Bamboo, i sell all our range online, powertools are what get people interested and looking, they will only buy powertools every couple of years or so, its what they buy inbetween and getting them to come back to my online shop that i want.
Firstly you have literally seconds to grab a potential customers attention. Browsers (people looking or more commonly called tyre kickers) will find you anyway & these people hardly ever buy as they are looking not buying.
It doesn't matter how that potential customer arrives at your site either by a well worded PPC ad or a well worded page description in the organic search.
If you don't hit them with precisely what they are expecting to see as soon as they land on the product page they are gone.
Your market is overcrowded & may well be diminishing so this is a key aspect you have to nail before you splash the cash on a designer.
Words/pictures/price do the selling. Design convinces the customer they are in the right place!
Secondly in the market you are in unless you have a massive brand like B&Q or Screwfix you ain't going to get any repeat customers after a couple of weeks let alone two years.
Unlike a bricks & mortar store which can go years without changing & still be profitable an online store has to be in a constant state of testing & improving or it's stuffed. Believe me I know what happens when you take your eye off this particular ball.
B&Q advertise online and in the paper, radio & TV media constantly to keepr their brand in the forefront of their customers minds.
Screwfix bombard their customers with mailshots to ensure their customers keep coming back.
Both of these companies also have big online stores and a lot of employees making sure that their online adverts are everywhere. However even they don't understand the difference in customers shopping behaviour online & offline so there is an opportunity to make money from their failings.
There are a myriad of other competitors for the products you sell which suggests that even though it may be diminishing & the margins are low you should still be able to make money if you concentrate on selling the one thing that the person landing on the product pages buys that product on the page.
Repeat custom is often seen as the holy grail of online retailing but in many markets this is simply chasing rainbows. The power tool market seems to be one market where the money is not in repeat sales but is in higher conversion rates of existing site visitors.
It's not going to be easy & you have to find out facts whilst ignoring what you think you believe but you should easily raise the conversion rate if you track & record the impact of every change you make.
Try adding product video. Neither B&Q or Screwfix have figured this one out yet so make a video of a tool in action & get it on your site & see if this improves the conversion rate on that particular product.
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