6 Tips To Save Money On An E-commerce Website

The title says it all this week. Read on for some tips that can save you hundreds of dollars when you have your E-Commerce shopping cart built.

Now these tips apply to people that are considering having a real bonafide shopping cart built. Not a web page with some PayPal buttons on it. We’re talking real E-Commerce ability here: credit card processing, inventory control, complete administration access, wholesale pricing, affiliate programs, real time shipping quotes, newsletter capability, 24 hr support, the works.

Tip 1: Hire Someone Who Actually knows What They Are Doing

This is not a joke. We get a handful of clients coming to us every year with these aborted abominations they call shopping carts and, of course,  they want us to fix them. My answer is usually to put their existing waste of money out of it’s misery and do another one from scratch the right way. This isn’t to get more money out of them, it’s because, in the world of web programming, fixing someone’s mistake usually takes more time than doing it from scratch the right way.

The problem for the business owner looking to get an E-Commerce site built is the fact that they are usually looking for a bargain (which is akin to using a coupon for cosmetic surgery) and they hire someone who doesn’t know what in the hell they are doing because there bid was the lowest. Why was it the lowest? Because they figured since the software is available for free online they would take your money, learn how to do it on your dime and everything will turn out right. Unfortunately, and ask your local web guy who really does know how to build E-Commerce site to verify this, there are plenty of “freelance web designers” that participate in this practice. And, yes, I did write that the software is available for free. You can download Zen Cart, OS Commerce and a slew of other open source shopping carts for free. As a matter of fact, these carts are sometimes included with your web hosting  tools. Go ahead you do-it-yourselfers. Knock yourselves out then call your web guy once you’ve been at it 50 hours and haven’t figured out how to change the color of your buttons yet.

The point is this. If you hire someone who has experience then the setup and programming won’t take as long. You are most likely going to be billed by the hour, so the less time it takes, the less money you spend. Ask to see a portfolio of shopping cart sites. Do they all look the same or are they different? Do they actually work? Does the designer give you excuses like, well it’s not quite done yet? Have they built more than one? Do they know how to set up credit card processing, PayPal, E Checks? Can they set up real time shipping quotes? If you wanted to set up an affiliate marketing program, could the cart handle it? These are just some of the questions any competent designer with E-Commerce experience should be able to answer. If they can’t, then call someone else.

Here’s a common example of something that happens all the time in the world of web design. A cheap business owner wants a cheap shopping cart. He gets three quotes. Two  for $100 per hour and $95 per hour from professional design firms and one for $50 per hour from some kid just out of college. He reads the three bids and has no clue as to what he’s reading. It’s all too technical so he goes for what he perceives as the better deal of $50 per hour. 40 hours and $2000 later his cart still isn’t quite working right. Instead of taking credit cards the proper way, the kid has convinced the business owner to just have the credit card numbers and orders emailed to him (believe me, this really does happen) since there is some sort of technical problem he can’t figure out with the cart. The business owner gets fed up with the kid and hires the $95 per hour design firm to fix the cart. They build him a new one from scratch (since the one the kid built is crap) that works perfectly in 15 hours for a total cost of $1425. Even if the kid got his cart working, did it really save the business owner anything?

Now, assuming you hire someone who’s competent, the rest will be up to you. If you deliver your materials to the designer all ready organized and set to go then you’ll shave hours off of the production time. If you are paying by the hour you need to make sure that the designer doesn’t have to sift through all your crap looking for what they need to set your cart up. Organization is the key to keeping production time down.

Tip 2: Put All Your Products Into a Spreadsheet

Every cart requires the same information so make sure you create a spreadsheet with all your products on it whether it’s 10 or 10,000. If your products are in Quickbooks or some other type of proprietary software you need to export it into a spreadsheet that anyone can open and read. At the very least have this information organized into columns:

  • Product Name
  • Keywords – no more than 10 words associated with the product
  • Short Description – a one sentence description of the product
  • Long Description – a full description of the product
  • Image Name – the file name of the photo for this product
  • Price

Now this is a bare minimum of the info actually required but just getting this stuff into a spreadsheet can save you hours upon hours depending on how many products you have. If any of your products have options (size, color, brand) you’ll want to list those too.

