Posts Tagged ‘conversion rates’

Good Error-Tolerance in Fuzzy Site Search a Must for All

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Just ran into this post from Matt Cutts (a bit of an Internet star and head of the webspam team at Google) which says about Google.com search:

“10% of our queries are misspelled”.  We often see this going up in te 20-30% range on online shops.

So if anyone out there still doubts that string matching algorithmic fuzzy search is a nice-to-have in site search, I challenge you.  Yes indeed, by nature site search or ecommerce shop search has two problems when exact matching or low grade fuzzy methods (stemming, etc.) are used:

  1. Greater chance of returning zero results with misspellings.  Google almost always has something to return even with exact matching on misspelling.  It’s returning results from among billions of web pages after all.
  2. Low success rates in search overall:  Misspellings will invariably miss their target even if they sometimes match on stemming or misspelled content here and there.

At Exorbyte, we have the very best structured data error-tolerance you can find anywhere.  We have beaten some of the biggest names in the business in enterprise search purchase.  If you are about CRO (conversion rate optimization), you need error-tolerance and your best option is Exorbyte.

Conversions Bragging Rights

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

Exorbyte just released some news from our customers which makes us quite proud.  Conversion increases of up to 45%.  That’s impressive by any count.  Conversion rates are the ratio of buyers to visitors to an online store.  Typically retailers with 10% are pretty happy.  Even 5% is acceptable, which would mean that 1 in 20 visitors to a store leaves a buyer.  In such a case, a retailer experiencing a 10% increase would see its conversion rate go up to 14.5% after some improvements, such as implementing Exorbyte Commerce.

Now, the question remains, how could Exorbyte Commerce generate such an improvement in conversion rates?  Rather than listing our product features which you can view on our site, let’s answer this question from the retailer’s point-of-view.  The table below lists a number of features which retailers are advised to pay particular attention to when engaging in Conversions Rate Optimization (CRO).  For each of these CRO tactics, Exorbyte Commerce provides an innovative solution.

CRO TACTICS DESCRIPTION HOW DOES EXORBYTE COMMERCE RESPONDS?
Identify and Pursue Lost Opportunities Do you know why your visitors leave without buying?  Making conjectures about why visitors leave without buying doesn’t help you.  In the real world store owners talk to their clerks, cashiers, and sales staff to find out what sells and what doesn’t. Exorbyte Commerce introduces actionable reports about what users search for, what they find, what they don’t find.  Retailers can finally find out what people are searching for and not finding.  There are many easily identifiable lost opportunities for which Exorbyte Commerce Ranking and Alias rules can become an immediate answer.  No need for experts and guesswork anymore.
Catch Visitors Before Flight Countless online store surveys show how short the attention span of visitors is. In a matter of seconds retailers have a chance to catch a visitor’s attention or never to see a transaction from them. The Exorbyte Commerce Autocomplete which features product pictures, prices, categories, and other relevant data based on the first couple of characters typed will instantly catch users attention. Do not doubt the search box is the place to catch a user’s attention.  This is the moment of truth for online retail.
Make Your Products Visible Online stores can easily feature hundreds of thousands of products.  They have no floor space limitations like in the brick-and-mortar world. How do you make sure your products are found when you carry thousands of them. Exorbyte Commerce always gets users to the product of their choice because its proprietary search engine is far better at decreasing the number of fruitless searches and at ranking relevant search results than any other search engine in the market.
Define and Improve Landing Pages Landing pages are pages that feature products, promos, marketing programs that may have a stronger visitor appeal than single product pages, pages about store’s policies or the store’s transcriptional process. Landing pages could be about seasonal promotions, an exclusive brand that the store carries, etc. They get picked up easily by web search engines but they don’t show in the store’s search results. With Target Pages Exorbyte Commerce allows online retailers to add new landing pages anytime they want. They can be associated with keywords of their choice and will be featured in the site search results when a user’s query seems relevant.
Increase Page Load Speed Slow stores do not fare well with online visitors. They expect fast page loading times. That’s a known fact. However, it is challenging to balance this requirement with that of featuring rich content like lengthy descriptions, suggestions, large images, etc. Exorbyte Commerce is an AJAX-based application. It means that interacting with the Exorbyte Commerce interface users won’t wait for pages to re-load.  The page’s contents change on-the-fly in a fraction of a second and there is never a delay. Rather than frustrated and impatient, users are surprised and in awe at the speed and quality of their experience.
Reduce Clutter and Messy Interfaces Messy pages, clutter, and too many choices almost guarantees visitor flight. Beyond a certain point, information overload pushes visitors to leave so they can breathe the fresh air of a lighter store design somewhere else. Exorbyte Commerce’s interface is light and well organized. It is the fruit of years of experience with online retail. We have reduced the presence of buttons, images, text, and other elements to an elegant set of well recognizable tools which visitors will feel are natural and relevant.
Make the Process Simple and Natural Don’t re-invent the wheel. Users don’t expect your store to redefine the process of finding and buying products on the web. They want a simple and natural experience that feels familiar. Unfamiliarity breeds risk and uncertainty in the minds of consumers. Buyers like control and a risk-less environment to make their purchases. Exorbyte Commerce follows the principles of good user interface design with simple, yet fast and sophisticated tools that will feel all but new to visitors. We take the best of what we have learned with some of the largest online retailers we have done work for and bring it to your store.
Use Images Whenever Possible Nothing replaces a good quality image in terms of removing the uncertainty that comes with buying a product off a strange new store. Seeing is believing. Exorbyte Commerce automatically pulls images from your store catalog and features them in search and suggestions.

