Does anyone know that the SSL padlock and https in the address bar makes a lot of difference to customers in terms number of orders completed. Are there any statitics on this?
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I don't know of any stats and I personally doubt if it still makes much difference.
I don't even notice it anymore when I buy online and I know I'm safe as I'm always by credit card anyway.
Of course, relative novices may still be cautious, and it certainly doesn't hurt to have it their.
Mike-----------------------------------------
First Tackle - Fly Fishing and Game Angling
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This subject was discussed ages ago, and I think I remember that people who moved from builtin encryption to SSL said their orders increased by about 10%.
I would say that the conclusion reached was yes you will lose some orders from people to judge if a site is secure by looking for the padlock, but it isn't a significant number (unless you consider every lost sale as disaster!).
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I reckon on 20% increase for newly minted stores. Those sites with established customer base, and products with a smaller repeat purchase rate, around 10%.
regards
Web Your Business Inc.
ps - an instantssl.com cert is only $49 a year - that's hardly worth losing any sleep over, almost all SHARED SSL providers charge more than that (if not all)!
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Originally posted by simonbridges
£100 a year for a shared SSL seems good value
InstantSSL.com
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Order completion rates are also increased because of the issues of the Java not loading correctly in Windows XP because of the lack of Java VM - An SSL cert removes this whole issue.Matt
Actinic User since v.3
Custom Actinic Site Specialist:
<a href="http://www.glowsticksdirect.co.uk/">GlowSticksDirect.co.uk</a>
<a href="http://www.digishopdirect.co.uk/">DigiShopDirect.co.uk</a>
<a href="http://www.calibreshopping.co.uk/">CalibreShopping.co.uk</a>
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instantSSL.com are actually based in the UK - they have an office in Aurora, Colorado (a suburb of Denver), but if you call for US support, they route you to the UK offices - kind of odd, as I'm a Brit living about 50 miles from their US office, and I end up talking to an office only 80 miles from my home town in the UK.
We use their certs for customers all over the world.
regards
Greg Hewitt-Long
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I use Claranet as a host, and their SOHO package (less than £100 pa for everything - domain name, hosting, support - the lot) includes free shared SSL.
NickFighting with sellerdeck on http://www.nickdobsonwines.co.uk
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We've just installed our first freessl.com chained certificate for a client, it's working well, was issued in 10 minutes from purchase, and cost $35.
I appreciate that your shared SSL package is only £100 pounds a year, but I personally would never buy from a company that can't be bothered to get their own certificate.... the change of URL from http://www.dobsonwines.co.uk to https://clarahost.clara.net/www.nick...in/os000001.pl wasn't obvious, but it is something I watch for.
Shared SSL isn't uncommon, but one of the things we caution in our education series, is that anyone with a few pounds or dollars can purchase shared SSL without even being verified that their domain details etc are even valid - not so with a dedicated SSL cert.
We also mention that cutting corners might be the first indication that something isn't quite right - not getting your own domain, your own cert, or operating from a PO Box, no phone number or using large amounts of canned graphics might also be signs of a site that you might not do business with.
In an ever increasing world of scammers and rip-off artists, the extra cost is negligible compared to potential for lost sales:
These are just what we charge - you will find them for less:
Domain: $15 per year
SSL Cert: $35 US Dollars per year
SSL Installation: $30 per cert
Business Hosting $150 per year
Grand total: $230 US Dollars per year - or £143.75 at an exchange rate of 1.6 dollars to the pound.
Doing it "properly" doesn't cost the earth - cutting corners can cost you a whole lot more than £43.75 in lost sales...
Greg
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