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“How to Win at Ecommerce” How to Speak Ecommerce: A Comprehensive Glossary for Ecommerce Beginners A publication by academy Who’s this book for? This ebook is a beginners level glossary for a broad range of ecommerce professionals, including new online retailers, trainee digital marketers and other ecommerce newbies. It is focused on getting you and your team up to speed on ecommerce lingo so that you can start talking the talk in no time. This glossary defines 73 of the most relevant concepts and terms used every day in the ecommerce ecosystem. In it we will cover different metrics, ecommerce concepts, business terms and other digital jargon that can seem complex for someone unfamiliar with ecommerce. However anyone involved in ecommerce will, we hope, find them useful. Happy reading! Share this ebook! Ecommerce analytics made simple Built by retailers for retailers FREE TRIAL LEARN MORE Analytics you can do something with! If you’re struggling to get answers from your data, then Ometria is made for you. Ometria is a powerful new ecommerce analytics platform that can be set up in minutes. It offers valuable customer insights and product analysis, alongside a KPI dashboard, real-time stats and an in-depth diagnostic review of your entire customer journey. • Helps you make more money by surfacing actionable insights • Saves you time and makes your team more productive • Gives you a truly holistic view of your ecommerce business About the authors... Written by Victoria Elizabeth Victoria is a Content Writer and Ecommerce Research Specialist at Ometria. She manages the Ometria Blog and writes about ecommerce optimisation, website design, digital trends and the latest ecommerce news. Edited by Edward Gotham Ed manages client relations and consulting at Ometria as the Head of ising Ecommerce. He delivers results, util as a data driven mindset, across all are ce of ecommerce from strategic guidan to more specific topics such as UI/UX optimisation. Designed by Djalal Lougouev eur and Djalal is a technology entrepren Officer a co-founder and Chief Financial sign at Ometria. He is the Head of De and product management. Introduction Welcome, and thanks for downloading the Ometria Academy’s How to Speak Ecommerce ebook! We have put together a detailed overview of common terms and concepts you will need to understand if you are serious about becoming proficient in ecommerce. Many of these terms have wider usage than just within ecommerce, and many of them will already be familiar - so please forgive us if we have included some of the more obvious terms. But whether you are an ecommerce beginner or a more experienced practitioner who would like a refresher, this glossary will help navigate the nuances and jargon of ecommerce lingo. And plenty of jargon there is I’m afraid! However, wherever possible we’ve tried to de-jargonise it into plain English. We welcome all feedback, so let us know if we have missed any terms or details in our feedback forum or by email. Share this ebook! A/B Mutlivariate Testing A/B and Multivariate testing are types of comparative analysis that test the performance of a website using two or more versions of a feature. An example of A/B testing might be to trial, for example, a blue versus a red call-to-action button on a homepage. The website traffic is divided up so that some viewers will see red, some will see blue, and the version that sees the most click-throughs is deemed the better option. • Multivariate testing is different from A/B testing in a few small but important ways. First of all, A/B testing uses one original and one variable version of a feature, whereas multivariate testing takes into account a number of variables tested simultaneously. Another big difference, albeit debatable, is that A/B testing is reserved for major changes, such as an entirely different landing page or design, while multivariate testing makes many smaller adjustments to an already existing page. • For example, your checkout process may be causing a lot of trouble for visitors, and there are a number of different issues with it that aren’t determinable with just one test. In this case you might decide to implement a multivariate test that takes into account the mandatory form fields of the checkout page, the prominence of the shipping and handling policy, the colour of the backdrop, and a new progress bar above each page of the checkout. The results come in with the combination that caused the most successful checkouts, and this is the one you choose to implement. Abandoned Basket/Cart An abandoned cart or basket is an incomplete transaction. (Basket is the common UK English term, while Cart is US English). This occurs after a prospective customer has added items to their shopping basket/cart and then leaves whilst in the checkout process. • It is important to follow this metric to assess any issues with the checkout process. Where are the friction areas? This will allow you to determine the possible factors that went into abandoning their basket or cart, such as lack of credit card options, too long of a process, or expensive shipping and handling. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Affiliate Marketing Affiliate marketing is a performance-based method of attracting more sales where third party partners (affiliate partners) are compensated for each sale (commonly called CPA - cost per acquisition) or in some cases visitor (CPC cost per click) they drive into a website. • Affiliate marketing is seen as a cost-effective, results-driven way to encourage sales by motivating individuals to earn money through commission. As long as someone has a website and can post a link to a company’s site, they can earn commission based on how many people followed the link and made a purchase. Alt Text Alt text, or alternative text to give it its full name, is a phrase used to complement an image file which outlines in text for viewers what the image represents. It is good practise which allows disabled visitors, who might not be able to see images and who rely on aural aids, to access your site, as well as provide an alternative way to understand an image where a viewer has the choice to download the image, or where they are viewing the page with a slow connection. Analytics Analytics is the process used to collect and organise patterns in data. While in most cases analytics relates directly to digital analytics, strictly-speaking it concerns all analyses of large amounts of information. It is especially useful in business intelligence, and helps to inform and predict future courses of action. API An API, or Application Program Interface, is a set of rules or tools for building a software application as well as connecting sets of data together from one application to another. A good API provides the building blocks for creating programs that are consistent and can interact with each other. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Average Order Value (AOV) Average Order Value is a basic but fundamental metric for ecommerce that allows you to track the average amount each customer is spending during a transaction over a specific time frame. • Optimising AOV is one of main sources to increase revenues. It is affected by many things, including the quality of traffic you are attracting to your site and the user experience when they arrive there. Ecommerce companies should focus on analysing AOV - especially by way of comparing the different AOVs of different channels and visitor groups - to acquire a top-level overview of their site’s performance over time. Breadcrumb Navigation Breadcrumb navigation is used to help keep track of a viewer’s location within a website - normally a visualised heirarchy of directory pages with arrows showing the direction of navigation. They are a way for users to navigate back to where they were before, as well as jump back several stages in one click, and typically show up at the top of a page when you are delving further into subcategories. Bounce Rate The bounce rate is actually interpreted differently on different analytics platforms, however the standard set by Google is the percentage of visits to your website that only go to a single page in one session. However, they do not take into account the time spent on a single page, so some analysts like to reconfigure their analytics to set a time limit - for example, a bounce can be defined by spending 10 seconds on a page before exiting. This does not take into account visitors who come once and then leave their browsers open - so there is no perfect way to calculate this! • Bounce rates tend to reflect non-relevant traffic - people who arrive and find the site is not for them - or usability issues such as slow page loading time. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W C Browser Short for website browser, this is a software application that allows users to connect and interact with information on the internet. A browser displays information gathered and organized for users which was sent from a server to display a webpage. Call to Action (CTA) A call to action is a marketing technique that prompts visitors to complete a desired action by displaying a bold and effective message, which commonly revolves around clicking a button. Typically CTAs have messages like, “Buy Now,” or “Sign Up Today.” • Understanding the importance of CTAs will help your messaging stand out and allow your visitors to know exactly how they should act. A product page or advertisement without a strong call to action will be less likely to lead to a sale or other conversion (for example signing up to a newsletter if that’s what you want them to do). Checkout Ecommerce sites all have checkout pages that allow customers to fill in their personal details and credit card information in order to complete a purchase. • The checkout process is undoubtedly one of the most important aspects of a sale. The length and ease of the process, as well as how much information you provide during the different stages can have a big influence on whether a visitor will complete the process or abandon their cart. • A one page checkout is what you should be aiming for and always include a guest checkout option. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Click-through Rate (CTR) The click-through rate is a measure of how many people clicked on a particular link in relation to how many times it was loaded on a page. It is an essential performance indicator for online marketing. For example, if 5 people clicked on an advert or CTA out of a total of 50 page views, the clickthrough rate would be 10%. Concurrent Visitors Concurrent visitors refers to the number of users active on your website at the same time. This can be used to monitor the real-time response to marketing campaigns and to test your maximum load on your server. Content Management System (CMS) A content management system is software used for uploading, creating and managing content on your website, whether it be text, images, video or audio. Its main purpose is to avoid the need to hardcode, and increase the productivity when making changes to your website. In ecommerce it is highly likely that the ecommerce platform you are using will include CMS software in it. Conversion A conversion happens when a person successfully takes an action on a website that is linked to further action down the customer funnel. It does not necessarily have to mean a successful purchase of a product; it can alternatively mean that a viewer clicked on an ad that took them to a new promotional page. In general however, ecommerce conversions do indicate completed transactions. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Conversion Funnel The conversion funnel is the step-based model for sales and marketing. It tracks the path to conversion for a specific action, which in ecommerce is typically a transaction, after visiting the site from a particular marketing channel or other source. The main steps in a conversion funnel are: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Visit - visitor comes to your website. Viewed listing - visitors viewed a product-listing page. Viewed product - visitor viewed a product page. Added product to basket - visitor added an item to their basket. Started checkout - visitor views their basket to start the checkout process Completed checkout - visitor completes the checkout process and purchase an item(s). • It is important to understand your company’s conversion funnel in order to understand how well each aspect of the funnel is working and where there is room for improvement. Optimising your ecommerce funnel will enable a steady increase in conversion rates and revenue. • A conversion funnel differs from the customer lifecycle stages in that the funnel is linear and meant to express measures of customer experience at particular points on the conversion path. Conversion Rate The conversion rate is the number of visits to your website that result in a successful completion of a particular action or event. Traditionally, for ecommerce, the action is a transaction. • This fundamental metric is incredibly important in ecommerce as it is directly related to revenue and should be measured as a KPI. • Benchmark conversion rates vary per industry. Some, like online flower sellers, can achieve 20% or higher. For retail fashion, average rates vary from 1-3%. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Cookie A cookie is a snippet of code, unique to each site or application interacted with, that is stored in a user’s web browser whilst the user is browsing that website. Every time the user loads the application or website, the browser activates the cookie and sends the data stored in it back to the website or application, to link the new session with previous activity by that user. In the UK, websites are required by law to display their cookie information and ask visitors whether they agree to accept cookies while they use the site. CSS CSS, or Cascading Style Sheets, are used to describe how a page should be laid out and formatted. It differs from HTML in that it defines everything other than the content of a page, focusing instead on layout, style, background and colour. Customer Acquisition Cost Customer Acquisition Cost is the amount attributed to getting one new customer, taking into account the cost of advertising, marketing, and sales expenses to attract them. The customer acquisition cost is found by taking the total spend on attracting customers divided by the amount of new customers for a certain period. Where is starts getting useful for ecommerce managers is where it is broken down into channels, so you can see which channel provides the best return. Customer Experience In ecommerce the customer experience is generally referred to as the sum of the ongoing experiences an individual has with a company and content they display across all devices. • Many ecommerce businesses are now using some type of technology to personalise customers’ experiences on their websites. Some programs are designed to determine where a customer is from, what they have previously purchased or what they have in their shopping basket. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W • You should personalise your company’s interactions wherever you can to optimise the experience on an individual level. This will lead to higher customer retention and easier shopping. Customer Lifecycle The customer lifecycle is a model used by marketers that describes the relationship between a customer and company over a period of time. The stages are not set in stone and differ between different companies and industries. However, normally the stages are as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. Visitor Lead/Contact Customer LTV - Lifetime value • This model helps marketing make decisions about how to acquire and retain customers, as well as having a better understanding of their behaviour throughout a period of time. Customer Lifetime Value Customer lifetime value is the most accurate measure of a customer’s economic value to a company over time. It can be used to determine a very accurate return on investment (ROI) on marketing campaigns. Use the ratio CAC:CLV (where CAC is Customer Acquisition Cost and CLV is Customer Lifetime Value) to determine the maximum you are able to spend to acquire a customer. • This measure is essential as it provides a deeper understanding of how much a particular customer may be worth over time and not just during a single purchase. It also can determine whether marketing should allocate more resources to upholding this relationship or not. • In its most advanced form you can use predictive CLV to determine the value you expect an individual to have over their future lifetime with your company. