Archive for 2009


Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Does your shopping cart scare your customer away?

Your customer is most anxious on your website when she’s reviewing her cart. The cart page shows the cart total for the items added and the basic price – but often doesn’t show the tax or shipping charges – thus begins the fear of the unknown.

Aside from price, the customer wants assurance that she’s getting what she wanted. For furniture, this is usually size and color, material, or wood finish at the very least.

Bad cart summary pages don’t provide enough detail:

bad cart

The customer is interested in a lot more information about the product.

good cart

Do not be vague. Without a thumbnail image it’s near impossible to figure out what type of bed and which finish she is going to receive if she makes the purchase.

Excellent cart pages show the sku, color, large thumbnail images, availability, tax and include a shipping calculator pre-checkout.

good cart 2

Reduce her anxiety on the cart page, and you’ll reduce cart abandoment.

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Thursday, September 24th, 2009

“Three firms partnering for e-Showroom program” from FURNITURE|Today

Lively Merchant, PROFITsystems, MicroDBy Gary Evans — Furniture Today, September 21, 2009

Three of the industry’s top technology specialists have formed a partnership to provide an e-commerce offering for retailers hoping to attract and serve consumers shopping on the Internet.

The partnership includes Colorado-based PROFITsystems, North Carolina-based MicroD and Ohio-based The Lively Merchant. Together, the companies have developed an advanced Web solution called e-Showroom.

The process basically allows retailers with no Web sites or Web sites that need improvement to get a turnkey enhancement. The process starts with an assessment of what the retailer really wants his Web site to do (The Lively Merchant) and continues through the creation of catalogs and room-planning capabilities (MicroD) and setting up a system to run it on (PROFITsystems).

While all three companies provide different technologies, “not one of us really provided the complete solution on our own,” said Shelley Parlin, PROFITsystems’ COO. “We thought that putting together the three companies that each excelled in a different area gave the clients the best opportunity for something that would really meet their needs.”

e-Showroom enables retailers using PROFITprofessional software to integrate and cross-reference their inventory with vendor catalogs and display them directly on their new e-commerce Web site, which runs on the ePiphany platform developed by MicroD.

“Through e-Showroom, our clients can establish brand awareness, increase traffic levels and maximize their advertising dollars by adding the equivalent of a second store without the building expense,” Parlin said.

Manoj Nigam, MicroD’s president, said the partnership “gives retailers the strongest possible solution” for establishing an effective Internet presence.

“We can help them connect to their customers and provide an easy-to-use shopping experience. Retailers will have control over their Web site, e-mail marketing and products shown without having to invest excessive time to maintain it.”

He said e-Showroom is a complete package that offers configurable and non-configurable catalogs, an integrated room planner, e-mail marketing system, free Web-needs analysis, Web site development, search engine optimization and social networking tools.

In addition, retailers will be able to select vendor catalogs or even have their own private-label catalog built so that shoppers can easily search through products without leaving the Web site and create wish lists or make purchases.

“Once the retailer has his site up and going, that retailer can figure out what the top 10 items are that are looked at on the site. Or he can look at what the top 10 companies are on the site,” said PROFITsystem’s Parlin.

“He may go, ‘Isn’t this funny? I deliberately put all my stock items on the front page but all the items people are clicking on and spending time with are on the third page. Maybe I should move those forward.’ We can actually get some analytics as a decision-making tool on what people are using the Web site for.”

While partnerships are not unusual for retail technology companies, three separate companies banding together for one purchase is unusual. Parlin said PROFITsystems has worked with both MicroD and The Lively Merchant in other venues so getting the three parties together was not so hard.

“It took a while to work out — who’s going to set it up; who’s going to support it; who’s going to do the billing? The relationship is working brilliantly.”

By Gary Evans — Furniture Today, September 21, 2009

Three of the industry’s top technology specialists have formed a partnership to provide an e-commerce offering for retailers hoping to attract and serve consumers shopping on the Internet.

The partnership includes Colorado-based PROFITsystems, North Carolina-based MicroD and Ohio-based The Lively Merchant. Together, the companies have developed an advanced Web solution called e-Showroom.

The process basically allows retailers with no Web sites or Web sites that need improvement to get a turnkey enhancement. The process starts with an assessment of what the retailer really wants his Web site to do (The Lively Merchant) and continues through the creation of catalogs and room-planning capabilities (MicroD) and setting up a system to run it on (PROFITsystems).

While all three companies provide different technologies, “not one of us really provided the complete solution on our own,” said Shelley Parlin, PROFITsystems’ COO. “We thought that putting together the three companies that each excelled in a different area gave the clients the best opportunity for something that would really meet their needs.”

e-Showroom enables retailers using PROFITprofessional software to integrate and cross-reference their inventory with vendor catalogs and display them directly on their new e-commerce Web site, which runs on the ePiphany platform developed by MicroD.

