Forrester’s Report, The Retail Ecommerce Metrics That Matter, Details the Metrics Critical for Measurement, Ecommerce Success.
To achieve key business goals such as increasing retail sales, digital business retail executives need to ensure that they have the right ecommerce metrics in place. These metrics should track customers’ use of various touchpoints and devices, identify opportunities for enhancements or new features, and help quantify the bottom-line performance of the website.
For true growth, merchants must recognize that the right metrics, not just the easy ones, will improve ecommerce. It’s critical that merchants use metrics that measure both customer and business objects. This article lays out these metrics, recommends how to align them with business objectives, and offers a step-by-step process for collecting and using these metrics. This article summarized a previously published report.
Here Are The Retail eCommerce Metrics that Forrester Says Matter
What are the Metrics Critical for Measuring Ecommerce Success?
The most important metrics largely depend on each company’s goals. The key is to start with the metrics that you must monitor, measure, and improve to be competitive; then prioritize the data you need to do that. Below we explore common metrics and discuss the processes you can use to let the metrics guide your retail ecommerce success.
Step One: Identify What You Can Measure
Site analytics are deeply embedded within the operations of most e-commerce companies, but data about a company’s overall digital retail performance and success rests in sources outside of a traditional analytics solution. Typical metrics include looking at site data, usability, customer experience and cross-channel behavior. For more specific examples of what metrics to use, download the full report.
- Site data. E-commerce is now well over two decades old, so performance metrics are well established and benchmarks for strong and weak performance are prevalent throughout the industry. The metrics that retail e-commerce executives most commonly review are conversion, average order value, shopping cart abandonment, sales generated from marketing programs, and time on the site.
- Usability. Site metrics often tell a story after the fact, but the most rigorous organizations also tap into customer feedback and employ usability labs that try to predict how shoppers will react to changes in a site’s layout or functionality. Focus groups, persona development, A/B testing, and heuristic analyses are a few of the tactics that retailers use to assess whether shoppers can easily find content and achieve their goals on a retail site.
- Customer experience (CX). CX metrics explore how customers feel about their engagement with the retailer. Retailers must combine CX metrics with more traditional metrics, such as site performance and download times, to understand how the total experience works for the customer. Teams routinely gather CX data points from other sources that monitor a site’s infrastructure and stress-test the site to ensure that pages load properly and sources like voice-of-the-customer analysis. These can come from emails, call center phone inquiries and social posts — as well as formal and informal customer interviews and conversations during store visits.
- Cross-channel behavior. Our data shows that 44% of US online adults regularly purchase products offline after researching them online, and 27% regularly purchase products online after researching them offline. Most retailers have unified customer databases across touchpoints. With profile data that can identify which shoppers buy at which touchpoints, retailers can understand dynamics such as online-to-offline conversion or desktop-to-mobile handoffs. Retailers that force customers to log into a site will find it relatively easy to understand device switching. For others, loyalty programs are often the key to identifying shoppers across touchpoints.