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An enhanced version of Virtual Earth 3-D by Microsoft has been released for Great Britain. Eric DesRoche, Senior Vice President of Intermap Technologies tells WebProNews the significance of these enhanced features. Watch the full story on WebProNews.

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SMX Seattle: Jeffrey Rohrs on Paid SearcheBaydev: Anthony Sukow talks Plugins
Terapeak’s CEO and President, Anthony Sukow, discussed their new program designed for eBay sellers and buyers.

SMX Seattle: Jeffrey Rohrs on Paid SearcheBaydev: Damon Williams on PayPal
At the eBaydev conference, Damon Williams tells WebProNews about the three most recent developments at PayPal.


SMX Seattle: Jeffrey Rohrs on Paid Search eBaydev: Alan Lewis on eBay’s San Dimas
eBay’s Product Manager Alan Lewis spoke with WebProNews about Project San Dimas. This desktop application allows users to apply...

SMX Seattle: Matt Cutts on Duplicate Content and Paid Search eBaydev: Paul Amery on Skype
Paul Amery, Developer Program Director for Skype, discusses the company's latest updates and innovations at the Ebay Developer...




Jason Lee Miller Thursday, June 21, 2007

Live Chat Ups Conversions Tenfold

Sales, online and off, are closed when the customer trusts the seller. To that end, how far does including live chat in the online sales and checkout process go toward sealing the deal? Numbers are coming in, and their looking good.
Editor's Note:  Though Coremetrics numbers on live chat are impressive, other analytics show little or no impact on conversion rates, even if that seems counterintuitive. Have you employed some kind of live chat option at your e-store? What was the result? Do you think it matters if chat is initiated by customers or by the seller? Let us know in the Comments Section.

It seems it would make intuitive sense: customers can ask questions before buying the same way they could in a brick and mortar store. No phone calls, no automated systems, no echoing silence from across the Internet.

Trust is such an important concept. This may be why, according to GetElastic.com, multiple pages in the checkout process converts better than a single page. Their data suggests that three pages or steps are optimal, converting at 6.2 percent.

Even seven pages or more (which is unbelievable to me, impatient jerk that I am) converts better than a one-step checkout process. Only one of the top 100 retailers use a one page checkout, and they convert the least at just 2.5 percent.

But why? Maybe it's because one step seems too easy, just like a scam would seem too easy. Maybe it takes more steps to reassure a buyer, who is dealing with an invisible seller, that this deal is legit.

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It would make sense, then, that providing the opportunity to actually converse with a human before a purchase could boost the chances of the purchase actually taking place. Conversations build trust and conversations look like they build conversions, too.

GetElastic has its own numbers on live chat in a nifty 46-page whitepaper on the entire checkout process, which can be downloaded in PDF or viewed in HTML, and includes data on shipping offers, coupons, security, et cetera.

"Live chat has the potential to bridge the customer service gap that exists between online shoppers and retailers," the authors say. "It can be the extra little push a shopper needs to get over any conversion hurdles that may exist such as purchase uncertainty, product questions, or technical and policy assistance."

But they're still unsure about its actual efficacy, only slightly outperforming in the Apparel and High Ticket categories, and underperforming in every other. The authors attribute this "counter-intuitive" result to a potential annoyance factor, which can turn any would-be customer off.

Coremetrics and CompUSA have a different tale to tell on live chat, though. Coremetrics followed CompUSA's implementation of InstantService's live chat technology to make a case study of it. They found that website conversion rates went up by a factor of ten.

"By adding InstantService live chat to Compusa.com, we've given our customers the ability to communicate with a live agent who can help answer their questions" said Al Hurlebaus, managing director of marketing and advertising at CompUSA. "This added value mirrors the in-store experience where customers rely on our knowledgeable salespeople to obtain assistance when they need it. "

Coremetrics' analysis showed that 60 percent of visitors who chatted and added an item to the cart, did so from the most recently viewed category before initiating a chat session.

A keyword there might be "initiated," as in the customer initiated the chat session, cutting down on the annoyance factor mentioned by GetElastic. Nearly 54 percent of CompUSA customers ended up purchasing from the category they most recently viewed before chatting.

It is still unclear, though, whether CompUSA's recent change in customer focus, from business-to-consumer to business-to-business had an impact on the results.

Jane Paolucci, VP of marketing for Coremetrics, shares some more numbers in an interview with WebProNews. She said that 68.5 percent of CompUSA customers chatted while browsing the site and that 32 percent chatted while in the shopping cart during the late stages of the buying process.

"Out of that," she said, "over 10 percent of those sessions convert to a sale, 10 times the average website conversion rate." Paolucci says that only 28 percent of ecommerce sites are currently offering live chat.

But they are "increasingly spending more money on technologies that are bringing them closer to their clients."

Not to endorse one chat product over the other, here's a Google search for "live chat widgets for ecommerce" to speed you along the chat discovery process should you think that's right for your site.

>>>Comments

Article by Jason Lee Miller, a WebProNews editor and writer covering business and technology.
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Google Pay-Per-Action Goes Global

Mike SachoffBy Mike Sachoff
Staff Writer | WebProNews

Google has announced that its pay-per-action advertising beta is now open to international advertisers.

Pay-per-action (PPA) is a pricing model where advertisers pay only when a conversion has taken place on their site, such as when a user makes a purchase or signs up for a newsletter.

"Pay-per-action advertising helped our company make the most of our marketing budget," said Alexandre Douzet, Executive Vice President and General Manager, TheLadders.com.

"At TheLadders.com, we are big proponents of marketing efficiency, so the ability to supplement our existing cost-per-click campaigns with a model that rewards qualified leads makes a lot of sense to us."

Beginning today, advertisers in the beta will receive an alert in their AdWords account telling them that they can create PPA campaigns. Advertisers who have AdWords conversion tracking and have more than 500 conversions in the last 30 days will automatically be added to the beta on a rolling basis.

PPA ads only appear on sites that participate in Google's content network. They will not be visible on Google or in its search network. Publishers in the Google content network that want more control over the ads displayed on their sites can choose individual ads, a shopping cart of ads or a keyword that is related to the content on their site.

Article by Mike Sachoff, a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.
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What am I Doing Right?

My website provides holiday and sport team schedules for Microsoft Outlook. As a part of the service that I provide, each holiday has a page that describes the history and origin of the holiday. Many of these pages make it on page 1 of Google search results and some of them are actually the number 1 result at the top of the page.

For example:

First Day of Summer
First Day of Summer - Google Search - 1

Workers Mourning Day
Workers Mourning Day - Google Search - 1

Boss Day
Boss Day - Google Search - 1 & 2
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