:: By Joe Schnaufer, cleverbridge ::
We've all experienced it - after purchasing a product online we find ourselves unceremoniously dumped on a mostly empty page, perhaps with the sentence "Thank you for order." Companies spend millions of dollars to drive traffic to their web stores, converting a small, highly engaged fraction of that traffic, only to drop the ball with a useless confirmation page. This page is not only your last chance to talk to your customers on their way out the door, but by providing them with certain key resources and crucial pieces of info, you can prevent the problems that cause customers to contact support teams in the first place, thereby reducing contact rates and increasing customer satisfaction.
If I buy a sofa at Overstock.com, I'll need information that allows me to track the delivery of the product, but I won't need any instructions on how to access or use the product: It goes in the living room and I sit on it.
However, digital products are different. They are delivered immediately to the buyer, but download and installation processes are often complex, even overwhelming, to some users. The order confirmation page is the perfect place to address these concerns and others. Here are nine critical elements companies should implement to their order confirmation page.
Your mother taught you this when you were young: When someone does you a favor, you say, "Thank you." In a sense, every paying customer is doing you a favor - they're allowing you to stay in business, and that favor should be acknowledged. It would take too long to explain the psychology behind the power of these two little words, but suffice it to say, thank you's go a long way in maintaining relationships. Subscription companies especially, who depend on customer renewals, need to make sure the confirmation page is the first (though not the last) place in which they thank customers for their business. Uniblue is one of the many companies who include a thank you at the top of the confirmation page.
Payment Method - The confirmation page needs to confirm which product was bought and the method of payment. These two should be obvious, but they go on the list because they're an absolute necessity. Also make sure to include a downloadable PDF version of a receipt, as some customers may require this. And just in case your customers are not as tech savvy as the rest of us, provide a link to download a free PDF reader like Adobe.
As we explained above, digital products are delivered a little differently than a sofa, for example. The confirmation page not only confirms the customer's purchase, it provides access to the product itself. The download link is important because a) you should not assume the customer already downloaded the product through a trial version, and b) the customer might need to download the product onto a different machine at a later time.
Cancellation Options - Customers can become upset if their credit cards are unexpectedly charged, and rightfully so. For subscription products, the confirmation page should make it clear at what intervals and for what amount the customer will be charged by subscribing to the product. Make it as easy as possible for customers to cancel if needed.
It is useful to think of the confirmation page as preventive care - the things a patient should know and do to avoid a visit to the doctor's office. All the above best practices should be in place in order to prevent customer contacts. Not because you don't value your customers and don't want to hear from them. Rather, these elements are in place precisely because you care for your customers and want them to have the smoothest experience possible with your company.
About the Author
Joe Schnaufer is the global director customer support, cleverbridge - a full-service e-commerce provider for more than 300 international software and SaaS corporations like Acronis, Avira, Dell, Malwarebytes and Parallels. Schnaufer is responsible for leading the company's global operations with respect to managing all customer support related initiatives, staff and day-to-day operations.