Yahoo! Store Announces New Features for March 2008

Greetings everyone. As some of you may know, Yahoo Store just released a new round of updates to the Yahoo Merchant Solutions Platform. While none of these new features are ground breaking, they are all very effective in their niche of need. Some help with Anti-Fraud in Yahoo Stores, some are for a better presentation and some are to assist you in maximizing your average order size. Here’s a run down from Yahoo on the new features:

American Express CID Codes

Merchants now have the option to process CID codes for shoppers paying with American Express. First Data Merchant Services (FDMS) recently added support for American Express CID (Card Identification) codes and we have updated Checkout Manager to allow for displaying this field and passing the value through FDMS to American Express.

Merchants who would like to use the CID code when accepting American Express will need to contact American Express directly to enable processing of the code and then publish your order settings. If your orders show a response code of “P” (Not Processed) then American Express has not enabled CID support for your merchant account yet. Please consult our Risk Tools help for more information about this feature.

Default Product Image Format Selection

Ever wonder why your product images may look different from the original image after uploading? Currently in the Store Editor, if you upload images larger than the values specified in your Image variables for product images, your original image is resized and converted to GIF format. With our upcoming release there will be two new variables added which allow you to control the default file format for resized images. This allows you the flexibility to choose the format that best meets your needs, including GIF, JPEG, or PNG.

You can also choose a default value for images generated by the Store Editor for navigation buttons or display text; this is more commonly used in the 2.0 Editor templates that generate images for side navigation buttons. The default setting of GIF will remain so no changes will be made automatically to your images. You can find these new variables in the Image Dimensions section of the Variables page. For more information please refer to Help.

View by Specific Date Range

We have added a date range option to the Page Views, Sales, References, and Searches reports. With this feature if you are running a short term promotion that launches on a specific day and runs for a specific period, you can set the date ranges to correspond to that period and view and export the results to help determine the impact for that period. Likewise, if you make a major change to your site, such as a redesign or change to checkout, you can run two reports with the date ranges set before and after the date of the change to help determine what the impact may have been.

Two Other Changes for Cross-Sell

We have also made improvements to our Cross-Sell Manager to provide merchants who have this feature with the flexibility and insight into cross-sell performance they have requested. We will dedicate a separate blog post just to these improvements, but here is a quick preview of the changes:

  • Customizable labels for price, sale price and cross-sell discount on product and cart page cross-sell listings. Consult Cross-Sell help for more details.
  • New graphs available in the Graphs page to show the performance of automated rules, manual (merchant created) rules, and both combined so merchants can decide on where to prioritize their cross-sell efforts.

So look for another post which will get into all of the details for the improved Cross-Sell features shortly. We look forward to bringing you many more releases this year and continue our wish to be a true partner in your online success.

If you need assistance with any of these new features, please let us know. At Colorado Web Solutions our business is Yahoo! Stores and we’re always ready to take on the next new feature or project you can throw at us.

Yahoo! Merchant Solutions released Cross Sell Additions

Yahoo! Store just released information on their new reporting and tools for the Cross Sell technology that was released last Fall. Here’s what they had to say about it.

When we launched enhancements to Cross-Sell last fall, there were some features we wanted to deliver but could not. Since the launch, we’ve also received feedback from merchants requesting some refinements. With this release, we’re introducing new Cross-Sell reporting, custom pricing labels, and changes to the cart display.

Cross-Sell Reporting

For merchants using the latest version of Cross-Sell, there are six new graphs available in the Graphs section of Store Manager. These graphs allow you to view orders and revenue from auto-suggest, merchant created rules, or the two types of cross-sell combined. With this insight into cross-sell performance, you can now test using each type of cross-sell to determine which one works best for your site. For auto-suggestions, note that the more traffic and sales you have, the more data the auto-suggestions have to work with, so if you’re not using auto-suggest now you may want to revisit it as your store grows. In order to ensure that all cross-sell data is properly collected, a one time publish of Order Settings is needed once the new graphs are available. Please note it can take up to 48 hours for cross-sell statistics to be compiled and reflected in these new reports (e.g. cross-sell driven purchases made on Wednesday will show up in the graphs by Saturday).

