Are you absolutely certain
that everything on your site works correctly?
We recently had the following unfortunate experience. After
focusing heavily on marketing, we
launched a new marketing campaign. Soon we had an irate
email. A gentleman pointed out he could
not get the free download nor could he place an order. We
had already received orders, so we were
just about to dismiss this as the writings of a computer
illiterate, who probably had trouble turning the
thing on, when we decided to check it out.
And to my horror he was right! We have two identical sites,
with different domain names, and I had
just spent a small fortune promoting one of them, to find
it was not possible to place an order! It took
only a few minutes to find the problem – wrong links
to the order page. I had checked this before, but
somehow the page was subsequently changed and uploaded.
He later informed me that the free
download was not downloading, despite a free bonus (a "thankyou"
for bringing it to my attention)
downloading perfectly well.
We tried –and again, he was right! We couldn’t
see the problem, so we just uploaded a "fresh"
version, and it worked. I don’t even want to think
how many customers we might of lost – most people
will just abandon your site, rather than take the time to
let you know something is wrong. So this chap
could have saved us a fortune – so I sent him a free
bonus! He was as pleased as punch, and I was
grateful that someone out there took the time to point the
problems out. He is my best customer – he
hasn’t purchased anything, but he saved me from losing
dozens of potential customers, who would
simply "surf" elsewhere when things didn’t
work.
So, always:
1)Test everything works regularly.
2)Test everything works after making any changes, however
small.
3)Test all downloads thoroughly. Things can happen that
you may not ever know about problems
with your ISP’s server, data corruptions etc.
4)Run dummy orders to check your shopping cart and credit
card processing systems work (these rely
on third party companies, so you may not know if they develop
problems their end).
5)Check the load time of your site, over a normal phone
line. You may have a high speed connection,
but most people are still connected via regular phone lines.
They will go elsewhere if it takes 30
seconds to load your homepage.
6)Check all the above, on as many different combinations
of computer and browser as you can. Does it
look and function as it should.
7)Encourage your customers to report faults –and
reward them!
There’s so much choice out there, so don’t
give visitors an excuse to go elsewhere – make sure
everything about your site works –test it to destruction! |