eCommerce is constantly evolving and your strategy should be too. If not, the competition will eat you for breakfast (num num). The first step in your eCommerce strategy moving forward should be a thorough eCommerce site analysis. Your site needs to be firing on all cylinders before you focus on increasing traffic. This means it should be optimized using current industry best practices and converting visitors to customers. Keep reading to see a few of things I look for while auditing an eCommerce website.
Things to Look For When Auditing an eCommerce Website:
Benchmarking
Before you can reach your traffic and revenue goals, you need to know where you stand. What have you been doing well and what have you been doing not so well?
Where is your traffic coming from and how much revenue is being generated by each traffic source?
What are the top viewed pages, the top landing pages and the top exit pages? Identify opportunities to improve these pagesโ performance.
What keywords are driving traffic to your site? Are they converting?
What are your goals and KPIs?
Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
The next item we begin to look at is your siteโs search engine optimization. It is important that you properly leverage technical and on-page SEO factors in order to increase search engine rankings.
Does your site have page titles that are unique and optimized with the most important keywords appearing first?
Are the URLs clean and keyword rich?
What does your content strategy look like? Are you blogging often enough? Does your site contain unique product descriptions? Are you including keywords in the copy on your site and in header tags?
Do you have an internal linking strategy in place?
Are you leveraging image alt text?
Have you written compelling meta descriptions that would make a user want to visit your site?
If applicable, have you utilized canonical tags?
Have you created a robots.txt file and an xml sitemap?
Have you implemented a product review system in order to create user generated content and increase conversion rates?
Are you serving data like addresses, recipes, events and reviews to the search engines using schema.org html tags?
How fast does your site load?
Design and Usability
This section could be a blog in itself or even a series of blogsโฆoh wait, we do have a great design and usability blog series called โDesign 1, 2, 3โ. Iโll just give a few high level examples of things I look for while conducting an eCommerce site analysis.
Are the most important aspects of your site โabove the foldโ?
Does your site have clear and consistent calls to action?
Is the navigation easy to use?
Is the site search box prominently displayed? When a user utilizes the site search, does it produce the best possible results?
Are the most popular products prominently displayed on the category pages?
How many clicks does it take for a user to get from the homepage to the shopping cart?
The Shopping Cart
The Checkout Process
This is by no means an exhaustive list but rather a good starting point. I’m interested in hearing from you as to what it is you look for when you are making a purchase online or even conducting an eCommerce site analysis yourself.
โeCommerce is constantly evolving and your strategy should be too. If not, the competition will eat you for breakfast (num num). The first step in your eCommerce strategy moving forward should be a thorough eCommerce site analysis. Your site needs to be firing on all cylinders before you focus on increasing traffic. This means it should be optimized using current industry best practices and converting visitors to customers. Keep reading to see a few of things I look for while auditing an eCommerce website.ย ย