UK e-commerce sites are jeopardising more than £300m in lost sales each year
and risk driving customers to competitors because of 'invisible errors' that
can't be detected by web analytics, according to research from website testing
experts.
One third of the consumer visits to websites tested by
SciVisum experienced more than three
per cent error rates, while more than 10 per cent demonstrated extreme
inconsistencies in delivery speed of the online journey.
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"This is a worrying trend for eCommerce and IT directors and for consumers
with Christmas just around the corner. Poor performance and web errors will mean
lost sales," said Deri Jones, CEO of SciVisum.
"Companies wanting to maximise their online sales this Christmas need to
check the performance of their sites now. Those that fail to do so might as well
include a link to their competitors' site."
SciVisum recently investigated the performance of 40 online sites from the
retail, finance, insurance and travel sectors over a period of six months. The
study confirmed that customers of e-tailers are being exposed to a significant
number and range of problems online which prevent them finishing their desired
'journeys'.
"Invisible errors are not outages affecting 100 per cent of users, but are
problems that impact a percentage of users at any point in time. A problem that
impacts say 1 in 100 random users on a particular journey is not reproducible by
IT teams, and so frequently remains unresolved," said Jones.
SciVisum's testing adopts a mystery-shopper approach and visits the site and
attempts to make a user journey every five minutes throughout the day. This
allows the company to see what customers see and makes it possible to identify
a range of intermittent problems that impact real users, but that are invisible
to any other analysis.
The most common problems include: session swap – where two users see each
others' online sessions; page not delivered errors; jump back – the user is in
error forced back several pages; page content incomplete; and shopping basket
errors.
The research also highlighted inconsistencies in the delivery speeds of the
journeys that users undertake. More than 30 per cent of journeys experienced
performance varying by more than 200 per cent, with one in 10 varying more than
300 per cent, data averaging over a seven-day period.
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