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Do you display related or sale items on the cart page?

One last opportunity to cross-sell

         

wingslevel

8:49 pm on Apr 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I am gooing to try it on one of my sites this week.

I am thinking one row of thumb size images with price and short description under the cart.

Don't want to beat the customer to death, though....

otc_cmnn

9:05 pm on Apr 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



essential cross selling - eCommmerce 210.

Don't distract from the real purpose of the shopping cart page which is "CLICK ON THE CHECKOUT BUTTON"

But always add:
A) accessories for items already in cart
B) low cost impulse buy items that may qualify them for discounts (free shipping on orders over $100 for example)
C) category related items compared to cart contents
D) people who bought those - also bought these
E) Top selling items in general

in that order.

Some merchants go so far as throwing those items at you at the checkout confirmation page. I'm sure it works, but I personally prefer not to distract customers with bling bling at such a crucial point in the transaction. But the shopping cart page itself is good as it is earlier on.

warrisr

9:56 pm on Apr 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree with otc_cmnn. Offer the upsell only at the cart and not during the actual checkout process. Make the actual checkout as smooth and clutter free as possible.

We have had good success with upselling by offering free shipping for orders over $x and if the customer has not added that value of goods to the cart yet, we display a number of related upsell items that they can choose from to reach the minimum order level for free shipping. Has worked extremely well.

wingslevel

10:10 pm on Apr 19, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks - We'll rotate the related and inexpensive sale items on the cart page only - I'll try to remember to report back in a few weeks....

ditto the free shipping total at the cart -

UltraCartJohn

5:48 pm on May 10, 2005 (gmt 0)



One other avenue to consider as your order history begins to build up is to look for natural correlations based on previous orders.

For example, our cart will allow you to manually specify certain related items, then fill the remaining slots with calculated related items.

Across our merchant base, we see about 20% - 25% more related item adds when a merchant uses both manual & calculated related item display.

Of course, this only works well when you've some historical data to work with. :-)

webtress

5:12 am on May 12, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



am thinking one row of thumb size images with price and short description under the cart
When a customer is at the cart he/she is ready to pay and go. The time to upsale is before the customer reaches the cart.

otc_cmnn

5:23 pm on May 13, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Depends on how your cart is configured. If you send the customer to the cart page everytime the add an item to the cart, it is a fine opportunity to upsell as they are still shopping.

If you only send them to the cart when it is actually checkout time, then keep it clean.

Never forget that the most important element on the cart page is that "CHECKOUT!" button. Always make it the focus and most prominant element.