Tip 3: Organize Your Images

First, rename your images to what they are actually pictures of. Instead of “KDK00398834598627265347.jpg” rename it to “YellowHat.jpg”. When renaming images make sure to not use leave any spaces and only use letters and numbers. This will make it easier for the designers and the easier you make their job the quicker your stuff will get done. Also, deliver large versions of all your images to the designers. Let them resize your images for you. If they have Photoshop this can be very quickly. This way you’ll have high quality images on your site and the designer won’t have to take extra time working with tiny, junky images.

Tip 4: Have Your Shipping Info and Equations Ready

If you are going to be using real time shipping quotes have all your equations written out and ready to be handed over to the designers. DO NOT I repeat DO NOT just give some of the info and expect them to come up with your shipping rates for you. This can be a real time killer, especially if you have thousands of products with different rates for each. It’s your responsibility as the business owner to know what your shipping situation is. Have it ready to save money. Call the carriers you will be using and have them help you come up with your rates. They’ll do it for free, your web designer will bill you for it.

Tip 5: Create an Outline

Once you have all your products in the spreadsheet create an outline just like the ones you did back in grade school. See, you should have paid more attention in writing class. Anyway, organize your products into categories, sub-categories and sub-sub-categories. Make sure that every product, category, option and sub category is accounted for and organized. This is another time killer if not presented to the designer in a clear organized manner.

Tip 6: Use a Skin

Another money saver is to use a skin for the design of your site. Most of the top line shopping cart software has these things called skins available for them. Skins are basically design templates that can be added with the click of a button to make your E-Commerce website look more professional. Now, any designer can customize your site for you but that can be expensive considering that most carts require PHP, ColdFusion or ASP programming skills to customize the look. Your won’t be able to just hire the kid down the street at $10 per hour to do it. A skin can be added to a cart and modified much quicker and cheaper than having a design custom built. Most quality skins cost money but they are also way less than hiring a designer to do the same thing.

There are many, many other things that need to be done when putting together an E-Commerce site like setting up the server, database , SSL certificate, photography, home page content, email set up, affiliate programs, wholesale programs and more but if you at least follow these six tips then you should be able to save yourself some production time. Again, the most important thing is to hire someone who is competent. That decision alone could save you thousands of dollars in production costs.

Well, smart guy. How long should it take?

I’ve received some feedback since posting this that I’d like to address and that’s how long it should really take to build a cart. Now this varies depending on a variety of factors. But, unlike websites, shopping carts are software programs that really only need to be loaded, set up and then customized. Whether it’s 10 or 10,000 items the amount of time to set up won’t vary much if the information is presented to the designer the way they require since they will most likely upload a spreadsheet to populate the cart and run batch image processing to resize the images used. Now, yes, 10,000 items will take a little longer than 10 but not as long as you may think. Customization is where the real time is spent. But back to the question, how long should it take? I know some solid designers than can have skinned carts with hundreds of items up within 7 hours from beginning to end if they get the materials sent to them the way they require. That includes server, database and SSL set up. Now in your area you may have designers who are faster and some who are slower but I can only speak from what I have personally seen.

Jayme Ward is owner of Digi Donkey, an Internet consulting firm located in Historic Cocoa Village, Florida

7 Responses

  1. Very useful post, enjoyed every word…

  2. “This isn’t to get more money out of them, it’s because, in the world of web programming, fixing someone’s mistake usually takes more time than doing it from scratch the right way.”
    I have to agree with you on this one. It is better to build a site from the scratch than to fix errors from someone else’s work.
    Tracing errors from the thousand lines of codes is no joke. It is tiring and sometimes can make you unproductive.

  3. Good post. I agree with the previous comment too, tracing errors is no fun.

  4. Great post, thanks for your good tips and tricks. i will use lhis a lot.

  5. Nice Tips, I use Zeuscart for e-commerce on several sites. Open source shopping carts provide flexibility, secure and good support also.

  6. Just make sure you use reliable, proven, open-source shopping cart scripts. The ones you’ve mentioned are good ones to consider!

  7. A great understand this but, lets face it budgeting is one of those topics we’d rather avoid, but in business, it’s an absolute necessity. To prepare a reasoned and thoughtful budget, an accountant or should start by means of a common-based vital analysis of the the majority recent actual performance and position of the corporation by the managers who are responsible for the results. Then the managers decide on explicit and concrete goals for the coming year. It demands a fair total of management time and energy. Budgets should be worth this time and effort. It’s one of the key components of a manager’s job.

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