Design Focused versus Enterprise Design

>95% of business websites fail*, causing a re-design cycle of 18-30 Months**. Businesses tend to focus only on design and are left wondering why each new design does note not deliver expected results.

This “design-focus” overlooks key elements of an Enterprise-Level Design and further compounded by the perceived cost, time and risk related of such an endeavor. The cost / time / effort expended would extend the life of a web site and produce financial rewards that offset the investment and generates true income.

An Enterprise-Level site for Manufacturers and Distributors should meet the needs of: Managers to add your company to the AVL; Engineers who specify your products; and Buyers that place orders.

Most websites are so focused on the design that they underperform on content, usability, page load speeds, conversion and Search engine optimization. These problems persist in each new re-design due to a lack of understanding or ability to fund such efforts.

Inductech - 1 of 16 Websites by Distiman in 2021 (so far)

Another example of a site utilizing DISTiMAN for their on-line engineering catalog.  The site is designed to appeal to the designing engineers with an easy to use menu and product listing with advanced filters and sortable columns.

How a Bad Website Can Drive Customers Away… For Good

How a Bad Website Can Drive Customers Away… For Good

Finding and keeping new customers is difficult enough in today’s competitive business world; a poor website that repels customers can make things even more difficult.

 Irrelevant content, long loading times, content that’s not mobile-friendly, and too many hoops to jump through can all push customers to find better places to spend their money online. Consider your last B2C shopping experience, for example. If the site wasn’t well organized, didn’t meet your needs, and/or wasted your time, you probably ran away as fast as you could by tapping your phone screen or clicking your mouse.

Well, your distributorship’s B2B customers are doing the same thing. “Your website is oftentimes your potential customer’s first impression of your company, and that makes it a pretty powerful marketing tool. Having a great website can win you customers around the world without any effort from a salesman,” Jerome Collomb writes in 5 Things That Drive Your Visitors Away. “However, if your website isn’t created with the right things in mind, it can send the wrong message to thousands of people, and eventually lead to a big loss in business.”

Citing poor content; unclear directives that aren’t concise and user-friendly; a lack of credibility; looking “cheap” and unprofessional; and too much information as the primary customer repellants in the online world, Collomb tells companies to strive for the right balance between providing easy-to-understand information and maintaining a professional image online. Ignore this advice and you could wind up driving existing and prospective customers away for good.

Is Your Website Up to Snuff?

According to Forrester Research, B2B e-commerce transactions will reach $1.2 billion by 2021 and will account for more than 13% of all U.S. B2B sales at that point (up from $889 billion in 2017). Increasing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 7.4% annually, these B2B sales frequently kick off with a customer using a mobile device or desktop computer to visit a distributor’s website. And if that experience isn’t up to snuff, he or she will go elsewhere to find the right product, information, and data.

“If you’re not continuously improving your pages and appropriately updating as trends change, you could be driving customers away in droves,” writes Megan Prangley in 10 Ways Your Website Could Be Driving Customers Away. She sees outdated design, not being mobile friendly, complicated navigation, grammatical errors, and a lack of CTAs (calls to action) as the primary culprits. A lack of social media links and too many pop-ups can also hurt a distributor’s chances of retaining eyeballs—and making sales—online.

“If your website has so many pop-ups scrolling around that your leads can’t read your copy, that is a huge turn off to modern web-users,” Prangley cautions. “CTAs are great, but annoying and spammy links will drive traffic right to your competitors.”

Let Your Reps Loose on the Web

Having worked with many industrial distributors over the last few years—helping them improve their e-commerce presences and grow their online sales—Justin King, co-founder of the DigitalBranch, and senior partner at B2X Partners, says there are a few tricks that companies can use to buck the bad website trend.

For starters, King says having good, accurate data is paramount in the B2B world, where customers want to know what the product is, how it solves their problem, how much it costs, and when they can get it. Past that, he says electrical distributors should utilize descriptive product titles (ideally those that speak to a specific application or customer problem), product attributes, and detailed descriptions.

And who better than your own inside sales reps to develop those descriptions? “Have your inside sales reps, or maybe someone who is retiring from your industry, write the descriptions,” King says. Start by giving those scribes an Excel file of 50-100 top products and have them develop write-ups that mimic how they would describe the products to their own customers in person, on the phone, or via email.