Tell us what you do to improve conversions and how much quality search factors into your conversion maximization efforts.

eCommerce Search: What is it? Why do it? Who does it?

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Why do it?

This previous article about the long tail of search in ecommerce makes already a good case for better site search in ecommerce sites.   This said, it is also important to remind people that past studies have shown that about half of all visitors gravitate straight to the search box.  They don’t waste their time browsing for products to buy in the directory structures of your store catalog’s categories, they want something specific and Google has taught them to find this with search.   This little roundup of the state of industry aims to show you where we think ecommerce search engine products are coming from and where they are going.

What is it?

The Search Legacy
Search software has been all the rage since the late 90s. When I worked for Netscape, and later Infoseek, I saw the search software industry explode and split into multiple major segments. The Internet search segment (Google, and co.) found pursued growth opportunities in media with added value portals and other advertising-supported business models. The cost of entry in this category became so high eventually, however, that the late arrival of Google on the Web was seen as a miracle-of-sorts. Search software editors on the other hand kept sprouting with new products and new approaches.
Some search products were outgrowth of web search ventures: Ultraseek, Inktomi, Google Appliance, etc. Others aimed straight at the enterprise with a mix of full-text search tools and database and ERP connectors (Endeca, Microsoft/Fast, Autonomy, SLI, etc.).
While that was happening no-one paid too much attention to the relatively small ecommerce opportunities. Enterprise search contracts often started at around $250K (sometimes yearly). So why focusing on ecommerce where the only enterprise-size businesses (eBay, Amazon, and a few others) mostly hired their own R&D and software development staff.

The Ecommerce Legacy
Strangely enough (as Tobi Lütke the founder of Shopify pertinently explains here) search remained anafterthought for most of the ecommerce software developers. Their initial focus was to automate the brick-and-mortar processes of the real world through advanced database powered applications. They never envisioned the volume of traffic that some ecommerce properties see these days and the very small portion of visitors, surfers, and product researchers who actually complete transactions.
Many ecommerce platforms were developed based on a mix of full-text search technology (crawler-indexer). These technologies are just not what the ecommerce platforms need because their data (products, services, customers) is already structured in databases. Furthermore, the search results logic that presides over content (documents, web pages) is very different from the way a shopper behaves with the catalog of an online store. Retailers need ways to serve search results that help the visitors find what they want to search for. Not just results to a well-prepared query. Online merchants also need to cross-sell, cross-promote, and present visitors with as many relevant opportunities to transact as possible.

What is Site Search for Ecommerce?

So at the end of the day, running simple queries against a database just isn’t enough anymore for powerful ecommerce search experiences.   What is needed in terms of features is a mix of the following features:

  • a powerful structured data search facility which can handle fast recall with error-tolerance like:
    • misspellings
    • synonyms
    • taxonomies (related terms, catagories, facets, etc.)
  • advanced interfaces like real-time AJAX search results controls and autocompletes (like the Google Suggest)
  • Search Reporting and Analytics to allow continuous improvement of catalog inventory and descriptions to match highly sought after products (this data also needs to be exportable to third party business intelligence tools like Google Analytics or Omniture)
  • advanced search-powered merchandising modules like “related products”, “contextual promos”, “you might also like” which can only get better if they are based on the same error-tolerant features cited above
  • full-text search for non-catalog content on the store’s web site (web pages, support pages, corporate content, etc.)

What’s Ecommerce Search made of These Days?

