Posts tagged as:

holiday shopping

Sounds like the title to a children’s book.  The potential ramifications certainly point to thousands of Facebook users suddenly giddy with child-like excitement upon receiving notification that the special item they have had on their wishlist is now available at the price they are willing to pay. And it is a simple Facebook Application.  So right there in my toolbar, I now see every application that can get me through any day: Farmville, Mafia Wars, Bejeweled Blitz, Foodfight and now… Wishlist.

Wishlist. Brought to you by the clever people at SortPrice.com.  http://apps.facebook.com/shopping_wishlist/ (of course you must be logged in to see anything at this link)

wishlist

But what does it do?  How does it wrangle potential shopping masses from Facebook status additions and virtual farming into a comparison shopping realm?

It’s not that complicated.  This application allows you to shop for things, find them, COMPARE them to others, read and write reviews and then place your wanted items in a wishlist.  Sounds like Amazon.com, right?  The difference is with Facebook  the items in your wishlist are broadcast for all to see, either on your profile or on the live feed to your friends.  You can also elect to not have those products posted and visible.  If a friend clicks the product you have posted, they are taken directly to the merchant’s site that is selling the product, presumably after dropping a tracer through SortPrice.

This is a HUGE advantage to merchants advertising in SortPrice.  It brings e-commerce to the fingertips of an incredibly diverse audience, who already spend a large amount of time on Facebook.

But wait! There’s more!

wishlist2

It wouldn’t be your standard issue Facebook application without some sort of competition with others on Facebook.  Monthly,  SortPrice and Wishlist hold a points gathering competition to earn  $100.00, usable towards items on your own wishlist.  So there is the strategic motivation that Facebook game players seek: who can get the most points?  Doing different things within the Wishlist application earn you points. Simply adding items to your wishlist can get you points.  It’s a shoppers Facebook dream!

Could this be the hook we’ve all needed to bring e-commerce to the masses virally through social media?

I am eager to hear how this worked for SortPrice and their merchants following the holiday season.

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‘Tis the season!

For e-commerce stores, that simply means being aware of the annual tradition of comparison shopping engines hiking up their costs per click. In an effort to capture a bit of their own holiday glee, CSE’s like Pricegrabber, NexTag and Shopzilla raise their rates by as much as 25%.

How does that work?

Cost Per Click – Bid Model:

If you list products in NexTag, under the TOYS category, your normal minimum bid is 25 cents per click.  During the holiday shopping season, NexTag increases their pricing by 25%.  So the new minimum cost per click is 32 cents per click.  Now, you may not be affected by this at all.  If the bids you set on your products already start higher than that minimum bid, you may not feel any difference in spent budget.  However, the increase in minimum cost per click does bring lower positioned competitors higher on the results page.  Be aware and adjust accordingly.

Cost Per Click Flat Rate Model:

With this model, your total cost will go up.  If you are utilizing Pricegrabber, you pay a flat fee per click, based on the category your products are in.  With the application of the 25% holiday rate increase, you will see your costs rise.  For example, if you have products in the TOYS category and your normal price per click is 75 cents per click, you will be paying 94 cents per click for each click.  So your budget will be depleted quicker and your products could go offline earlier.

Some Good News:

There are several comparison shopping engines that are breaking with tradition and NOT increasing prices this holiday season.  They may have other specials to note though.

Here is a breakdown of the rate increases by major engine:

nextag-small-logo

  • Runs from 11/4/2009 through 1/06/2010
  • 25% increase.  All categories

sites_pricegrabber

  • Runs from 11/1/2009 through 1/15/2010
  • 25% increase. All subcategories

yahoo-shopping-small-logo

  • Runs from 11/02/2009 through 12/29/2009
  • 25% increase. All categories.

shopzilla-small-logo

  • Runs from 11/16/2009 through 12/27/2009
  • 0% to 25% increase, based on category.

shopping-small-logo

  • Runs from 11/15/2009 through 12/31/2009
  • 0% to 20% increase, based on category.

smarter-small-logo

  • Runs from 11/01/2009 through 1/01/2010
  • 20% increase, All categories.

become-small-logo

  • NO INCREASE
  • Add a Logo 1/2 off – Entire month of November.

sortprice-small-logo

  • NO INCREASE
  • Contact for special placement pricing.

google-product-search-small-logo

  • NO INCREASE
  • (Hard to beat FREE)

Some of these have already kicked in.  There are two watch points for you, if you have products listed in the comparison shopping engines.  First is that you will spend your budget quicker and should monitor your spend closely to ensure your products do not experience down time as a result.  Second is that rate changes cause a scramble for bid placement.  Keep your eye on the listings to ensure your are in the position you want to be in.

Have a great season!

I’m Linda Bateman and I’m here to help.

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It’s November… Do you Know Where Your Products Are?

by lynbatNovember 2, 2009 Comparison Shopping Engines

The holiday shopping season is already underway.  Long gone is the time that  holiday shopping kicked off the day after Thanksgiving.  Retail shelves are already full of holiday offerings.  What is amazing is that shopping carts are already full of holiday products.
I ventured into the local Walmart on Halloween fully expecting aisles full of families gathering [...]

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