Ivan Walsh
01-3-2006
Imagine you’re downtown and you want to buy a Kraftwerk CD. You visit Tower Records, go to the Electronic section, find category K, locate Kraftwerk, and select their Tour De France CD. Great! You’re off to the checkout and… Hang on. Where’s the checkout? They’ve moved it to the second floor. When you get there, you hand over you credit card. Big mistake. You should have registered downstairs first. You head back down to the basement. Do you have two copies of your ID? No. “But it’s only a $9.99 CD!” you argue. The store stands firm. Wonderful music though it is, you’re soon off to a store that’s more conducive to purchasing. This scenario may be a little far-flung, but if you’ve ever shopped online, you’ve probably had a similar experience at some point. You wanted to buy something, were ready to use your credit card… but the shopping cart process was so excruciating that you gave up. You might have the slickest eCommerce web site design on the block, but if users can’t figure it and your shopping cart out, you won’t make a sale. Over recent years, the Web has matured from a simple functionality like browsing to being able to cater to intricate processes such as end-to-end financial transactions. During this period, eCommerce website design technologies have grown more sophisticated, users have come to require a richer experience, and companies have found numerous ways to generate sales online. Indeed, when it comes to building a successful ecommerce shopping cart Website, several areas, such as the design, content, products, incentives, and banner ads all contribute to turn surfers into shoppers. The creation of an effective eCommerce shopping cart—and everything else that’s related to the buying experience—poses challenges that are very different from programming the site. These issues can be addressed by applying the basic principles of Information Architecture, which offer several tools to refine the process and ensure that the overall business objectives of the site are met. Information Architecture can be applied to resolve breakdowns in eCommerce web design and navigation structure. The role of good Information Architecture is to make the Website work not in the technical sense, but from a functional, organized, conceptual perspective. Tidy navigation, meaningful labels, and consistent screens all help enhance the shopping experience. Alternatively, if you’re overhauling an ecommerce site, you need to identify where users are getting lost by studying their navigation trails, and noting the most frequent entrance and exit routes. The exit page can be very interesting. By examining these pages, you can start to determine: Shopping Cart Design Shopping carts are notoriously complex to design. A cart might look simple when it works correctly, but when even a single step is missing or incorrect, the whole process is undermined. Regardless of whether you get the rest of the site right, if this area doesn’t work, your time and effort may be wasted. We’ve all heard the expression ‘business critical’, but for an ecommerce web site design it really is critical that you give shoppers every chance—and then some more—to complete their online purchases. Here's a selection of the most important areas in which you can make valuable amendments to your shopping cart. AFter that, we'll look at a few suggestions for research that will allow you to go beyond what's presented in this article as you improve your site. Reduce Abandonment Rates eMarketer report that over 65% of buyers leave their Shopping Carts in mid-purchase. To reduce cart abandonment rates, consider these points during the design phase: consider these points during the design phase: Improve the Purchase Process Shopping carts can be sharpened up, checkout processes can be simplified, and buying online can be almost as much fun as the hype would have you believe! To improve your ecommerce site’s effectiveness, try these seven bulletproof pointers: Include all necessary features in the shopping cart process, for example, the ability to modify or delete items from the basket. Let users put items ‘on hold’ for future purchasing. Their credit card may not have the available limit during the session, but they might like to be reminded of the item when they return. All these points will improve the shopping experience for users, and ensure you achieve more sales. User Testing and Focus Groups Before you launch the site, test the shopping cart on a cross-section of users. Resist the temptation of asking your staff, family, or friends to test the site. Most likely, they will only give you positive feedback. Instead, organize a focus group with five or six volunteers. It’s better to find faults in the site before it goes live, rather than after a much-promoted public launch. Study the Masters If you’re getting into Information Architecture for the first time, take a look at some leading ecommerce sites. They’ve invested millions to fine-tune their shopping carts. See how many fail in the areas mentioned above. Contrast rival etailers, such as bookstores or music sites. The results will be very interesting! When you add an item to the ‘basket’ on Dell.com, the price of the purchase is shown at the bottom of the page. This feature also breaks down how much the purchase will cost per month if you purchase it through a financing plan. And when you change the configuration, it updates the prices in real-time. Simple, but very impressive. Before I leave you, here’s a challenge. Visit an ecommerce site. Go through the checkout process. Then go back and count the number of areas where it could be improved. Consider how you would fix it. And, if you’re considering Information Architecture as a career, you could contact the retailer and politely say, “I couldn’t help notice a few things on your site…” If you can help a company sell more products, people will listen to you very carefully.
Where Information Architecture can Help
Every Web designer knows that regardless of how nice an ecommerce site looks, unless the shopping process works, users will abandon it and go elsewhere.
One of the first things to organize in a site’s design is its navigation structure. This involves defining the optimal routes by which a user might pass from one location to the next.