Pricing Labels

Some of the feedback we received on the cross-sell addition to product pages pointed out that the pricing labels were confusing to shoppers when products had sale prices but not cross-sell prices. We agree, and we also recognize that each store has its own needs. While, we will continue to provide default labels (which now distinguish between sale price and cross-sell discount price to clear up that confusion), you can also customize all the pricing labels for price, sale price, and cross-sell discount price in product pages and in the cart. Order Settings must be published the first time new labels are created for the labels to take effect.

Cart Display

We also fixed an issue that affected cross-sell appearance in the cart. Cross-sell products once again have their name and info beside them, rather than below them.

Yahoo! Store Infrastructure Improvements

In response to the crash of Cyber Monday on the Yahoo! Servers, Yahoo! has preemptively made some great improvements to their delivery of your stores. Here’s the information that Yahoo! Merchant Solutions posted:

Here in Small Business, we’ve been making improvements to our systems that we’d like to share with you. Merchants often ask about how we preserve their store data, and rightly so. In addition to regular backups, copying data within the primary data center, and replicating data to a remote data center in a different geographic location, going forward your store’s data will also be published to multiple data centers simultaneously. This has the following benefits:

  • Similar to our image-caching technology, which uses a content delivery network, shopper requests for your store’s pages will now be served by the closest available data center to the shopper. This should improve page serving times and the overall reliability of shoppers interacting with your site.
  • Should a major event such as a natural disaster occur and one data center becomes unavailable, the other data center can service all requests with limited impact to your shoppers. Previously a major data center outage would mean bringing the other data center online before being able to service requests.

We’ve also made improvements to our overall network architecture. Key benefits include:

  • More than double the order-taking capacity for our checkout systems.
  • Double the front-end serving capacity, allowing us to handle twice as much traffic to our page serving systems.
  • Improved ability to quickly add capacity to handle sudden increases in traffic.

The needs of our merchants are important to us. We remain committed to continually improving our systems so we can meet these needs, now and in the future.

Colorado Web Solutions Partners with goDataFeed.com

Yahoo Store Data Feed ServiceColorado Web Solutions is pleased to announce a new partnership with GoDataFeed.com. Go Data Feed is a data feed management solution integrated perfectly with Yahoo! Merchant Solutions Stores. This partnership will allow our clients to easily list their products on sites like Shopzilla, NexTag, PriceGrabber, Froogle (Google Product Search) and more.

GoDataFeed has developed seamless integration with yahoo Stores that will automatically extract your most current product data and import it directly into the GoDataFeed System.

This partnership will empower our clients by offering an affordable, time-saving tool to improve visibility and performance on the major comparison shopping sites. It’s all automated and automatically optimizes your product listings for each individual search engine.

If you are interested in increasing your sales online, we can’t say enough about the services and support that GoDataFeed offers to our clients.

To sign up for their 30 day $0.99 trial or to learn more, please click here.

If you’d like to see a list of the shopping comparison sites compatible with goDataFeed and Yahoo! Store, please click here.

GoDataFeed invites Colorado Web Solutions’ clients to take advantage of their $0.99 risk-free trial for the first month and discover they can do for your Yahoo! Store including:

• A Fast & Easy way to Submit Yahoo! Store products
• An Affordable $49.99 Flat Rate for Unlimited Feeds to 20+ Shopping Sites & Affiliate Networks (up to 5,000 products)
• Built-in Optimization and Categorization for All Shopping Engines
• Real-Time Analytics and ROI Feedback
• Free Feed Setup Assistance

To sign up for their 30 day $0.99 trial or to learn more, please click here.

Yahoo! Pro-Forma Update and Colorado Web Solutions

Yahoo has recently made an update to their form submission security by changing the built-in Pro-Forma submission scripts.

