha! This is amazing! moment where they fall in love with your product.
Not only does this help your customer, it also paves the road for a great review or referral down the road.
For example, check out how Biolite includes an instructional video, three quick tips to get going once the light arrives (bonus points for skimmable text), and a link to FAQ. All of these serve the customers interests and goals now, when they get the product, they can immediately start using it.
Once your product hits the doorstep, its time to check in that everything arrived a-okay and assure the customer youre available if not.
When to send it: The day the product arrives or 2-3 days after it arrived.
How to think about it: Weve all had a package show up that looks as if it were a stand-in ball for some midday warehouse soccer. This is to double-check that didnt happen. You want to ask questions like did you receive your order? and was everything okay?
When you do this, youre preemptively handling a bad situation and heading off a negative review. If something did go wrong during shipment, youre saying hey, if youre not 100% satisfied, reply to this and well fix it. When the customer has this , theyre more likely to hit reply than vent on social media.
Plus, when a customer engages with you this way, you have an opportunity to take advantage of the service recovery paradox. This occurs when a customer is happier and more loyal to a brand after the company fixes a problemcompared to if the customer never had a problem at all! So keep in mind when you turn a bad situation into a good one youre pre-selling a good review and future purchases.
By the way, this is a great opportunity to take advantage of the service recovery paradox.
How to do it:
For example, Allergy Buyers Club sends a friendly check-in with simple setup instructions, just in case customers havent set up the product yet:
Once you deliver an incredible product and/or provide stellar customer service, nows the time to ask for a customer review. The trick? Make it as easy as possible for the customer to do this.
When to send it: A week or so after theyve received the product.
How to think about it: According to data gathered by Spiegel Research Center, nearly 95 percent of shoppers read online reviews before making a purchase.
Gathering post-purchase reviews will help you improve conversion rates for new customers down the road.
We reached out to DJ Sprague, the Chief Marketing Officer at Trust Brands, for his opinion on why verified product reviews are such a powerful motivator for potential customers. Here is what he had to say
Social proof is pivotal at the critical moment when shoppers ask themselves these common questions before making a final purchase decision:
Without trustworthy evidence or social proof to adequately satisfy these uncertainties, they are less likely to convert in the first place, let alone continue to purchase or recommend it to others in the future.
Whats more, a pile of positive reviews is a gold star for SEO. Yotpo looked at 30,000 businesses and compared their organic traffic before and after posting reviews. For a number of reasons, posting those reviews made a big impact:
And if you need even more convincing, consider this: reviews are an excellent way to hear, straight from your customers, what they love, hate, and cant live without. In other words, its a feedback goldmine.
How to do it: Of course, you cant send any old and cross your fingers for a great review. Ideally, youve laid the groundwork for this in your product and your last three excellent emails. To further incentivize customers, include the following in this :
What counts as a good question? Here are a few options:
A note on validity:
Prompting customers for reviews via helps ensure you collect reviews from verified purchasers. There are plenty of product detail pages where any visitor can leave a review. These are untrustworthy because anyone family, friend, employees, random person can add their thoughts. In contrast, when you only request reviews as a part of the post-purchase experience sequence, you ensure all of your reviews are from verified customers.
As you collect these reviews, though, keep in you want to use an approved review aggregator. There are plenty of plugins that will collect reviews on your site, but not all of them are approved, and not all of them build search engine trust. Choose one that is for better optimization.
Also keep in mind that you dont want to stop asking for reviews once you get 50, 100, or even 200. Bright Local found 84% of consumers think reviews older than 3 months arent relevant anymore, so keep asking for fresh ones.
Something that continually surprises us is how few brands ask for referrals. What a missed opportunity! There are a few ways you can do this in context of the other emails your sending:
Whichever option best fits your goals, referrals ask customers to talk with their friends and family and send them your way.
When to send it: A week or so after theyve received your product or a few days after you asked for a review.
How to think about it: If youre not considering the different ways you can help a happy customer become a referral source, youre leaving some revenue on the table. The first step here is surprisingly simple, too. You ask. Many brands immediately jump to 10% off for you and friend or something similar. But remember, there are better options than offering a straight discount.
How to do it:
And while were calling this a referral , you could use it to pitch a loyalty program instead. If you need a tool for all this, check out Smile.io. They do a great job of helping you manage loyalty programs and referral incentives.
Whew, youve done some hard and good post-purchase work. Theres just one more send you want to be aware of. When, and only when, your customer has completed all the emails above, you can add them to regular-ish marketing emails.
When to send it: After the customer has received all other post-purchase emails.
How to think about it: While its true youre adding the customer to regular marketing emails here, you dont want to put them on the same cadence as non-customers. Have at least one separate segment for existing customers. Put them on either a slower cadence or only send them high-priority marketing messages (e.g. holidays).
Youve earned some of the customers trust by this point, but you want to keep in the mind its still fragile. Remember the adage, trust takes years to build, seconds to break, and forever to repair. Keeping building trust through regular emails.
How to do it:
Think about it this way: you talk and share information with a friend very differently than you do with a stranger. Youre not sure what a stranger thinks of you; youre reasonably sure a friend likes you. A customer is more like a friend than a stranger. Youve earned their affection, and now you can engage with them in a more personal way.
So, instead of bombarding them with additional purchase options and promos, hone in on helpful and personalized emails.
Check out how Ritual does this for existing customers. By showcasing value in slow drip emails, they continue building customer friendship (trust and affection) which improves their retention:
One last thing before we wrap up the journey here: There are a few things you want to keep in mind for every you send. These are best practice items that ensure your is readable, enjoyable, and working as hard as it can for you and customers.
Keep in mind, most customers (like you) have roughly 397 unread promotions in their inbox. The fact is, they havent been sitting around waiting for your communication. More likely, theyre in their inbox because theyre procrastinating, trying to feel productive, or searching for something.
This means you dont have long to grab their attention. Follow the checklist below to give your emails a better chance of earning the customers attention.
Alright, that wraps up the nitty-gritty of post-purchase emails. To finish out this journey, lets zoom back out and make sure were on the same page in terms of what you want to track throughout all these optimizations.
Done well, optimizing your customers post-purchase experience with your brand is going to boost four important metrics:
Now, with improvements like these, it may be tempting to pull back on traditional conversion rate optimization efforts and focus on post-purchase experience instead. But not so fast. You need both of these for healthy conversions, revenue, and margin.
Work your way up to these post-purchase experience steps and start seeing digital experience optimization as something that spans the entire customer experience, from the moment they meet you to their 2nd, 5th, and 50th purchase.
If you havent done any optimization yet, the best place to start is pre-purchase. You want to go to optimization college, so to speak, and complete your basic courses on helping the customer get to the point of purchase. Focus first on providing a great customer experience that maximizes the number of visitors who convert into first-time customers.
Then, once youve graduated, you can move on to graduate school post-purchase optimization. With the opportunities to increase average order value, encourage repeat purchases, and improve customer retention, this part of the customer journey is well worth your attention.
Eventually, youll want to have a comprehensive optimization program, which analyzes the end-to-end purchasing process and identifies ways you can continue maximizing the value of every customer experience.
If youre already there, consider researching our Digital Experience Optimization Program, which is a custom program that systematically improves your user experience over time.
Find out what stands between your company and digital excellence with a custom 5-Factors Scorecard
. GET YOUR SCORECARDLaura Bosco is a former Content Marketer at The Good and freelance writer. She helps translate thoughts, opinions, and client experiences into written products that are both entertaining and educational.
For more High-Quality Metal Fence Postsinformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.
Previous: None
Comments
Please Join Us to post.
0