This video is about the street food of Coco Island by Bali Thai along the Gurney Drive Road in Penang Island. Check out the various street food stalls ranging from 'char koay teow,' seafood and vegetables, 'sotong bakar' or baked calamari, Italian pasta, Taiwanese noodles, 'wanton noodles,' 'bak kut teh,' Japanese food, Chinese food, Western food, etc. You need to check out this eatery.
Since today is Palm Sunday, check out my various curated pictures on Palm Sunday on my Instagram account by clicking on the '>' icon on the right.
From Wikipedia, Palm Sunday is a Christian moveable feast that falls on the Sunday before Easter. The feast commemorates Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem, an event mentioned in each of the four canonical Gospels. Palm Sunday marks the first day of Holy Week, the last week of the Christian solemn season of Lent that precedes the arrival of Eastertide.
In most liturgical churches, Palm Sunday is celebrated by the blessing and distribution of palm branches (or the branches of other native trees), representing the palm branches which the crowd scattered in front of Christ as he rode into Jerusalem. The difficulty of procuring palms in unfavorable climates led to their substitution with branches of native trees, including box, olive, willow, and yew. The Sunday was often named after these substitute trees, as in Yew Sunday, or by the general term Branch Sunday.
Many churches of mainstream Christian denominations, including the Orthodox, Catholic, Lutheran, Methodist, Anglican, Moravian and Reformed traditions, distribute palm branches to their congregations during their Palm Sunday liturgies. Christians take these palms, which are often blessed by clergy, to their homes where they hang them alongside Christian art (especially crosses and crucifixes) or keep them in their Bibles or devotionals.
If you click on the '>' button on the right side, you will see our dear brother Kelvin's niche in the 3rd photo. Though I have never met up with him, despite him suggesting that we meet up on Atomy during MCO, he is like a big brother to me. He was a very successful banker, worked in Alliance bank for 20 years or so in the housing loan department, and had the power to approve bank loans to borrowers to buy houses. He would have been 53 years of age this March 2021, had he not suffered a massive cardiac arrest at home. Guess being single and missing his dearly departed mum since September last year, plus pay cut, it was just too much to handle in this path of life filled with stress, pandemic, etc.
Anyway, brother Kelvin was my only Atomy member who could purchase from the eCommerce website on his own, amongst my 30 sleeping Atomy members. Kelvin Chan is now happily holding hands with his mum in heaven looking down at us mortals.
The video above was done and compiled by yours truly. This video is on Sungai Penang Food Court Paradise in Penang. Various hawker stalls, fresh fish, fish soup rice vermicelli, etc. with funky and soothing music. 😎😍😁
Check out the "Good Morning" pictures and Sunday Blessings where you can click on the ">" icon to swipe left for more beautiful banners.
Above is an Instagram post on EComXFactor - The Ultimate Product Research Tool for your eCommerce Store. Just click on '>' button on the right side to swipe to the left for more pictures and information. A picture is worth a thousand words, so they say, and a video below is worth more.
So today guys, we're going to talk about how to increase your conversion rates in your Shopify or Woocommerce store. We're going to focus on improving conversion rates on your product page, so we're not going to talk about how to optimize the funnel in the checkout stage or the cart page. We're just going to focus on improving your product page, which elements you should use in order to improve your conversion and how to structure the product page correctly so you get the best conversion rates possible.
So this video is going to be all about how to increase conversion rates in your store it's going to have two parts.
The first part we're going to talk about what is conversion rate, where can you see your conversion rates? A few tips regarding how to analyze your conversion rates and I'm going to share with you 12 elements that promote conversion.
In the second video, I'm going to share with you guys the page structure that we use in our Shopify and WooCommerce stores. We've done hundreds of split tests and this is the template that is working the best for us. I'm going to show you exactly which elements we use, where do we use them and why they are converting so well.
Before we upload any product page. I'm also going to share with you a few tricks and hacks that we use, in order to understand and get a few signals regarding if our product page is going to be good or not. So stay tuned until the end. I'm sure you're going to get tons of value from this video. Okay, let's start.
Conversion rates differ between pricing points. If you're selling a product for $9.99 Your conversion rates are probably going to be higher than if you're selling a product for $29.99 or $100. When people pay more, they do more research and the conversion rates are generally speaking going to be lower. So this is the first thing to take into account.
Because people are more likely to pay and make impulse buying, of a product that they really feel is solving a crucial problem in their lives. So let's say a posture corrector, is probably going to sell better than a bone for pets. And the last thing I want to emphasize is that conversion rates differ between markets.
You need to split test everything you do on your store because if the conversion rates are improving and you didn't AB test, you can't really know what is the reason behind the improvement of the conversions. Just the fact that you assume that something would work better doesn't mean that it will work better in the actual real life.
The next thing is you must drive traffic to your website and learn the benchmarks. You can spend hours in Facebook groups and asking people what are their conversion rates and reading articles about conversion rates and stuff like that. But the most important thing is that you get to know the benchmarks of each niche and each market. What do I mean by this? As soon as you drive a lot of traffic for let's say cosmetic products in your store and you get to understand that cosmetic products, the conversion rate of cosmetic products in the US market are around 3% so from
now on, you know that every time you upload a new product in the same market and in the same niche, and if the conversion rates are lower than 3% so probably something is off with this specific product page or specific offer.