We wanted to let all of our clients know that this change should not effect any of you. At Colorado Web Solutions, we opt to use PHP for all of our form submissions vs. the Yahoo CGI scripts so this should not effect you at all.  If for any reason you have experienced any issues with any forms on your site, please let your project manager know immediately and we’ll take a look.

For Reference, here is a copy of the email that went out to some merchants regarding this issue:

Dear Yahoo! Merchant Solutions customer,

In an effort to improve security, we will be upgrading the pro-forma

script (form submission) functionality. Your site has been identified

as one using this functionality—-merchants typically use this for

newsletter signups, “contact us” forms, or price-quote requests.

The pro-forma script security changes will ensure form submissions

are properly associated with a store ID and that all email recipients

of form submissions are approved. Once the changes are in place, your

site will be automatically protected. However, you must take immediate

action to use the new approved format for the pro-forma functionality.

Otherwise, you may not receive submissions using the old format.

———————————————

WHAT STEPS DO I NEED TO TAKE?

———————————————

* New URL for form submissions.

The following change will be required within your form tags sent to

this script:

<form method=”post” action=”http://<accountname>.stores.yahoo.net/cgi-bin/pro-forma”>

where “accountname” is your store ID. You will need to confirm this

revised tag is used for each form sent to this script on your site.

After updating the URL for form submissions, you will need to publish

your site.

* Approved email recipients.

Previously, any names listed within the form as values for owner

received the email:

<input type=hidden name=”owner” value=”me@myname.com”>

With this update, merchants must now enter the list of approved form

submission recipients in the “Email To” field of the Form Submissions

section in the Order Emails page (or the Fax & Email page for Merchant

Solutions Standard and Professional merchants). Email addresses should

be entered one per line. If you have a form that uses an email address

not specified in the “Email To” field, that form submission will not

be delivered.

* Thank-you URL and Continue-URL under your store domain.\

Previously, merchants could specify any URL to take shoppers to for

the confirmation page (thankyou-URL) or after leaving the confirmation

page (continue-URL):

<input type=hidden name=”continue-url” value=”http://anydomain.com”>

Now merchants will need to specify a page within their store domain to

send shoppers to.

<input type=hidden name=”continue-url” value=”http://merchantdomain.com”>

———————————————

HOW DO I KNOW MY FORMS ARE SET UP CORRECTLY?

———————————————

If you have active forms on your site but are not receiving form

submissions, then you likely have not made all of the required changes.

* Confirm your form is submitting to the new URL:

<form method=”post” action=”http://<accountname>.stores.yahoo.net/cgi-bin/pro-forma”>

and that you are using the correct account name.

* Ensure that any email address listed in your forms also appears in the

“Email To” field on the Order Emails page (Fax & Email for Standard and

Professional accounts). You should receive emails of the form

submissions to the owner addresses specified in your form, provided you

are submitting the form to the new URL and have specified all email

addresses.

* Ensure your shoppers are being directed to a confirmation page under

your domain after submitting the form and after continuing from the

confirmation page.

For full details about the newly revised pro-forma functionality, please

refer to our help documentation.

http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/smallbusiness/store/edit/regular/regular-12.html

We regret any inconvenience these changes may cause you, but we are

pleased to bring you a more secure Yahoo! Store environment.

Best regards,

The Yahoo! Small Business team

Amazon’s take On Customers: Take Notes

I was reading one of my favorite blogs today (Signal vs. Noise) and came across an article that I felt very strongly about. It was an interpretation of an article found in the New York Times about Amazon and their commitment to customer service.

I myself am a BIG fan of Amazon. I’m a member of Amazon Prime, so everything I order (if it’s sold directly from Amazon) gets shipped to me via Second Day Air at No Charge. I think this is about as close to “instant gratification” as you can get as an online merchant.

The point of this article hoever, was not about their shipping rates, it was about their commitment to customer service, which I think is something that ALL merchants should take note of. I’ve already written about this before, but I feel very strongly that this should be the number one focus for all online merchants and thus, deserves another spot on our blog.

If you’d like to read the post on the Signal vs. Noise blog, you can find it here.

