Skip to navigation
   
Davey Winder's Blog

Why ecommerce fails

By Davey Winder in Editorial

Posted in Blog, e-commerce on November 29, 2007 at 12:05 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

Reading that headline you are probably thinking something along the lines of what is he talking about, integrating back office services with front end functionality and wrapping it all up with an attractive public facing design is pretty straightforward these days. True. However, I was thinking about ecommerce from the sharp end of the usability stick, the part that has been poking me in my frustrated consumer eye this past week.

Despite my saying otherwise recently, I have been doing some online xmas shopping after all. I simple have not had the time during the week to escape into the high streets and shopping malls, nor the inclination to fight for a car parking space at the weekend. I am starting to think that the fight might be more pleasurable than some of the problems I have encountered with retailers that just do not get this new fangled Web thing.

Take, for example, the shop that was so desperate to impress new customers that along with the email confirmation of my purchase was news of an exciting discount offer because my business is important to them and I am an important customer. 10 percent off my next order, as long as I make it before the end of June 2007.

Or how about the shop which allows you to buy items that are showing as out of stock, but then leaves you in the dark about order progress. After a few days I noticed one of the items I had ordered was showing as in stock, however my customer account showed no outstanding orders. I used the web based contact system, and after 3 days got an email saying the order would be with me in mid-December for some odd reason. I replied to ask that they cancel the item as I had managed to source it elsewhere. That email bounced because, despite there being no ‘do not reply to this address’ warning the customer service department do not accept emails only web based contact or telephone. I overcame my phone phobia to ask them to cancel, and discovered that the reason I was being told mid-December was because that was when my other out of stock item was expected to arrive and they would send them together. A little information can go a long way, but only if you telephone them it seems.

Then there was the company whose ‘real time stock check’ apparently runs around 24 hours behind itself. I ordered an in-stock item, paid for it, got the confirmation within a few minutes only to get another the next day informing me the item is not in stock and will arrive as soon as possible, sometime in the next 14 days. Ding, no sale, refund please.

Not everyone gets it wrong though, and I do feel I should ‘big up’ the chaps at Japan Centre who despite my ticking the option of ‘if not available please cancel entire order’ had the good sense to email me instead. I had ordered a selection of cooking saki, because I am something of a food ponce, and one particular variety was not available in the size I had asked for. Instead of cancelling the entire order, Japan Centre asked if they could substitute this for the next size up (a third bigger) at the same price and with the same postage charge. Now that is what I call customer service, it’s just a shame not everyone understands that for ecommerce to be a truly enjoyable user experience it is not just the payment processes and shopping baskets that have to be transferred from real life retail - but the personal service as well…

12345
Rated: 100% (6 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Comment by Dan Jones - November 29, 2007 on 12:21 pm

I have to agree - when ecommerce does go wrong it is not a good thing.. I have had faulty parts delivered from one online retailer who took ages to sort the RMA/refund. Kind of defeated the speed I hoped I would have got.

I find the traditional retailers are worst at online customer care - and these are the ones that have poked me in the virtual eye as you say. I will use their real shops again, but online, forget it.

I have had some excellent experiences recently - from Amazon, with one of the 2 large xmas orders I placed. Free Supersaver delivery (ie normal 3-5 day wait) ordered Thurs night past 5pm, delivered Saturday am at 8am. Couldn’t believe getting a Saturday delivery at no cost to myself (couldn’t pick this thuogh!). May be luck, but certainally has helped!.

Comment by jhone marcus - June 24, 2008 on 9:03 am

As an electrical goods retailer I offer variety of consumer items. The consumer electronics market is revolutionized by techstore.co.uk
It is beneficial to both consumers and suppliers. Over the years suppliers had their own matters in getting through with electronic gadgets to the market. This will never be the same with electronic store like techstore.co.uk

Pingback by IT PRO: Blogs: Davey Winder: How to spend £11.46 on absolutely nothing - September 30, 2008 on 1:39 pm

[…] | Author Profile I have written before about the problems of why ecommerce fails and the undeniable truth of the matter is that it usually comes down to treating customers like […]

Comment by links of london - October 9, 2009 on 8:08 am

It was a very nice idea! Just wanna say thank you for the information you have shared. Just continue writing this kind of post. I will be your loyal reader. Thanks again.

Comment by usb sticks - October 15, 2009 on 11:00 am

This is great article.I also want to thanks for sharing such a nice article.I like it alot.

Comment by chi hair straightener - August 3, 2010 on 12:46 am

nice post

Comment by www.4uhats.com - August 11, 2010 on 1:34 am

www.4uhats.com

Trackback by Cleta Biber - February 9, 2012 on 7:16 am

greenpeace shirts…

[…]have granted their determination before Xmas but as the new yr strategies it now seems […]…

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

museum Analysis size Acer Project worm School shopping BOFH remote iPhone Microsoft documentation Big Brother stupid Vista NASA smartphone hardware CAPTCHA XP symantec recession Retail HPC Music football ASUS RAM office remote working Meh teleworking Energy Yahoo MessageLabs USA GMail compromise disclosure VPN Employment money Psion migration spending technology Health digitise green Government social networking Parenting ISP Mobile Phone Recall VM chips EU eBook IP xmas Military Eee worker Conference second life InfoSec Data Centre Gartner graphics Blog politics report Supercomputer Game Psychic Intel books services BSI Beta Obama man-in-the-middle Top 10 fun Study statistics Adobe universe Mobile Phones security snooping tech Sex Business Johnny Depp ROFL MiniBook Paris Hilton NBC holidays scareware economy iPhone 3GS Army stupidity support cloud desktop trust millions data HP dumb Notebooks Trojan Flash Advertising Eee PC news Experiment Porn Gateway Linux survey Opinion Education Media Web Development SMS Rant hacking transactional security search Harry Potter malware Hack Facebook workplace Dell games Trousers Performance computing data protection Europe law Video prison Browsers Steve Ballmer spam virtual machine hubdub web 2.0 Michael Jackson home Space iPhone 3G linkedin Application hacker virtualisation family hoax development Networks Programming Deal standards YouTube global encryption debian Digital Footprint e-commerce mail admin MSN DNS Press avatar earth hour lawsuit Mafia Enterprise meme science scan open source e Children McKinnon Bill Gates IT web App Store Microchip Windows 7 payment server management carbon copy Cisco network storage virus adware Olympics Nintendo ecommerce Kindle archiving computer SSL VeriSign productivity gaming App Browser campaign Zango Google Earth IBM Death Mars RATM fool Google Review payments Firefox economics credit crunch policy biometrics exploit Apple christmas Licensing Election Finjan MSNBC Jobs gadgets Gadget Internet Explorer Funny Kill Switch patch management mobile poll Madness China Sony Lotus Research ISPA Software parental control phishing terrorism President Nexus OS The Federation sick Apps Texas Instruments scam Architecture computing broadband Geeks Developers Scotland Windows Phone 7 Series Texting crime AMD botnet Jesus Phone banks privacy iPod Amazon environment work Noro fraud Palm Pre Pirate console Kaspersky wifi Digg Windows Backlash betting copyright Palm email credit card fraud Addiction library Guardian GSM innovation virtual world Patents Tesco Internet tax IDC surveys FBI Netbook memory Android monetisation help staffing Top 500 Marketing Banned code Blogging ID Theft iPad service Steve Jobs black hat banking students Rumour rootkits Kin patent outsourcing world of warcraft Ballmer theft Twitter hypervisor OCR Voice printing Russia fake information nightmare Spotify acquisition Silverlight PS3 Battery computers
Advertisement
Advertisement