Have you heard of Narvar? They help retailers around the world (think Sephora, Patagonia, Home Depot, and LVMH, among many others) improve their ecommerce business. These well-known retailers represent many of the popular brands that people are buying online, and the data that Narvar gathers and reviews for them can often be indicative of the current state of ecommerce.
Luckily for ecommerce sellers everywhere, Narvar periodically shares this data in reports. Earlier in 2019 they released their “Magical Moments Report”. This report surveys 650+ retailers and 350+ carriers across 9 retail categories and 38 countries regarding online shopping behaviour and customer expectations in 2019. It also recommends ways that ecommerce sellers can apply this knowledge to increase customer satisfaction, build repeat business, and sustain loyalty.
With the New Year right around the corner and the holiday rush (mostly) behind us, now is a great time to reflect on these findings and consider how you might apply them to your business in 2020. Narvar’s report is 70 pages long, however, and you probably have holiday visitors causing a ruckus in the living room. So, we’ve done the hard work for you and summarized key points below.
We’ll also share how to put these findings to work using your very own booth and tools here on Bonanza.
Let’s get started!
Narvar found that providing multiple choices for shipping and delivery can help your business. For example, 80% of UK shoppers they surveyed said they’re more loyal to brands and retailers that offer a range of convenient and flexible delivery options.
Similarly, Narvar found that 80% of consumers surveyed said they want same-day shipping options, but only 53% of retailers offer this.
How you can apply this on Bonanza:
Narvar noted that customer expectations regarding shipping vary based on market trends in their country. For example, in the UK, average shipment time in transit is a quick 1.5 days, as delivery collection points are more common and there is a relatively small geographic footprint. This is more than twice as fast as in the US, where they found the average is 3.5 days, and the ‘last mile’ in less populated areas often adds extra transit time.
Narvar also found that 54% of consumers would shop with a retailer again if they provided an accurate delivery date.
So, this doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to figure out how to ship to London from L.A. in 1.5 days. Rather, considering the local norm when you’re expanding into a new country can help you manage customer expectations in your descriptions and communications.
How you can apply this on Bonanza:
Proactive updates ranked highly on customers’ expectation lists, Narvar notes. 81% of consumers surveyed said that receiving proactive updates on an order is critical to them repurchasing. Essentially, this means providing them with information they want before they have to ask for it. This includes things like personalized confirmation messages sent immediately after purchase and providing tracking information as soon as it is available.
Narvar also found that the longer your delivery timeframe, the greater a customer’s communication expectations increased. This also applied when their order experienced delivery issues or delays. Customers were more likely to remain satisfied if they were notified of delivery issues before the expected delivery date. Generally, customer expectations for response time are growing shorter. (We blame cell phones).
How you can apply this on Bonanza:
Interestingly, Narvar found that expectations for tracking were increased in certain item categories, such as technology, which has higher average cost and theft concerns. They also pointed to the expectations for health & beauty categories in the UK and Germany – these categories attracted a statistically higher number of ‘digitally native’ customers who are accustomed to on-demand information.
Another intriguing discovery was that the US had the highest overall average number of visits to tracking pages. Narvar attributed this to longer overall ship times in the US, which allows customers more opportunity and reason to check back in.
How you can apply this on Bonanza:
53% of customers surveyed said that thoughtful and personal experiences are more important to them than discounts. Narvar suggests treating customers like more than “just another order number” by providing them with above-average experiences, such as helpful information regarding the product they’ve purchased.
How you can apply this on Bonanza:
Returns often inspire mixed feelings for sellers, so this was nice to hear: Narvar found that 95% of customers who were satisfied with their returns process said they’ll purchase with that retailer again.
There was a tougher flip side to that coin. 72% of shoppers surveyed said that having to pay for return shipping costs will prevent them from making a purchase.
There’s ways to make lemonade out of returns, however: In a separate (but related) 2019 report, “State of Returns”, Narvar noted that most shoppers (62%) exchange or replace the items they return. This means that a return is still a chance to keep the customer in your ecosystem. They found that poor service can make the difference between earning this exchange or losing the sale to a competitor, and they observed that more customers are willing to make an exchange instead of a return if it’s easy.
Useful to know for next holiday season: Narvar also noted that improving the returns process for gift recipients is an opportunity to capture them as new customers. If you’re wondering what customers look for in a ‘perfect return’, Narvar cited:
Some other interesting tidbits from these 2 reports regarding returns:
How you can apply this on Bonanza:
One last reassuring takeaway from Narvar was that while expectations about delivery time are increasing, speed is still not everything yet. There are other experiential touch points that retailers can still compete on, such as delivery methods, proactive communication and a seamless post-purchase experience.
We hope that this information is helpful for your business in 2020. Have additional tips for the future you’d like to share with other sellers? Let us know in the comments!