To read the article from the New York Times, you can click here.

Here’s the article from the guys over at Signal vs. Noise.


Put Buyers First? What a Concept describes the way Amazon bailed out a reporter after he realized his son’s PlayStation gift had been stolen after being signed for.

The Amazon customer service guy didn’t blink. After assuring himself that I had never actually touched or seen the PlayStation, he had a replacement on the way before the day was out. It arrived on Christmas Eve. Amazon didn’t even charge me for the shipping. My son was very happy. So, of course, was I.

The article goes on to discuss how taking care of customers can be the best way to build a lasting business, even if it comes at the expense of short-term results.

But I couldn’t help wondering if maybe there wasn’t something else at play here, something Wall Street never seems to take very seriously. Maybe, just maybe, taking care of customers is something worth doing when you are trying to create a lasting company. Maybe, in fact, it’s the best way to build a real business — even if it comes at the expense of short-term results.

It is almost impossible to read or see an interview with Mr. Bezos in which he doesn’t, at some point, begin to wax on about what he likes to call “the customer experience.” Just a few months ago, for instance, he appeared on Charlie Rose’s talk show to tout Amazon’s new e-book device, the Kindle. Toward the end of the program, Mr. Rose asked the chief executive an open-ended question about how he spent his time, and Mr. Bezos responded with a soliloquy about his “obsession” with customers.

“They care about having the lowest prices, having vast selection, so they have choice, and getting the products to customers fast,” he said. “And the reason I’m so obsessed with these drivers of the customer experience is that I believe that the success we have had over the past 12 years has been driven exclusively by that customer experience. We are not great advertisers. So we start with customers, figure out what they want, and figure out how to get it to them.”

Anybody who has spent any time around Mr. Bezos knows that this is not just some line he throws out for public consumption. It has been the guiding principle behind Amazon since it began. “Jeff has been focused on the customer since Day 1,” said Suresh Kotha, a management professor at the University of Washington business school who has written several case studies about Amazon. Mr. Miller noted that Amazon has really had only one stated goal since it began: to be the most customer-centric company in the world.

According to the article, Bezos’ obsession with customers has paid off too…

But Mr. Bezos refused to give in. “He was spending his time on long-term value creation,” Mr. Miller said. There aren’t many chief executives who can so easily ignore the entreaties of the investment community, but Mr. Bezos turned out to be one of them. Of course it helps that he owns over 100 million shares of the stock — and is the company’s single largest shareholder…

There is simply no question that Mr. Bezos’s obsession with his customers — and the long term — has paid off, even if he had to take some hits to the stock price along the way. Surely, it was worth it. As for me, the $500 favor the company did for me this Christmas will surely rebound in additional business down the line. Why would I ever shop anywhere else online? Then again, there may be another reason good customer service makes sense. “Jeff used to say that if you did something good for one customer, they would tell 100 customers,” Mr. Kotha said.

Disclosure: Jeff Bezos is an investor in 37signals.

CWS Client Barebabies.com featured by Yahoo!

Colorado Web Solutions is proud to announce that one of our clients, barebabies.com was selected to be featured by Yahoo! Store as one of their case studies. Take a visit to their site, it’s one of the examples of what Colorado Web Solutions can do to take your Yahoo! Store to a whole new level!

Congratulations Karen and the rest of the Barebabies.com team!

Description:

Karen McMasters learned a lot of lessons as she turned her modest hobby into a multimillion-dollar store, including how not to run a business. Here she explains her strategies for success: Love what you do — and just get started.

Find your Focus and Run with It

I just read a very good article today that was in BetaNews. Typically their blog is full of news about upcoming sites, new technologies, etc, but today I found an article that really hit the nail on the head for our clients (and ANY retailer). The article is about focusing on YOUR site and YOUR customers rather than going after other competing sites and being “better than they are.” We try to take this approach at Colorado Web Solutions as well. We certainly keep an eye on our competitors, but for the most part, we try to be the best company that we can be. We try to offer our customers the best service, the best technology and the best innovation available with Yahoo! Stores. With that in mind, here’s the article I read today in full.