Search-only offerings:

  • Exorbyte Commerce
  • Endeca
  • Omniture / Mercado
  • Celebros
  • SLI
  • Fast
  • Nextopia
  • Baynote
  • Shoptivate

Ecommerce platforms with better-than-average search features:

  • Prestashop
  • Volusion
  • Demandware (not on all stores)
What features and technologies?
Clearly, at Exorbyte, we have taken one orientation which we firmly believe in.   Here are some of the features we believe every search app should offer to ecommerce users:
  • a proprietary search engine that allows high error tolerance, very fast recall (for autocomplete) and phonetic, edit distance, and more matching algorithms
  • merchandising features for easy control of search ranking, faceted search, and more.
  • advanced reporting showing what people are search for, what they are finding, what they are not finding and allowing conversion tracking
  • a system that allows for multilingual product data search (any language for product catalog data, any language for search matching logic above)
  • hosted software-as-a-service mode for delivery (considerably more affordable for the online retailer)
  • complete integration using AJAX technology ( no more jumping to a special domain or complex DNS integrations, search is delivered as if it lived on the store’s own servers)
  • easy customization for special custom data attributes about products for rich catalogs and faceted search

So what do you think?  Please comment.

Low Hanging Fruit for Most Online Stores: Better Search Features

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

We just launched the public beta version of Exorbyte Commerce Search and Autocomplete (if you are in the UK: http://commerce.exorbyte.co.uk). It’s a hosted SaaS monthly subscription version of our popular search products (MatchMaker and SearchNavigator) especially designed for ecommerce.

We also serve a large selection of other industries with the same core products for search within structured data. However we chose ecommerce, and we did so on purpose. There is plenty of data showing how many online stores are behind in terms of satisfying users with better search features to help them find what they want to buy. Here are  some of the reasons why Exorbyte Commerce is worth many times the very short time  (only minutes) setting up its free trial requires:

  • More than 47% of online shop visitors don’t become buyers because of poor search or navigation features.
    “According to iPerceptions’ E-commerce Industry Report Q2 2009, 38.6% of the 360,000 or so visitors to the 160 websites tracked were in the research stage of the buying process, while just 17% were at the buying stage.

    online shopper flight1 300x177 Low Hanging Fruit for Most Online Stores: Better Search Features
    source

    Source: iPerceptions' E-commerce Industry Report Q2 2009

    iPerceptions was able to establish several reasons why visitors aren’t purchasing. The main reason was that visitors weren’t able to find what they were looking for (34%), while price and navigation/usability issues tied in second place (13%) followed by shipping policies (9%).

    why customers dont buy1 300x200 Low Hanging Fruit for Most Online Stores: Better Search Features
    source

    Source: iPerceptions' E-commerce Industry Report Q2 2009

  • In his book The Humane Interface, renowned user interface guru Jef Raskin compares incremental and delimited search: “With a delimited search, the computer waits for the user to type a pattern and delimit it, after which it is the user who waits while the computer does the search. When using a delimited search the user must guess, beforehand, how much of a pattern the computer needs to distinguish the desired target from other, similar targets. With an incremental search, he can tell when he has typed enough to disambiguate the desired instance, because the target appeared on the display.”
    Jef Raskin goes on to say: “In spite of near agreement about the desirability of incremental searches on the part of both designers and users, almost all interface-building tools make it easy to implement delimited searches and difficult or impossible to implement incremental searches.”
    Jef Raskin even ventured to say in a footnote that search is either “incremental or excremental”. We kind of agree with him. icon wink Low Hanging Fruit for Most Online Stores: Better Search Features

While ecommerce catalogs are structured database tables, many online stores still use lame full-text search engines or slow database queries to provide catalog search results to their users. This is a real problem for the following reasons:

  • Full-text search engines usually have to crawl pages to index the data, making the update mechanism of search results slow and often out-of-date (not reflecting frequent changes in inventory levels, prices, and descriptions retail database undergo daily).
  • Database queries and full-text queries are simply not capable of handling advanced fuzzy search like structured data or database indexing engines can. Too slow or simply impossible to implement.
    Just try to build an advanced multi-field fuzzy search facility for a database of millions of SKUs (ex: online travel store, industrial parts, online electronics store, etc.) and keep it fast (under 10ms round trip) using a database query or full text search engine! Have fun and let us know if you want tips on how to make it work with a different approach.

Something that would be much better, much simpler, much faster and much more natural. An ecommerce search system that yeilds more conversions. Simply a system that guesses what you want to find even if you don’t know what it’s called: That is what we strive for every day at Exorbyte! What do you think?