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It’s here, the final chapter of A Case of Sporting Goods. So far in this case study series, we’ve examined the challenges of the sports goods industry and went over winning strategies for the homepage, search areas, product and category pages. It is now time to close this case with the basket page and cross-channel messaging strategies, Watson.
Key Takeaways
- The global average cart abandonment rate is 70%.
- Cart abandonments can be unavoidable at times. Asking customers why they’ve decided not to finalise their purchase might prove valuable.
- In order to market effectively, you need to understand how consent information can be used in audience segmentation.
You’ve made it! The customer’s added the items they’re thinking of buying. However, nothing has ended yet. The possibility of cart abandonment is still there. In fact, the global average shopping cart abandonment rate is 70%. How can you avoid cart abandonment and make sure the transaction is completed?
“Purchased Together” or “Frequently Bought Together” campaigns are a great way to boost your AOV. A single product recommendation increases shoppers’ average order by 369% compared to shoppers who don’t engage with any recommendations.
Use the basket page to upsell or cross-sell. Why not recommend a pair of tennis shoes to go with that racket?
Achieved with “Frequently Bought Together” Campaigns: Higher AOV, higher conversion, faster decision-making
Sometimes it’s really not you; it’s them. At times, it’s more about the customer’s mindset and not how effective your campaigns were. Remember that many of us also love to use our basket pages as pseudo-wishlists.
So the customer has decided to not buy the items in their cart. You can still use this to your advantage. How? Just ask them why they’ve decided not to finalise their purchase. If it’s something that you can fix, this is highly valuable data.
For example, customers don’t like it when:
Hear what the visitors have to say about your brand and store with some elegantly designed pop-ups when an exit intent is detected. If the problem is one of the ones stated above, these surveys help you detect and solve them as quickly as possible!
Achieved with Exit Surveys: CX optimisation, increased customer retention and loyalty, smoother customer journey
It’s here, the final chapter of A Case of Sporting Goods. So far in this case study series, we’ve examined the challenges of the sports goods industry and went over winning strategies for the homepage, search areas, product and category pages. It is now time to close this case with the basket page and cross-channel messaging strategies, Watson.
Key Takeaways
- The global average cart abandonment rate is 70%.
- Cart abandonments can be unavoidable at times. Asking customers why they’ve decided not to finalise their purchase might prove valuable.
- In order to market effectively, you need to understand how consent information can be used in audience segmentation.
You’ve made it! The customer’s added the items they’re thinking of buying. However, nothing has ended yet. The possibility of cart abandonment is still there. In fact, the global average shopping cart abandonment rate is 70%. How can you avoid cart abandonment and make sure the transaction is completed?
“Purchased Together” or “Frequently Bought Together” campaigns are a great way to boost your AOV. A single product recommendation increases shoppers’ average order by 369% compared to shoppers who don’t engage with any recommendations.
Use the basket page to upsell or cross-sell. Why not recommend a pair of tennis shoes to go with that racket?
Achieved with “Frequently Bought Together” Campaigns: Higher AOV, higher conversion, faster decision-making
Sometimes it’s really not you; it’s them. At times, it’s more about the customer’s mindset and not how effective your campaigns were. Remember that many of us also love to use our basket pages as pseudo-wishlists.
So the customer has decided to not buy the items in their cart. You can still use this to your advantage. How? Just ask them why they’ve decided not to finalise their purchase. If it’s something that you can fix, this is highly valuable data.
For example, customers don’t like it when:
Hear what the visitors have to say about your brand and store with some elegantly designed pop-ups when an exit intent is detected. If the problem is one of the ones stated above, these surveys help you detect and solve them as quickly as possible!
Achieved with Exit Surveys: CX optimisation, increased customer retention and loyalty, smoother customer journey
It’s here, the final chapter of A Case of Sporting Goods. So far in this case study series, we’ve examined the challenges of the sports goods industry and went over winning strategies for the homepage, search areas, product and category pages. It is now time to close this case with the basket page and cross-channel messaging strategies, Watson.
Key Takeaways
- The global average cart abandonment rate is 70%.
- Cart abandonments can be unavoidable at times. Asking customers why they’ve decided not to finalise their purchase might prove valuable.
- In order to market effectively, you need to understand how consent information can be used in audience segmentation.
You’ve made it! The customer’s added the items they’re thinking of buying. However, nothing has ended yet. The possibility of cart abandonment is still there. In fact, the global average shopping cart abandonment rate is 70%. How can you avoid cart abandonment and make sure the transaction is completed?
“Purchased Together” or “Frequently Bought Together” campaigns are a great way to boost your AOV. A single product recommendation increases shoppers’ average order by 369% compared to shoppers who don’t engage with any recommendations.
Use the basket page to upsell or cross-sell. Why not recommend a pair of tennis shoes to go with that racket?
Achieved with “Frequently Bought Together” Campaigns: Higher AOV, higher conversion, faster decision-making
Sometimes it’s really not you; it’s them. At times, it’s more about the customer’s mindset and not how effective your campaigns were. Remember that many of us also love to use our basket pages as pseudo-wishlists.
So the customer has decided to not buy the items in their cart. You can still use this to your advantage. How? Just ask them why they’ve decided not to finalise their purchase. If it’s something that you can fix, this is highly valuable data.
For example, customers don’t like it when:
Hear what the visitors have to say about your brand and store with some elegantly designed pop-ups when an exit intent is detected. If the problem is one of the ones stated above, these surveys help you detect and solve them as quickly as possible!
Achieved with Exit Surveys: CX optimisation, increased customer retention and loyalty, smoother customer journey