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Wooing Your eCommerce Customers Is Easier Than You Think

wooing-your-customers

Are you planning to start an online business? It is really easy to woo your eCommerce customers and increase sales with the recommendations included in this blog post. In fact, these tips are so easy to follow, any WooCommerce store owner can implement them today.

As the popular quote by Orvel Ray Wilson goes,

Customers buy for their reasons, not yours.

You should try to understand your eCommerce customers well enough to gain more sales. This article discusses how to delight your customers with your WooCommerce store.

Why WooCommerce?

It powers 26% of all online stores, is open-source, and it’s easy to customize and maintain. At WebDevStudios, we build and maintain some popular WooCommerce stores.

Below os my list of recommendations. Many store owners often miss these, and that affects sales. So, let’s get started.

Target Audience

Defining your target audience is a crucial factor in your marketing efforts. As Seth Godin says, “Everyone is not your customer.” So, you have to niche down and identify your target eCommerce customers.

There is a popular marketing term called “buyer persona,” which means identifying the buyers to a deeper level. If you have buyer personas, pat yourself on your back. If you don’t, here is a simple approach in two steps.

  1. Start with the demographics of your customers by including age, gender, location, occupation, income level, etc.
  2. Then, proceed with psychographics, like interests, lifestyle, behavior, attitude, etc.

This gives you a better picture of your target audience. Do you need a buyer persona? The short answer is yes.

Many store owners and agencies know how the sales funnel works, but only a few of them target the right target audience and convert visitors to customers.

Whether it is social media advertisements, email campaigns, or SEO, the wrong target market won’t convert into sales. Here are some tools to help.

Competitor Analysis

Every business has a unique selling proposition, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have competitors. A business or person that offers the same services or products as yours to your target audience is competition. Instead of competing with them, you could learn from them.

  1. Identify gaps. By curating a list of your competitors and what they offer, you can find the gaps in the market. Find the blue ocean where you can make a difference and dominate the market.
  2. Find what is trending. Spy on your competitors on their social media pages, email campaigns, webinars, and other all possible outlets. Research and use the data you discover to guide you. See what is trending and add to your brand’s identity, core values, and invent your own trend.
  3. Pay attention to social signals. Find out what the customers talk about your competitors’ customer service by reading testimonials, tweets, and whatnot.
  4. Analyze their strategies. Observe competitors’ pricing, shipping, refund, returns, and other strategies and policies. You can learn from these and avoid their mistakes. Keep it DRY. That means, don’t repeat yourself.

These tools help with competitor analysis.

Store Features

The experience of your eCommerce customers matters. From header navigation to search filters, every feature of your online store is important. These are the minimum required ones:

Did you know that 88% of the online carts are abandoned worldwide? Understanding your eCommerce customers and providing a good user experience will help in reducing abandonment rates. The following tools help.

Pricing

Who doesn’t want discounts? Pricing can often make or break the deal.

As we discussed earlier, analyze your competitors’ strategies, including pricing. Find inspiration in their examples and formulate a pricing strategy that works for you.

One tool I highly recommend is WooCommerce Points and Rewards. This product allows you to reward your customers for their purchases and referrals.

Customer Service

Others can copy your strategies, get supplies from the same supplier as yours, use the same theme and plugins, but they can’t match your customer service.

Every brand has its own core values, and it reflects in customer service. WooCommerce makes it easy to add and view order notes for both store owners and customers.

Make sure you are providing excellent eCommerce customer support before, during, and after the purchase to stay on top of the market. Adding these elements to your WooCommerce shop will help.

You may not be able to control the market, but you can control the way you serve your eCommerce customers. Good customer service also brings you positive feedback. Additionally, positive ratings from your customers increases brand awareness

For assistance with your customer service, keep these tools in mind.

Communities

This is a commonly known yet ignored piece of advice. Be a part of the community related to your industry and grow your own community around your eCommerce brand. Here are two ideas.

Communities foster a sense of belonging. You learn more by listening to others’ experiences.

At first, you can start by becoming a member of various communities. Then, you should create a community with your customers as you grow.

As the Pareto principle advises: 80% of sales come from 20% of the customers. When you have a community of loyal eCommerce customers, marketing and sales become easy.

Need some help with building or scaling your WooCommerce store? Let the experts handle it. Contact us now.

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