Analyst: Retail Web sites should focus on customers, not competition
By Jacqueline Emigh, BetaNews
January 16, 2008, 1:57 PMToo often, retailers’ Web sites don’t work right, if at all…and they keep chasing after new customers instead of trying to retain their current ones. Are some big online retailers focusing too much on the competition at the expense of their own evolution?

NEW YORK CITY (BetaNews) - With retail Web sites that are too glitchy and search engines that don’t always turn up the right stuff, a lot of retailers trying to sell online are still missing the boat with consumers, according to an analyst at Forrester Research.

During a conference session at this week’s National Retail Federation (NRF) show in New York City, Forrester’s Sucharita Mulpuru also pinpointed some big problems with Web site availability and on-time delivery of goods ordered online.

People who do try to buy online tend to move back and forth between competing Web sites, according to Mulpuru.

“Sixty-eight percent of CircuitCity.com shoppers have also shopped at BestBuy.com. Forty-five percent of Borders.com shoppers have also shopped at [BarnesandNoble.com],” she said. “Thirty-four percent of Staples.com shoppers have also shopped at OfficeDepot.com.”

Yet some Web sites are growing obsessed with beating the competition, when they should be obsessing instead over meeting the needs of customers, the analyst said.

In a big room at the Javits Center packed with retail managers from throughout the US, Mulpuru pointed to sales depicting overall growth of e-commerce from $76 billion to $220 billion from 2002 to 2006.

But still, year-over-year growth has slowed from 51% between 2002 and 2003 to 25% — or a level less than twice as high — between 2005 and 2006, according to Forrester’s numbers.

In surveys conducted by Forrester, consumers are still giving much higher customer satisfaction ratings to “going to a retail store” than to either “using a Web site” or attempting to do business through a self-service kiosk.

In a 2007 study by Forrester, more than 25% of Web shoppers said they’d experienced problems with online buying during the 2006 holiday season, with 17% complaining about shipping delays, 15% about out-of-stock or back-ordered merchandise, and 12% about “sluggish performance” of Web sites.

Meanwhile, some Web sites are paying too much attention to adding advanced technologies such as podcasts and streaming video when they “still haven’t even nailed down the basics,” the analyst said.

Even eBay’s could be much easier to navigate, according to Mulpuru, who is a senior analyst at Forrester for the retail market.

But retail Web sites vary considerably in terms of availability as well as other factors, Mulpuru said.

The analyst gave numbers from Internet monitoring firm Gomez, Inc. showing an average unavailability rate of about 2% across the top 25 Internet retailer Web sites — an average rate which is fairly consistent across the year.

Yet also according to Gomez’ statistics, some major retail sites are down much more often than that, especially during periods of peak demand.

From October of 2006 to June of 2007, the “least available” of these sites was unavailable almost 12% of the time for stints during the key holiday shopping time of December, as well as in February and March.

Meanwhile, in a survey done by Forrester among online retailers, 51% said they’re focusing mostly on customer acquisition, 24% on customer retention, 18% on driving sales to “other channels” such as brick-and-mortar stores, and 11% simply on brand recognition.

Mulpuru suggested, though, that maybe some of these retailers should concentrate more on keeping those customers they already have — because right now, half of all online shoppers are responsible for two-thirds of the money spent at Web sites.

Also, the time is right for major store chains to stop “siloing” their online sales, she said, and to start integrating their Web divisions more closely with the operations of brick-and-mortar stores, on both the technology and sales and marketing sides.

Although Web sites are currently “cannibalizing” sales in stores, many untapped opportunities are still out there for retailers to leverage “cross-channel initiatives” involving the use of Web sites and stores to push sales back and forth between them.

For instance, some retailers use e-mail for delivering coupons that can be applied either online or at a store cash register. And many consumers use the Web to research products before going into stores to purchase products.