So where can we see your conversion rates? You can see them in the Shopify or WooCommerce analytics dashboard. Here's an example from one of our stores. As you can see you have here the add to cart conversion rate and sessions converted. The next place in which you can see your conversion rates are in your Google Analytics dashboard, and you guys if you haven't connected Google analytics yet, you should do so.
It's highly important. It's a really powerful tool that you can use to analyze and optimize your funnel. Here's an example from one of our stores. As you can see, I created a breakdown between desktop and mobile users. And this is very, very important because this way you can see two things. First of all, you can understand that if your performance in desktop is better, so you might as well consider targeting and creating ad sets that are desktop specific and not using only auto-placement and driving traffic only to your desktop website.
Let's cover now the majority of the elements that you can use in order to promote conversion. So the first one is scarcity. Highlighting items that are low in stock and making people, letting people know that the stock is running out. Here's a quick example from Amazon. Even Amazon uses these kinds of tricks. As you can see only two left in stock. This is a thing that obviously can promote conversion.
The next thing is creating a sense of urgency. Using countdown timers on your website, telling people that the limited-time promotion is ending by the end of the day or ending by the end of the weekend or ending before Christmas or whatever. Here's a quick example from Best Buys' website, as you can see here, they have a countdown timer, which is ending by the end of the day. The next thing is exit-intent popup.
This is not used so often in mobile versions because the popups don't look so well in mobile, but this is something that many websites do use in their desktop versions. Just let me show you guys an example. This is the Cinderella solution, one of the best offers running in the Clickbank affiliate network these days. I'm here watching the video and as soon as I go to the 'back button' I get this, this is the exit-intent popup.
Normally the website is going to try for the last time to convert you and make you change your mind instead of having. So as you can see here, they're telling me 'hold on, don't leave this page'. They might even offer me a promotion - 20% off or even ask me to enter my email and then they can re-market and send emails and try to convert me via email before I leave the website.
Okay. The next thing is having a lot of call to action buttons. You want to make the purchasing process as frictionless as possible for the buyer. So this means you have to have a lot of buttons, not too many, cause you don't want to confuse them, but you have to let them the possibility to start the checkout whenever they want.
So let me show you a quick example from what Russell Brunson, the founder of ClickFunnels is doing on his website.
So you see here that the call to action is 'yes, I want my free copy of the dotcom secrets'. Then you scroll down and suddenly You see another button 'ship my free copy. Now I'm ready to get started'... 'ship my free copy now, I'm ready to get started', 'Ship my free copy of dotcom secrets now,'
The next thing is having social proof and testimonials. So I divide this into two. Testimonials is the first thing you must have customer reviews on your website and if you have images of customers using your product and benefiting from the main benefit of the product, obviously this is awesome. Also having video testimonials is something that can really promote the sale.
And the other thing is having social proof in a way that lets the people understand, let the customers understand that they are not alone on the website. People know this website that it's not a shady website and this isn't a
scam. So let's go back to the example of Clickfunnels, As you can see here, you have many different videos and testimonials of customers.
I'll show you another example from the Inspire Uplift website. So they have a lot of testimonials of customers. Obviously, in my opinion, it's better to have testimonials that are detailed and really emphasize and elaborate on the use of the product, how the customer, the potential customer can benefit from using it. And on the other hand,
this is a small social proof trick that an Inspire uplift is using. They took this widget and placed it under
the add to cart section.
And this basically whenever I entered the website and I see that I and the friends of mine have liked the Facebook page of this website, this gives me the understanding and the feeling that more people know this website and it's not a scammy website. The next element is product badging. So just using a small ribbon or even text saying that one product or one bundle or one type of product is the most popular or the best value or most recommended or anything like that can really improve the conversion rates and can make people choose this offer over another.
We tested something similar with a product of ours, and we just wrote next to one of the choices, which wasn't the cheapest one, We wrote 'most popular,' and people started buying this option more just because we wrote 'most popular,' we did an AB test, and we saw that the use of just writing 'most popular' has increased the conversion rate and increased the number of people who bought that specific option.
And this was amazing and something crazy that you should keep in mind as well. So product badging is highly essential. Another thing I'm going to talk about upsells and cross-selling. Cross-selling is selling a complementary product to your customers and showing them related products that can also help them. You guys probably know this from Amazon which uses it a lot. 'frequently bought together' and then they are offering you to buy a specific bundle,... customers who viewed this also viewed this and they give you ideas. It also makes you feel that this website is more legit and also might improve your AOV because if people, buy for example one thing and they think that even the other product can complement and help them solve their problems. So they might buy that product as well, and this will increase your AOV.
That's it for the first part of the video. Check out the second part of the video in which I'm going to share with you the page structure that we use for all of our product pages in our Shopify and WooCommerce stores. And I'm also going to share with you a checklist that you can use before you upload any product and launch a Facebook and Google ads.