If you haven’t yet read it, this article called The $300 Million Button is well worth your five minutes. It’s by Jared M. Spool and posted on the User Interface Engineering Web site. I don’t want to give away the secret of the article, but it discusses a very common practice on e-commerce sites, and how it tests with end users.
Subscribe to Larry’s Newsletter
Use your browser to subscribe to the blog's RSS feed, if you'd like. You can also subscribe to Larry's monthly (email) newsletter by providing the information below. Click the NEWSLETTER > ARCHIVES link above to view examples. I sometimes give away copies of my books through the newsletter, if you need further enticement.
Series
Tags
about ajax Amazon app article blog book books cdn cloudfront css3 database e-commerce ecom firefox flash builder framework hosting html html5 html forms ide JavaScript jquery jsdd mobile mvc newsletter nosql oop performance php6 phpmysql4 phpvqs4 programming security software ui user interface utilities video windows writing yii zend
Thank you that’s a very interesting article. I’m going to have people at work read it. And maybe we will remove the requirement of registering an account to place an order. (We have a central CMS with a shopping cart system that hundreds of clients use.)
Thanks, Jason, for your comments.
Interesting article. I started out thinking “Yikes, I have users register on my site, I hope I’m not losing business.” Then, by the end of the article, I was thinking “Of course the registration should be optional, those guys were idiots for making it mandatory.”
160,000 password requests per day! 45% of users with duplicate accounts! I have maybe 1% of registered users with duplicate accounts and I get an admin email every time someone guesses more than three times or requests a password change. I rarely get any such emails so I’m assuming I don’t have a problem.
$300 million? Other than Amazon, I can’t think of any other website that might be making that kind of money. I’d be happy with a tiny percentage of that income.
Interesting article. I always like seeing behind the scenes issues of other websites.
Hey Gary, thanks for the comments. As you suggest, I’d be really curious to know who the client/site was that has that kind of business. The important thing that many people miss is that e-commerce is as much about marketing and user interface as it is the ability for people to complete an order. That part (the code and functionality) is a given; getting people to the site and not driving them away is where the real pro sites stand out!
> getting people to the site and not driving them away is where the real pro sites stand out
Indeed! That’s why SEO is such a popular topic. People are still missing the point though: Google isn’t the magic bullet, it takes a decent product with a good presentation if you want to turn visitors into sales. Unfortunately, it’s a very nebulous topic, difficult to write a book on the subject with any kind of concrete, applicable answers.
All true. And it’s important for people to remember that Google isn’t the only way sites are found these days, even if it’s the only search engine I and maybe you and maybe pretty much everyone uses…