Beyond improving Web site performance and usability, Mulpuru also recommended the use of other tools for raising the satisfaction levels of online customers. For example, almost 82% of retail sites are using site analytics, only 59% are carrying out online surveys with customers.

Another 46% do online usability testing, but merely 23% conduct online focus groups, according to a report from Forrester called “The State of Retailing Online.”

Mulpuru gave particularly high marks to some Web sites — such as Netflix.com and Nordstrom.com — for being proactive on the subject of online customer satisfaction.

But to illustrate how other Web sites are concentrating too much on their competitors rather than their customers, she cited another study by Forrester, conducted among e-business management-professionals, in which 83% said they agreed with the statement, “We look outside our company for illustrations of best practices.”

Another 73% agreed that, “We gather whatever competitive intelligence we can to guide our business.”

In terms of cross-channel initiatives, although they are widely regarded among many retailers as the wave of the future, carrying them out can be a lot more difficult than it might sound, as one veteran retail manager attending the conference in Manhattan told BetaNews.

Beyond coordinating sales and marketing efforts between different company divisions — often with very different cultures and outlooks — many traditional retailers also need to roll out better integration between computer systems used for corporate, in-store, and Web purposes, he said.

The retailer told us that, during times when the economy is shaky, it can be especially tough to convince corporate management to allocate the needed funds.

Yahoo! is not the only one…

We received a letter from one of our other ecommerce partners that we work with as well during the holiday shopping rush. Just another example that Yahoo! Store is not the only platform having traffic issues during the post-thanksgiving rush.


Dear Customer,

We hope you are enjoying a successful holiday retailing season thus far. With the holiday selling season in full swing, we are seeing significant increases in traffic on our infrastructure as our customers attract and transact with an increasing volume of shoppers.

We are writing to say that despite having brought in significant additional capacity for this important time of year, the unprecedented traffic we have been experiencing has lead to some intermittent cases of decreases in performance that we believe should be addressed for everyone’s benefit.

Since all of our sites are database-driven, database server loads in particular may lead to degraded performance. The acts of making sizable updates to production databases by polling in (for RetailPro integrated customers), or via automated imports by those customers doing so places a significant load on the production database servers. Additionally, transferring catalog data from staging databases to production also places significant loads on the production database servers.

In the interests of providing the best possible performance for all customers at this important time, we are implementing the blocking of production database updates by polling in, automated imports or transfers during the peak traffic period between the hours of 10AM ET to 7PM ET. Polling out of, or exporting from production databases and transfers from production to staging databases will not be impacted.

 

Customers attempting to poll in or import updates to production databases will see messages in their logs to the effect that the ProcIn / import was not available during a peak performance period.

Customers attempting transfers from Staging to Production will receive a notice in the transfers pop-up window that data transfer is not available during peak performance period.

We hope you understand and support our efforts to ensure the best possible performance for all of our customers at this important time.

If you have any questions, please feel free to submit them through the Customer Center at support.uniteu.net.

Defining Spam in the real world

This is an article provided by our partners from Constant Contact. We felt this was a great article and something worth passing on to our clients and visitors.

What is your definition of spam? There’s a good chance it might be a little different from the next person’s and that both of yours might be different from the legal definition. It’s vital that we are all aware of what the law is, as it relates to spam, but it’s also important that we understand what our subscribers see as spam.
A recent survey conducted by MarketingSherpa and Q Interactive found that 50 percent of those surveyed see emails that arrive too frequently (from people they know!) as spam. Additionally, 56 percent see marketing messages and newsletters (also from people they know) as spam. Why? Because, as the question was phrased, these emails are “just not interesting to me.”

These results show that we can’t get too comfortable in our permission-based lists. Just because someone signs up to get my emails doesn’t mean that they will always want to hear from me.

How do I combat this new, broader, non-legal definition of spam? Relevancy. I have to understand who I am talking to and what kind of information they want to get from me. I have to keep my content interesting so they have a reason to open and read my emails. And I always have to make sure that I’m meeting the needs of my subscribers first and my marketing objectives second. The good news is that it is possible to do both.