5 Things You Need to Know About Responsive Design in eCommerce

Post on 09-May-2015

957 views 1 download

description

You did your job. You intrigued your prospect. You captured their attention. Your call to action worked and they want to buy. Now. So they do it from their phone. Oops. Too bad you spent all of your time and effort designing that slick user interface that doesn’t work in mobile environments. Simply put, responsive design is critical to eCommerce success. Don’t believe us? Check out this presentation. You’ll be convinced and informed to respond yourself.

transcript

Hi.

Matthew BertulliCEO and Co-Founder

Demac Media

@mbertulli

Ben BurmasterPresident and Founder

Snuggle Bugz

@SnuggleBugz

About us

Some Of Our Clients

• Canada’s Baby Store• Began selling online in 2008• Magento Enterprise• Trajectory growth of 300-400%• By 2012, 1/3 of traffic was mobile

Some Context (our story)

• Combined redesign with improved infrastructure / server environment to support responsive

• Lots of bumps & bruises and the lessons that come from them• Cornerstone piece of long term “omni-channel” strategy

We’re going to use the 2013 SnuggleBugz.ca responsive redesign project and results to give some context to this talk.

6 MONTHS 1,500+ HOURS

NEARLY HALF OF

CONSUMERS USE MULTIPLE

DEVICES WHEN SHOPPING

* Internet Retailer

Today’s ThemeResponsive design has a

“multiplier effect” on many parts of your business both good and bad.

Mobile as % of RevenueDid going responsive even have an impact on mobile as a % of total revenue?

August (pre-responsive)

December (post-responsive)

Mobile Conversion RateDecember 2013:• Significant increase in

mobile conversion rate as compared to tablet and desktop.

• 52.51% increase. • Largest increase in

mobile CR of 2013.

User Interaction parity across devices.

Problems arising from responsive redesign.

Consistency across communication channels.

Overhead of running responsive.

1 Responsive requires far more planning.

2

3

4

5

THE 5 THINGS…

1Responsive requires far more planning.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Responsive Requires More Planning1

Part 1: What are the desired outcomes from going responsive?

Part 2: What impact is a responsive site going to have on my business back-office functions?

Part 3: Small changes can have massive impact on a regular site. Every change now requires you to think of more screen sizes.

Part 4: Can easily spend hundreds / thousands of hours fine tuning user interactions on each screen size. What are your limits?

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Responsive Requires More Planning1

You start your planning with user interactions. What are they? How many?

Normal Sites• Content Pages / Templates• Registration / Login• Account Management

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Responsive Requires More Planning1

eCommerce Sites• Content Templates• Registration / Login• Shopping Cart • Wish List• Registry• Checkout• Rewards Points• Account Management• Order Management • Product Reviews• Product Listing Templates

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Responsive Requires More Planning1

Can a responsive redesign impact your business in the back office?

Key: Your customers “touch” much more than your site.

Marketing Processes

Customer Service

Fulfillment Retail Store Impact

2User Interaction

parity across devices.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

User Interaction Parity2

Example: Think about how hard it is to pay on your phone! (digital wallet)

What is the best way to handle user interaction parity?

Are there features & functionalities that belong on only certain devices / screen sizes and not others?

Core differences in the types of user interactions. (hover/mouse over, drop down menus, right click, complex fields etc…)

ONE TWO THREE

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

SnuggleBugz – Since Launching Responsive

User Interaction Parity2

3Problems arising from responsive redesign.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Challenges & Problems Encountered3

Screen sizes… oh screen sizes!! 130+ of them..

The first week post-launch was pretty hard on our customer service team. Lots of inbound requests as a result of new site problems.

Forgotten features… yup, even after a lot of planning.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Challenges & Problems Encountered3

• Snuggle Bugz had 5 employees dedicated to responsive testing once it was deployed

• Reimagination of the desktop navigation

4Consistency across

communication channels.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Communication Channel Consistency4

Responsive Emails

More than doubled the amount of time required to design and build an email message.• Had to re-think everything.• Totally new approach.

Image hosting overhaul• SVG graphics and scripts• Utilizing smybolset icon fonts

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Communication Channel Consistency4

Examples of Responsive Email Display

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Communication Channel Consistency4

Examples of Responsive Email Display

5Overhead of

running responsive.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Overhead of Running responsive5

Customer Service

Customer service and in-store associates now need to have an understanding of responsive in order to handle requests effectively.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Overhead of Running responsive5

Multiple Images & Key Site Assets

Train Your Team in Responsive

• Produce Multiple or Produce Smart

• What is it? • Common problems

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Overhead of Running responsive5

Content Type Section Priority

Logo Branding Site Wide 1

New Products Rev Gen Site Wide 1

Customer Reviews Informative Page Specific 3

A new content strategy was developed to rank pieces of the page and how they’re arranged since every device has varying real estate.

1. Responsive Design in eCommerce Requires a lot more planning.

Overhead of Running responsive5

IE8 and Earlier• Lack of support for CSS media queries• We monitored our GA traffic to decide if this was a good use of

resources• Usage of IE8 was 2.8% for February 2014• National average for February 2014 is 4.34% according to Awio

Web Services

?

Questions?

Hello@demacmedia.com

Matthew BertulliDemac Media

@mbertulli

Ben BurmasterSnuggle Bugz

@SnuggleBugz