“Pay them by the hour or the SKU, and task them with coming up with write-ups that actually speak to your customers. Tell them what the product is and how it can be used, and suddenly you have unique content on your website.” That unique content can really help distributors stand out online, says King, and namely because “about 1% of companies are doing this right now.”

The Video Secret

It’s no secret that videos help to keep people engaged online. In fact, where both video and text are available on the same page, 72% of people would rather use video to learn about a product or service, according to The State of Video Marketing in 2018. With 81% of businesses already using video as a marketing tool (up from 63% in 2017) and 99% of those firms planning to continue doing so this year, the push to augment text with moving pictures is on.

King says electrical distributors are in the perfect position to leverage the video trend, given the high number of “demonstrable” items that they sell, and the fact that many of their products require additional customer education and support. “Make a video detailing how your product is actually used or installed inside of a selection of different applications,” King suggests. “Focus on the marketing side of the equation, with bulleted descriptions that are exciting and engaging, and make customers want to take action.

“Even a 30-second video shot on an iPhone X of a product being used in the field can go a long way in helping to enhance a distributor’s website,” says King. “It takes literally zero money to do it; it’s just about being smart and taking the initiative.”

Unbox It!

Going a step further, King encourages electrical distributors to experiment with advanced web content techniques like “unboxing,” or the unpacking of products whereby the process is captured on video and uploaded to the Internet. The item is then also explained in detail and/or demonstrated. (View three examples of product unboxing here.)

“Any distributor can create an unboxing video in just a few minutes,” says King. “It’s a simple and extremely effective way to show customers what’s in the box, what the different pieces and components are, and how big it is (i.e., by using a ruler right in the video).”

A central focus of your distributorship’s digital presence, your website has to be top-notch in today’s B2B world, where customers have come to expect the same experiences that they have in the B2C environment. By providing relevant information, publishing accurate data, and getting “creative” with advanced web techniques, distributors can avoid the “bad website” trap and begin attracting (and retaining) more customers online.

Page Load Time Affects Your Conversion Rate

As a consumer, you know how you respond to slow sites. You hit the back button or close the browser.  As a business owner, you’re well aware of this. You’re a consumer, too, after all. So, you know page load time and conversion rate are related. But how exactly? How does it affect the bottom line?

Conversion rate is the ratio of visitors who take the action you want them to on a page and the total number of visitors. Examples of actions you want page visitors to take are to download a specification, fill out a form, drop a product in a shopping cart, or submit a request for quote query.

How Page Load Time Affects Your Results

You intuitively sense the longer it takes for a page to load, the more likely a visitor is to hit the back button and abandon the page.  And you’re right.  How fast a page loads affects how visitors experience it. And it reflects directly on how they view your company and your products and services. AB Tasty reports 40% of visitors dissatisfied with your site’s speed are likely to talk about their poor experience. In the same report, HubSpot says 80% of them are less likely to buy from you again. Because page speed is crucial to user experience, Google uses page load time in its ranking algorithms. If you want your website to be ranked in Google search results, your pages need to load fast enough.

And, yes, page speed directly influences your conversion rates.

Let’s check the statistics.

Google did a study in 2017 that showed very clear and very sobering statistics:

    More than half (53%) of mobile users abandon a page if it takes more than three seconds to load.
    Mobile sites that load in five seconds or fewer earn twice as much as sites that take 19 seconds to load.
    Three out of four mobile sites take more than 10 seconds to load. And the average load time is 19 seconds on a 3G connection and 14 seconds on a 4G connection.

And a benchmark study by SOASTA showed 47% of all consumers shop using their phones.

Now, of course, bounce rates aren’t conversion rates.

However, visitors who bounce can’t ever convert. Your sales copy won’t even get a chance to work its magic.

It boils down to this: high page load times increase bounce rates, which directly translates to decreasing conversion rates.
But by How Much?

Walmart saw a sharp decline in conversion rates as page load time increased from one to four seconds. The graph doesn’t show conversion rate numbers, but the grid suggests conversion rates fell by about 90%.

More general figures come from an update to the Google study mentioned above. It measured the likelihood that a visitor will bounce increases with page load time.