20 responses to Ecommerce in 2019 and Beyond
nice tips… i like the mall photo, too
My learnings in the past match this…
Offer free returns and refund the full amount including their shipping.
Free shipping does not make as many sales as low cost shipping with multiple item shipping discounts, which are harder to apply to an order with free shipping.
Always send a thank you email and tracking information. No exceptions.
Wonderful information to get 2020 off to a running start! Thanks BonanzaBrian!
Timely information before the new year arrives!
Helpful information, thanks!
nice tips, thanks!!
Returns anyway you want to look at them are Red Ink for a seller. There is no other way to look at it. Especially when you say an item measures X amount at the waist and buyer is disappointed they could not get their 40 inch waist into the 36 inch garment. Shipping for a regular pair of jeans is $15.00 going and returning out of the seller’s pocket, and results in a loss for the seller on that item. Also free returns attracts the buyers who wear or use the item before they return it.
Thank you for the helpful info. “Merry Christmas to all and to all a great 2020!”
Great info!:)
very helpfull.
Thank you for the international shipping info. I’ve been wondering how to do this for 700+ listings in bulk. Good general info given, some of which is dependent upon whether selling new or used items.
helpfull, thank you for sharing.
Nice Read, Thank You!
Some background would be nice for the negative nellies, me for one.
Does all this only apply to high demand new merchandise?
What is the price range and mark up on the merchandise?
What % is lost to fraud?
What % is domestic sales and international sales?
What are the shipping costs domestic and international?\
How much do the vague numbers differ by country?
And on and on.
Helpful article. From the seller`s point of view, I would add the importance of appropriate insurance coverage for each particular parcel.
Merry Christmas to all!
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Great article, thanks! As far as Bonanza is concerned, hopefully there are some changes planned to make shipping profiles easier to use (particularly when updating rates and applying them to previously listed items). Otherwise everything is pretty great! Wishing all a successful New Year 2020!
Merry Christmas to all!
More and more it just makes me want to quit selling online.
Once again, all of these tips are oriented towards sellers who sell “all new” and “low cost” junk like what Walmart sells.
Try shipping a 5 pound tire to California from New York. Shipping is more than half the cost. In other words, the tire sells for $ 38 and the shipping is $ 22. And I am supposed to accept the return and pay the return shipping, lose money the transaction and hope the person buys another heavy item so they can return it within days as well?
This kind of stuff gets crammed down sellers throats on all platforms. Regardless of ebay, Bonanza, Etsy (joke the way that place is being heavy handed), Amazon or any other platform. But the truth is, even major retailers only off returns for a limited amount of time, they NEVER refund shipping cost if item is shipped to home. If they pay return shipping many times it is in the form of driving to their physical locations and dropping it off at the service counter.
I was a manager at AutoZone. They had lifetime warranty brake pads. The warranty covers manufacturing defects. Good many times on conference calls I was dressed down for returning brakes due to uneven wear that was caused by an unrelated part that hadn’t been replaced. Such as a sticking caliper, faulty or worn hardware and slides, etc. Even though I warranteed the pads and sold the buyer the parts to properly cure the problem Corporate wanted the money out of the pads as well. Because they buy 10 million sets of each part number from China and they make up to 90% on each set of pads. And all home delivered items are returned to local store or buyer pays return shipping in most cases.
I also worked at NAPA, Parts Of Africa (advance now I guess), Walmart tire and lube, etc. All had similar policies.
Poor planning on the buyers part does not constitute an emergency on my part. I am not going to jump over customers who have paid for parts and are waiting to get their order to appease somebody in a rip to get their order so they can return it faster. Tried it and had customers do that with me. First week of offering retuns on ebay sales went up 4% but returns went up 100%. So I ended up losing money for 1 month. Never again.
I have had a company website for many years. It gives me 3/4 plus of my total yearly sales and more than 3/4 of my yearly revenue. No fees, no one telling me how I should handle a customer, no one hounding me for free shipping. Because people who live in the real world know that every carrier regardless of name is ripping all of the shippers off. Monthly server fee, purchased good php cart, upload and edit at my leisure. And I never do under $ 100,000 gross in a year.
The branded selling platforms regardless of which one – have a vested interested in you earning them money. If they can make more in fees and revenue by you accepting returns and shipping withing minutes of selling then that’s always going to be their recommended procedure.
As an independent seller who relies on my business to make ME money to live, I will rely on my experience and decline returns, set a reasonable shipping time, and charge for shipping. I will do otherwise when I walk in the post office and the counter person says “no charge today”.
Charge reasonable shipping, get yourself a BRANDED platform of YOUR OWN (web site), sell your products per your own policies, and most importantly include flyers in every package to direct customers to buy from your private platform. It’s your business, brand it to yourself, not some sales platform that offers free low grade branded shipping supplies, or requires you ship on certain days at certain times, or penalizes you for not offering free shipping and free returns. It’s all malarkey.
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