“Through e-Showroom, our clients can establish brand awareness, increase traffic levels and maximize their advertising dollars by adding the equivalent of a second store without the building expense,” Parlin said.

Manoj Nigam, MicroD’s president, said the partnership “gives retailers the strongest possible solution” for establishing an effective Internet presence.

“We can help them connect to their customers and provide an easy-to-use shopping experience. Retailers will have control over their Web site, e-mail marketing and products shown without having to invest excessive time to maintain it.”

He said e-Showroom is a complete package that offers configurable and non-configurable catalogs, an integrated room planner, e-mail marketing system, free Web-needs analysis, Web site development, search engine optimization and social networking tools.

In addition, retailers will be able to select vendor catalogs or even have their own private-label catalog built so that shoppers can easily search through products without leaving the Web site and create wish lists or make purchases.

“Once the retailer has his site up and going, that retailer can figure out what the top 10 items are that are looked at on the site. Or he can look at what the top 10 companies are on the site,” said PROFITsystem’s Parlin.

“He may go, ‘Isn’t this funny? I deliberately put all my stock items on the front page but all the items people are clicking on and spending time with are on the third page. Maybe I should move those forward.’ We can actually get some analytics as a decision-making tool on what people are using the Web site for.”

While partnerships are not unusual for retail technology companies, three separate companies banding together for one purchase is unusual. Parlin said PROFITsystems has worked with both MicroD and The Lively Merchant in other venues so getting the three parties together was not so hard.

“It took a while to work out — who’s going to set it up; who’s going to support it; who’s going to do the billing? The relationship is working brilliantly.”

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Friday, September 18th, 2009

Web Summit 3.0 Presentation

The Industry-Wide Web Summit 3.0 was full of real-life illustrations of how furniture retailers and manufactures are succeeding online.

Web Summit 3.0

Here is the video attendees saw on Slide 3:

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Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Idiom: Family

ozziesFamily man. Runs in the family. In the family way. Family tree. Family matters.

Americana is all about family. We’ve even stretched it to include our “work family” and our “school family” or our “church family.” Despite efforts to redefine it, we all have our own personal definition.

What does “family” mean to Ms. Jones? Are there always kids, or can it just be her cats? What if Mr. Jones took off with someone from his “work family”? What if there are kids, but they just jumped out of the nest? What if they’re still in the nest, but only for ten minutes at a time between sporting events and play dates?

Whatever you sell has got to fit into Ms. Jones family, however she defines it. Has the changing shape, size and style of the American family changed the way you do business? Has it impacted your assortment? Have the needs of your employees changed as their own families have changed?

How do you find out what Ms. Jones’ family feels like, so you can fill their needs?

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Monday, September 14th, 2009

Watch the Web Summit live today at 1:00 PST / 4:00 EST

laptop3

If you can’t attend the Industry Wide Web Summit 3.0 in Vegas this afternoon, click here to watch the live webcast at at 1:00 pm PST (4:00 pm EST). You will gain practical, real world information and implementation strategies for all areas of electronic media and web for the furniture industry.

How to Implement Email Marketing and Social Media for Results | David McMahon | PROFITconsulting

Throw Web-Based Marketing Into Your Mix | Ron Carpenter | Strategic Marketing Solutions LLC

Demystifying the Online Furniture Shopper | David Lively | The Lively Merchant

Create an Engaging Website that Brings Your Brand to Life Online | Renee Loper | aspenhome


sponsors

You CAN show and sell furniture online. We’ll show you how.

space

Monday, September 14, 2009 | Opening day of the Las Vegas Market

Building C | 9th Floor | Room C976 | 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

space

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Monday, September 7th, 2009

“How To Make Your Website Really Sell” Entrepreneur Magazine interviews The Lively Merchant

Check out this excerpt from “How To Make Your Website Really Sell” in the September, 2009 issue of Entrepreneur Magazine featuring David Lively:

Be sure to post toll-free phone numbers and e-mail addresses on every page, as well as fields for visitors to submit questions, says David Lively, whose Ohio consulting firm, The Lively Merchant, specializes in retail sales. Glickman says retail sites should also allow visitors to calculate shipping costs early in the purchase process so that they aren’t ambushed at the conclusion of the transaction.

The ability to send automated responses to visitors who have reached the shopping cart is also critical, Lively says. “You want to be able to send auto responses that correspond to the exact point where a customer exits the shopping cart before purchasing, a communication that says, ‘We saw you were considering purchasing so-and-so product. If there are any questions we can answer about that product…’”

Whether you sell generic widgets or provide a highly specialized service, your efforts are more likely to bear fruit if your prospects perceive you as a benevolent authority in your field.

To that end, Lively says, a well-written, informative and regularly updated blog not only can boost credibility, it can also hold visitors’ interest and reengage them in the shopping experience. Read more…

How to Hold a Hot Lead by By David Port   |   Entrepreneur MagazineSeptember 2009


Make the essentials accessible. The company phone and e-mail should be prominent on most every page of a site, says Jay Bower of the Crossbow Group. Sites with a shopping cart should also provide ready access to privacy policies, return policies and shipping info.