If a page’s load time slowed from one second to three seconds, the chances of a bounce increased by almost a third (32%). And going from one to five seconds increased bounce rate by a whopping 90%!

Combining that knowledge with the fact that 53% of mobile visitors bounce at three-plus seconds, we can infer a little over 40% may bounce given a page load time of more than one second. Increasing the load time to five-plus seconds means a whopping 76% of visitors are likely to bounce.

What a difference a second makes!
How Does This Translate to Your Bottom Line?

Let’s say your sales copy works its magic and gets 20% of visitors to buy your product if speed wasn’t an issue (i.e., the page loads in less than one second).

Let’s further assume your product costs $100, and you get 1,000 unique visitors per day.

Putting everything together paints the following picture:

When speed isn’t an issue, 40% bounce, and 20% of the remaining visitors (60%) buy. That’s 120 sales and $12,000 in revenue.

When your site is just two seconds slower, 53% bounce. This leaves only 47% of visitors for your sales copy to work its magic, meaning 94 sales and $9,400 in revenue.

That’s a drop of almost a quarter!

Adding another two seconds to load your page translates to 76% bounces, meaning you make only 50 sales and $5,000 in revenue.

That’s less than half of what you’d be able to make if speed wasn’t an issue.

So, speed matters—a lot. But what can you do about it?
What to Aim for and Where to Focus
Page Load Time

Google recommends keeping page load time under three seconds.

Others recommend even shorter load times, with two seconds commonly accepted as the maximum load time mobile visitors will tolerate.

If you run an e-commerce store, you’ll want to aim for a load time of two seconds or fewer.
The Important Pages for Your Results

Pages aren’t created equal. Some are more important than others when it comes to improving load time.

Focus on the pages that move the needle for your results, also known as pages with “high consumer intent.” Basically, any page that turns a visitor into a prospect or a customer. Here are some examples of what those pages might be:

    Your checkout process
    Product and service information pages—especially when they have a “buy” button
    Category and search pages if you run an e-commerce store
    Mailing list and newsletter subscription pages

Mobile or Desktop

If you have to choose whether to focus on page speed for visitors using a desktop or their mobile phones, always pick mobile first.

A page that performs well for desktop users can be extremely slow for mobile users simply because of the slower connection. But when a page performs well for mobile users, desktop users will have an even better experience (unless you consciously include things for desktop users only and these kill load speed).
Steps to Improve Page Load Times

As with anything you want to improve, you need to start with where you are. Without that, you won’t know whether your changes make things better or worse.

So, the first step is to measure how fast your high-consumer-intent pages are loading.

I highly recommend using a tool to do so, because they’re more accurate and more efficient. You can use Google PageSpeed Insights or a more sophisticated performance measurement tool like SolarWinds® Pingdom®.

The second step is to start optimizing for speed.

This means minimizing the number and size of files needed for a page to display in a browser. You may also want to minimize the “network distance” between your site’s resources and visitors by using a content delivery network (CDN).

To learn more about what affects page load time and what you can do to minimize it, check out our article on page speed and SEO.

The third step is to check your results and ensure there’s an improvement.

After that, you want to repeat measurements regularly, so you can act fast when something causes one or more pages to slow down.
Break the Speed Limit

Speed matters.

You’ve seen exactly how page load times affect conversion rates and know when it comes to your business’s bottom line, every second counts.

So, start measuring and start improving. Break the speed limit holding you back. And keep measuring to know when things slow down, so you can diagnose what’s causing it and act fast to remedy it.

And be sure to check out a free trial of SolarWinds Pingdom and experience how it helps you measure, analyze, and improve your page speed.

This post was written by Marjan Venema. With 30+ years in all corners of software development, Marjan’s specialty is writing engaging copy that takes the terror out of tech: making complicated and complex topics easy to understand and consume.

US B2B eCommerce Will Hit $1.8 Trillion By 2023

Forrester forecasts that US B2B eCommerce will reach $1.8 trillion and account for 17% of all B2B sales in the US by 2023. At the end of 2018, Forrester expects eCommerce to have reached $1.1 trillion and represent 12% of total B2B sales in the US. We forecast a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10% for B2B eCommerce over the next five years. This report defines the potential of the US B2B eCommerce space and what B2B digital business professionals must do to take advantage of the opportunity.

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