The Two Most Important Wine Ecommerce Analytics You Should Evaluate Every Month
There are tens if not hundreds of analytic measurements you can conduct on your website. Unique visitors, page views, top content, where people are visiting your site from, are all great things to look at.
The two most powerful, but often overlooked measurements are conversion rate and customer retention rate.
Conversion Rate
Conversion rate is the total number of sales divided by the total number of people visiting your site. (Technically conversion rate is the number of goals achieved divided by the number of visits, and there are a number of measurements people use such as total number of sales divided by total number of carts started, etc – the important thing is to measure it consistently month over month).
Total Number Of Visitors
Total Number Of Sales
Conversion rate gives you a benchmark of how well your ecommerce is performing month over month. Once you have a measurement, you can start to play with factors that affect conversion rate including usability, content, navigation, etc. Try changing button sizes, minimizing steps to checkout, having larger images, etc and gauge whether it increases or decreases conversion rate.
(One of the best resources on the web for conversion rate optimization is the blog at Future Now Inc)
Customer Retention Rate
Customer retention refers to the percentage of customers that continue to return as customers with you after a given time period.
In the wine industry, customer retention should be measured in two areas:
- Club retention rate: how many customers that were in your club last month and are still in your club this month.
- Ecommerce retention rate: the number of customers who bought from your winery website last month who are placing an order this month. (You may prefer to use a longer time period than a month when measuring ecommerce retention)
Total Number of Club Members Last Month
Total Number of Club Members That Remain In The Club This Month
It’s far easier and costs significantly less to retain customers than to gain new customers. Bautomation claims that a 2% increase in customer retention has the same effect as decreasing costs by 10%.
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The next time you are looking to see how well your ecommerce is performing, skip unique visitors and page views and calculate conversion and retention rates.