Don’t demand too much information. “Only ask a customer or prospect for information you really need,” advises retail sales consultant David Lively. “Long forms are a source of frustration.”

Let them buy first, join later. It’s important to give customers an opportunity to open an account, but only after the close, says Dave Nevogt, owner of e-tailer PurePointGolf.com.

Remember: Less is more. “It’s a Facebook-driven world right now,” says Bower. You don’t want a site that looks text-heavy.

Function well with any browser. The best sites accommodate all visitors similarly, whether they arrived via Safari, Explorer or Firefox.

Be original. Don’t use a common template. Dare to differentiate with a site that looks and feels like no one else’s, says David Gass, who heads Business Credit Services.

Keep the site fresh. Regularly update your content, graphics and so on, and don’t be shy about trying new stuff on your site (a blog or video, for example).

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Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Web Summit 3.0 Featured in Furniture|Today

FurnitureToday article

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Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

“The X and Y of Buy”

xyOne reason people hire The Lively Merchant is because we help them do things they need to do and want to do, but don’t have time to do. One way we do this is by providing insights and reviews of new research and resources so you can decide if they are useful tools to apply to your business:

“The X and Y of Buy” by Elizabeth Pace is entertaining. Her work is simple; it is easy to read and the research is easy to follow. Pace does a nice job showing the differences between men and women without copying from thousands of other titles on the subject. She attempts to dig into the science behind men and women and straddle the issues of right and wrong.

To me, the science Pace presents is a little soupy and weak. It is likely because of my personality type, but I didn’t care for her stab at connecting the science at some emotional level.

I was reminded of “The Soccer Mom Myth” by Michelle Miller and Holly Buchanan in the few hours it took me to read the book. Frankly, while I liked “The X and Y of Buy” just fine, I thought Soccer Mom brought more to the reader.

Overall, the book was a fun, easy read. If you’re looking for a book to help you communicate more effectively, “X and Y” is a good choice. But if you’re looking for a book to increase your sales, “X and Y” is marginal. For serious solutions to serious problems, this wasn’t the book for me. I’d give it two stars.

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Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Using Your Head

business owners have to use their heads in order to compete in today's world

Business owners have to use their heads in order to compete in today's world.

As I talk with a business owners of all sizes, and they explain how their hands are tied in moving forward with an internet strategy. They believe they are doing the best they can under the circumstances, of course, but really there are departments in their organization that need to be protected, prices that need to be kept, sacred cows that can’t be touched. “After all,” they argue, “why should I wipe out my current business just to succeed online?”

This dogged thinking is great, unless your competition decides differently.

When you have someone who is willing to accomplish THIS without worrying about THUS and SO, they will likely defeat you. Online, this happens fast, since there are organizations that are willing to grow at the expense of revenue, ethics or reputation. In your short term, being focused may be a real advantage.  Sometimes, focusing on accomplishing just one thing (whatever it is) pushes a business through this recession or  that far ahead pothole. But at what expense? The competition makes a ton of money and you’ve lost forever.

Retailers, vendors, suppliers, factory branded stores, chains, regional players, local independents, Top 100′s, Mom-n-Pop’s and every other nook and cranny of our industry need to think hard about this before it’s too late

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Friday, August 21st, 2009

Profitsystems, MicroD, Lively Merchant Team up for e-Showroom

logo

Retail automation vendor Profitsystems has partnered with MicroD and The Lively Merchant on e-Showroom an advanced Web solution designed to help their customers sell additional product, more effectively and efficiently.

e-Showroom enables retailers using Profitprofessional software to integrate and cross reference their inventory flawlessly with vendor catalogs and display them directly on their new e-commerce enabled Web site. The partnership will utilize the ePiphany Web site platform developed by MicroD.

“Retailers can harness the power of three industry leaders in one Web solution,” said Shelley Parlin, COO for Profitsystems. “Through e-Showroom, our clients can establish brand awareness, increase traffic levels, and maximize their advertising dollars by adding the equivalent of a second store without the building expense.”

“This partnership gives retailers the strongest possible solution for their internet presence,” said Manoj Nigam, president of MicroD. “We can help them connect to their customers and provide an easy to use shopping experience. Retailers will have control over their website, email marketing, and products shown without having to invest excessive time to maintain it.”

David McMahon, director of e-solutions for Profitsystems said: What this means for retailers is that they can have a web solution that is easy to maintain with product that can be sold. From Web site development, provided by The Lively Merchant, to customer follow-up, this one solution can meet all of the retailer’s needs. Their website is now relevant to the customer and salesperson. That allows for a huge ROI in terms of increased sales and decreased cost.”

To inquire about e-Showroom, send email to info@profitsystems.com, or visit the Profitsystems, MicroD, and The Lively Merchant’s websites:  www.profitsystems.com, www.microdinc.com, or www.thelivelymerchant.com.

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