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Customer Retention Customer retention measures the number of active customers that your company has at any time. This metric is used in conjunction with other factors such as repeat visitor and conversion rates to assess the success of marketing campaigns and determine what factors lead to ongoing customer conversions. • It is essential for every ecommerce company not only to acquire new customers but to keep those who have already converted and make them into loyal, repeat consumers. Most companies spend more money on acquiring new customers than keeping those they already have, failing to realize that repeat customers are more likely to add significantly to a company’s revenue. Customer Service Customer service is simply the service you provide to your prospects and customers across all stages of the customer lifecycle. • Great customer service can take an ecommerce company’s revenue and customer retention sky high simply by nurturing a customer’s experience before, during and after the purchase to ensure satisfaction. • Companies that foster a good working relationship with customers are also more likely to get recommended to others because customers especially in the UK - are used to receiving mediocre service from online retailers. • It is especially important to manage social media channels. How a company deals with a complaint will often do more for its reputation than other customer service issues. Where once a dissatisfied customer would pass on their dissatisfaction to 4 or 5 others, on social media this dissatisfaction can be amplified to thousands very quickly. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W D Dimension Dimensions are qualitative attributes of a particular object, they are used to describe that object in greater depth. This is used very regularly when deploying analytics platforms to analyse your data. • For example a product - an object of data - can be given different dimensions such as product category, SKU & product name. These dimensions describe your products so you can perform deeper analysis. Direct Traffic Direct Traffic is the flow of visitors onto your site who type your page URL directly into their search bar at the top of their internet browser. This metric is important to follow because it indicates the number of people who are familiar enough with your company and website that they don’t need to search for it. They are typically amongst your highest value customers. Ecommerce Ecommerce or electronic commerce includes all buying and selling of products taking place through electronic means. Today, this encompasses channels such as social media, email and search through a growing number of different electronic devices such as smartphones, telephones, laptops etc. Ecommerce even pre-dates the internet - for example the first consumer ecommerce transaction took place in the UK in 1984, with Tesco. Ecommerce Platform An ecommerce platform is software that includes comprehensive prebuilt functionality allowing you to more easily set up an online store. The functionality of ecommerce platforms has evolved over the years to include common features such as a CMS, shopping basket and more advanced features like navigation tools, analytics, checkout pages, and inventory management. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W • There are a growing number of ecommerce platforms on the market, and so it is important that you select a platform that corresponds most closely to your company’s needs. You should ask yourself about the relative size and growth that your ecommerce store will see in the future as well as what specific functions are needed to market your products or services. Exit Percentage The exit percentage is a metric that is used to calculate the percentage of visitors that view a particular page and subsequently exit your site without viewing another page. • This measure can help you understand your website’s user activity and bring to light a particular problem. A high exit rate for a completed transaction page is ideal, whereas on the homepage the exit percentage should be a lot smaller because its purpose is to channel traffic into other areas of your website. Fraud Electronic fraud is the crime of using an internet scheme meant to mislead or withhold information from an individual or company in order steal information, money or products. • Ecommerce fraud has slowly risen alongside the growth of ecommerce in general, which costs companies many millions of pounds each year. It is inevitable, and systems and software should be put in place to try and minimise this as much as possible. Having a secure website and checkout process is a necessary first step. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Friction Friction is a term used in the UX/UI design of websites to indicate problem areas in the road to checkout and purchase. It relies heavily on behavioural studies and takes into account technology like eye-tracking software to indicate where advertisements, CTAs and other information should be ideally placed. The less friction there is in a website, the easier the road to conversion. Fulfillment House A fulfillment house is a company that specialises in accepting, filling and shipping orders on behalf of another company as well as storing inventory. Many ecommerce companies will enlist the help of a fulfillment house in order to improve efficiency with the least expenditures and hassle. • Fulfillment houses, depending on their size and services, can provide additional services such as keeping track of inventory, handling returns, informing customers of shipping status and product packaging. Gross Profit Margins A gross profit margin is a ratio that measures the total revenue of a company minus the cost of goods sold. total revenue - cost of goods sold total revenue • The cost of goods sold is the cost to a company to make a unit of any particular product which includes labour, materials etc. • It is an important KPI because it measures the health of a company and how much revenue they have left over for additional expenditures and future savings. Without a steady gross profit margin, a company will not be able to expand and take risks in future investments. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W G Guest Checkout Guest checkout is an option provided during the checkout process that allows a user to bypass creating an account for a website in order to purchase a product. Many ecommerce sites have adopted this feature in line with best practice since it is so highly valued by first time customers, and minimises friction on the road to purchase. HTML HTML, or Hyper Text Markup Language, is a standard language used for the internet to instruct what colour, font size, graphics and hyperlinks a page should have. A new version, called HTML5, is the next major revision of this universal standard language. Inbound Marketing Inbound marketing is a way to attract customers to your store through creating and distributing ‘remarkable content’ which builds brand awareness and utility. Inbound marketing uses blog posts, social media, video, ebooks, SEO, video and other multimedia to attract people more naturally to their product and inspire conversion. It differs from outbound marketing, which uses techniques such as display advertising and cold calling which can be classified as interruption marketing. • Inbound marketing is very effective at nurturing prospects into customers by ushering them along the customer lifecycle with content that resonates with them personally. • Learning to use inbound marketing tools effectively will benefit many aspects of your ecommerce business, including brand equity and revenue. Inbound marketing is a lot less expensive than outbound and works towards lowering the cost of customer acquisition. It does, however, require alot more effort and is very time consuming, but its ROI grows exponentially over time. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Inventory Inventory is the amount of goods that a company is holding in stock or in progress of being stocked. Tracking the amount of inventory a company has directly relates to revenue and purchasing decisions. The turnover of inventory should be tracked constantly to make sure enough product is always going out to avoid spoilage costs and warehouse storage overflow. Keyword A keyword is a word that acts as a flag or signifier for search engines to define what a page is about. Using keywords (for example ‘dresses’) or keyphrases (‘best deals on red dresses’) is a vital aspect of getting traffic into your site and standard SEO practices define which words are searched most often and consequently boost your site visibility in searches. Long tail keywords or phrases are those with very little search volume, but which consequently don’t have a lot of competition, so are easier to rank for. Landing Page Sometimes known as a ‘lead capture page,’ landing pages are pages on a website that prospects are channeled to after clicking on a promoted ad or URL. They are literally the pages visitors land on after clicking a link from any marketing channel. • Landing page experiences are important because they can determine how well an advertisement was placed and whether it was relevant to the target customers. This will affect advertising costs and placements. Landing pages need to be highly relevant to what an ad is actually promoting, so that a customer is not confused when they are redirected. • A good landing page that follows naturally from an ad and that compels customers to perform a desired action will in turn lead to higher conversion rates and customer satisfaction. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Marketing Attribution A marketing attribution model is a model that credits or attributes a conversion as a whole to an individual media channel, or as weighted parts to different touch points (steps) involved in the conversion path. Simply put it is a way to give credit where credit is due and determine a more accurate level of ROI per channel. Consequently, you can analyse which areas of your marketing techniques are doing well and which need improvement. • Attribution models can be very complex and take into account factors like type of touch point (URL or print ad), visit length, number of pages viewed, and type of device used (computer, cellphone, tablet). • A simple example of an attribution model is one that splits the value of any conversion evenly between all marketing channels used prior to the conversion but after any previous purchase by the same visitor. A more sophisticated example would take into account touch points from the very start of that customer’s relationship with the company. Merchandising Merchandising is simply any practice that a company takes to sell a product or service to consumers. In ecommerce these practices are largely focused online. It includes pricing, advertising, visual display, product descriptions, customer reviews, and offers, among others. • Online Merchandising cannot be recommended highly enough as a way for ecommerce companies to attract the attention of customers and entice them to make transactions. • It is also important to understand when and how to merchandise your products and services. For example, certain seasons will call for different clothing in fashion retailers, such as coats for winter and shorts for the summer. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Metric Metrics are measurements that can be applied to aspects of a dimension; they display data in a quantitative way and are used to analyse the raw data gathered from websites, apps etc in an actionable way. • Data such as click-through rates, total visits, pageviews, bounce rates, time per visit and exit percentages are all common metrics used in web analytics. Mobile The term ‘mobile’ is most commonly associated with mobile phones, however in ecommerce it now has a wider connotation that includes tablets and ereaders. • In marketing terms, mobile devices are essential channels to market for online retailers because more and more people get their product/service information and make transactions from these electronic devices. Multi-Channel Multichannel marketing is the process of using many different channels, both online and offline, to target current and prospective customers. This may include email, social media, print ads, TV commercials, sponsorships, among a host of others. • The importance of multichannel marketing is that it allows ecommerce companies to gain conversions from a variety of sources, and this heightened availability increases customer satisfaction and retention. • Multi-channel marketing also allows you to test other channels and find the best performing combination. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W O Omnichannel Marketing Omnichannel marketing is very similar to multichannel, but differs in one major aspect. Whereas multichannel marketing just aims to interact with customers on multiple channels, omnichannel does this by creating a consistent and seamless experience across all channels and devices. What this means is that you can walk into retail shop XYZ to try on a t-shirt, then look it up on their online store for a different color with your iPhone, purchase it online from an in-store iPad, and get it delivered to a nearby store so you can pick it up during your lunch hour. • Omnichannel marketing requires considerable financial and time commitment of resources, software and processes in order to create an optimal experience. • Sales, Marketing, and Customer Service teams must all be aware of up to date product news, inventories, marketing campaigns and deals, which requires sophisticated tracking software as well as seamless communication across the whole company. Organic Search Organic search is a marketing channel that attracts users via nonpaid search results on search engines, the result of a visitor typing in a particular keyword or phrase. The results are displayed via search engines in a prioritised order based on the relevance of a search term to specific webpages on the internet. • Organic search results are improved via SEO techniques. Outbound Marketing Outbound marketing is different from the increasingly popular inbound marketing method in that it focuses on harder selling techniques such as cold calling, email campaigns, advertisements, print ads and sponsorships. These techniques attempt to catch the attention - literally ‘interrupt’ - the consumer rather than attracting them more naturally. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W • Gaining customers in this way has been a tried and true method for as long as advertising has been around. • Today we have to deal with a massive amount of information on a daily basis and consequently we have become very good at blocking out information. The result is that outbound marketing techniques no longer yield as much of a return on investment (ROI). Pageview A pageview is simply the successful completion of loading a webpage. After it is loaded, it is safe to say that the page has been viewed by the individual who requested it via their browser. • Marketing departments use this figure to determine how much traffic a specific page on a website is generating. Use cases include helping analyse the optimal placement of ads and finding pages that are achieving below average pageviews. Paid Search Paid search is a marketing technique that displays ads in paid listings sections on search engine results pages in exchange for a fee per click (PPC - paid per click). The price for paid searches is usually based on click-through rates, which vary based on the popularity of the search engine queries you wish to advertise on. • On Google the paid listings appear at the top of search page results and in the right hand column. Payment Gateway A payment gateway is required in combination with a merchant account to authorise payments for online retailers and websites. It is usually run by a third party and acts as a link between the merchant and a customer’s bank account. Payment gateways will process, verify and accept/decline credit cards as payment to a merchant. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Product Recommendation Engine Product recommendation engines, or systems, use software to create personalised product recommendations based on previous transactions and user behaviour, which are subsequently promoted to users via email, websites etc. Amazon.com for instance, takes into account what you have in your basket and previous purchases together with what other people have bought with those items to recommend further products that you may like to view or purchase. • When implemented effectively, product recommendation engines are very successful - indeed essential if you want to create the best possible experience when people shop online. Referral Marketing Referral marketing is a form of word of mouth marketing, but in ecommerce it means incentivising third party online channels to refer visitors to your website. • Referral marketing normally involves some payment or incentive to the referring channel. • There are ways that referral marketing can be promoted virally - like getting customers to refer friends - for example through such offers as ‘refer 5 friends and get 50% off your next order’. Referral Traffic Referral traffic is the amount of people coming through to a company’s website due to referrals from other online channels (see above). These referrals can be tracked using the domain names or pages that are directing that traffic, and ideally an ecommerce company, using analytics software, should keep track of these sources and the volume of traffic referred, as well as its quality and propensity to convert, so that they can accurately calculate ROI. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Return A return is when, for whatever reason, a customer returns a purchase to the store for store credit, a refund or an alternative product. • This is an inevitable situation which must be prepared for and managed accordingly. Minimising returns is critical to long term success. • However, fashion etailers must understand their customers’ behaviour as well. Online shoppers will buy extra items and return the ones that didn’t fit, so a good shipping and returns policy is vital to scaling an online fashion store. • Some cultures and countries typically see higher percentages of returns than others - for example Germany, where it is common practise to order a range of sizes and colours and return all but the right fit. Revenue Revenue is one of the top level ecommerce KPIs for managing performance. It is simply the total income received over a specific period of time, which in ecommerce is normally total online sales. • Revenue can be taken as a total value, or it can be subdivided according to time frames (daily, weekly, monthly). It can also be divided further into revenue per visit, or per customer, which is very useful for deeper analysis. • Knowing how much revenue your company is making is a basic but important measure that can be compared against your strategic revenue goals, marketing techniques and expenditures to determine your company’s trajectory of success and areas of opportunity. • Monitoring revenue alone, however, can be misleading - it’s profit that really matters, and that requires taking into account margin. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Revenue Per Visit (RPV) Revenue per visit is simply an average of how much a website makes in sales each time a customer visits your store. • Revenue per visit is a great metric to measure the relative performance of various marketing campaigns. Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) Search Engine Optimization is a fundamental tool for increasing your company’s exposure to potential customers through search engines such as Google and Yahoo. It is essentially the visibility that your company has on an organic, or un-paid, search. The higher your company’s placement on organic searches and the more times it comes up using various keywords, the better the chances are that someone will find and click on your website URL. • Learning how to manage SEO is vital to attracting relevant traffic to your site. Segmentation Segmentation is used regularly in analytics, and refers to the process of segmenting or dividing up your data into manageable groups. This allows you to focus on and analyse certain parts of your data such as previous customers, only traffic from paid search or even more complex segments. • Segmentation is vital for deeper analysis of your data and is one of the most valuable tools to gain deeper insight into your business. Shopping Basket/ Cart Although most internet users would recognize this term, the technical definition of a shopping basket or cart is a piece of software on a server hosting an ecommerce site that allows customers to group and save certain items together for eventual purchase. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Site Search Site search or on-site search refers to the process of performing a search, like someone would on a search engine, but on a company’s website. The search field is normally located on the landing or home page and ideally on every page, and allows users to search for certain key terms, products or codes on an ecommerce site. • Optimising your company’s site search options allows customers to quickly and easily find what they already have the intention to seek out, and therefore are more likely to purchase. • It is worth performing regular tests on your site to see which keywords or products people are searching for. SKU A stock-keeping unit, or SKU, is an identification code that, in ecommerce, is used to uniquely identify an individual product. Any different attribute gets a different SKU, for example there are different SKUs for any colour or size variations of the same base product. SKU’s are often in the form of unique bar codes which can be scanned and used for inventory and accounting purposes. • It is important to track SKUs because this will allow you to see how many units you may have in warehouse versus how many in retailers, or how many of each color you may have in stock for a larger customer who wants to buy in bulk. Supply Chain Management Supply Chain Management, or SCM, is the management of all processes and logistics required to produce, ship and sell a product to the end customer. • A supply chain manager is in charge of tasks such as keeping track of product production levels and making communication, shipping and storing costs as economical as possible. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W • Having good supply chain management is essential to any ecommerce company for reducing production costs while ensuring that products are being led efficiently from each point of production to retail sale. Transaction A transaction is any exchange of money for products or services. This includes online sales through ecommerce sites but also includes retail and service exchanges. Transactions your company makes during a length of time (day/week/month) are a core factor in determining how much revenue you will produce for that period. URL A URL, or Universal Resource Locator, is the address of a page on the internet. It usually begins with http:// and allows a website to be located. Visitors (Unique visitors) The number of visitors is an important metric that tracks how many unique people have entered a website in one session. They are recognised through cookies, which can provide data on whether or not this is a new visit or a return visit in a defined amount of time. Visits are often grouped into ‘unique visitors’ and ‘visits’ (see below) when tracked over a certain period. ‘Visits’ may count individuals more than once if they have visited more than once in the time period, while ‘unique visitors’ counts them just once. Visits Visits are simply the cumulative quantity of sessions on your site over a defined period of time. A new session begins when someone loads one of your webpages and finishes when they exit your site. • Visits are instrumental to revenue. No visits means no revenue. However do not obsess over visits as sometimes it is more logical to focus on increasing AOV or conversion rate. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W • The goal is to get the highest quantity of visits at the lowest cost whilst maximising the relevance of the individuals you are attracting to ensure you maintain good conversion rates. Web Analytics Web analytics is the tracking, compilation, visualisation and analysis of data from websites. This is used to optimise merchandising, marketing and the entire user experience online. Web Hosting Web hosting is a service which stores your company’s website on an webconnected server and makes it accessible online. • Good web hosting is essential for ecommerce companies to ensure that their website performs well with traffic spikes, and minimises downtime. Webmaster Tools Webmaster tools help a website improve its site ranking in search engines. For example, Google provides statistics and alerts if a site is not performing optimally in search. Website Traffic Website traffic is the amount of visits that a website generates over the course of a specific time. • A steady stream of traffic to your site is a good indicator of healthy ecommerce activity, as well as brand awareness. • It is important to understand what times of day/week/year a website generates the most traffic so as to reduce the possibility of website crashes or slow running and uploading times. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Widget A widget is a small piece of software or code that can be incorporated into a website, app or other technology asset. Widgets in ecommerce may include social media sharing, small analysis tools, advertisements, videos or other simple functions. A B C D E F G H I K L M O P R S T U V W Conclusion. We welcome and encourage your feedback, as well as any ideas you have for improving our glossary that we may not have covered here. Please feel free to leave your opinions on our feedback forum or contact us by email: Give us feedback! Share this ebook! Ecommerce analytics made simple Built by retailers for retailers FREE TRIAL LEARN MORE Analytics you can do something with! If you’re struggling to get answers from your data, then Ometria is made for you. Ometria is a powerful new ecommerce analytics platform that can be set up in minutes. It offers valuable customer insights and product analysis, alongside a KPI dashboard, real-time stats and an in-depth diagnostic review of your entire customer journey. • Helps you make more money by surfacing actionable insights • Saves you time and makes your team more productive • Gives you a truly holistic view of your ecommerce business