Friday, July 13, 2007

Improving Shopping Cart Abandonment Rate

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Shopping cart abandonment is a significant problem. In some market verticals between 65 and 75% of shoppers abandon their online shopping carts before completing the checkout process. Small business owners report rates as high as 82%. Here are 20 tips to help you reduce the number of shoppers on your site that abandon their online shopping carts.

  1. Check how many steps are in your checkout process. This is usually a prime "knee jerk" target for results, but it has been found that whether you have one step or seven steps in the checkout process is not all that critical (which goes against conventional advice by having as few steps as possible). We had one client with whom with whom we were able to bring the checkout process from six steps down to one, but there was no correlation in reduction of the abandonment rate to the number of steps. Note: In testing that I have done I also found this to be true. Once people find what they want, they are generally going to buy, regardless of the steps involved.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: Look at the steps you have in place currently. Have a group of independent people look at the process and give honest feedback. Look for consistency in complaint - or praise. If your checkout process is very lengthy, consider a reduction to make it as smooth and painless as possible. As that is just good customer service and that is something we all need to focus on.

  2. Include a "Progress Indicator" (e.g. "Step 2 of 5") on each checkout page if you have multiple pages. No matter how many steps you have in your checkout process keep shoppers oriented by letting them know exactly where they are in the checkout process by step number. Be sure to clearly label the task to be completed at each step. Always give them an opportunity to review what they did in the previous steps and a way to return to their current step if they do go back.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: This is only necessary if you have three or more steps in your checkout process.

  3. Provide a link back to the product. When an item is placed in the shopping cart, include a link back to the product page, so shoppers can easily jump back to make sure they have selected the right item. Your own experience probably parallels others. Recently, shopping for a CD/DVD printer, a shopper wanted to know how many and what color cartridges come with the printer. It wasn't obvious where they should click to review what came with the printer so they had to navigate using the back button until they were able to get their questions answered. Not all consumers are willing to take on this navigational challenge and choose to abandon their carts instead.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: According my testing, having a link BACK to the product page and then relying on the customer to know what to do to get BACK to the shopping cart is just a bad idea. They can do it, sure, but at what cost? In fact, only 4% of users who clicked on the product link were able to get back to the shopping cart without causing a system error or adding a duplicate item to the cart. Instead: use a pop-up system to allow users to see more detail on the product without leaving the page. You may want to instruct them to press Ctrl as they click to override pop-up blockers that they may have.

  4. Add Pictures inside the basket. Just adding a link back to the product details page inside the checkout process reduces abandonment, placing a thumbnail image of the product inside the basket can increase conversions by as much as 10%.

    Recommendation from Jerry West: If you are going to include a link back to the product details page, take some time and create a pop-up instead (as mentioned above), so the product details "hovers" over the shopping cart page so the customer can make the review and not get "lost". I tested the "link back" and it does not reduce abandonment.

[Via - StomperNet]


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How To Choose A Business To Start From Home And Start Earning Immediately

http://eat-healthy-every-day.blogspot.com/
A good business to start from home is the one for which you have the greatest conviction, talent and means. The choice should be uninfluenced by your friends or any commercial ad.

Following steps will help you decide on your choice of a business to start from home.

1.Evaluate your skills

Evaluate yourself for your strengths and weaknesses. For example, you may have an artistic nature or have good communicating skills, or you love to interact with children or animals. Your skills will be the basis of your successful home-based business. After assessing yourself, ask yourself, “With these skills, what type of home based business can I start?” Supposing if you have excellent accounting and managerial skills, you can have multiple home-based business ideas not limited to just payroll, submission of tax and returns, year-end accounting etc. This accounting talent further combined with other skills might as well open doors to various other related home based business opportunities. Don’t restrict yourself with a few home business ideas. Make a list of all your ideas at this juncture.

2. Take a test for your business idea

Now from this list, strike off those businesses which are difficult or simply not possible to run from home, like starting a manufacturing unit in a residential area. You also have to consider that you can’t run a home-based business, if it involves dealing with a lot of clients coming and going. Many people start a home-based business with the first business idea coming to their mind and they plunge into it. Don’t do this. You will ruin your precious money and time.
The success key to a home-based business is to go through the business selection procedure.

3. Profit and Business Plan Are Major Keys to any Business to Start from Home

The two important factors to be considered before starting a “business to start from home” is to calculate expected revenues and preparing a business plan. To make your home-based business a success, you got to take these factors into consideration.

4. Figure out the profit aspect

It is important to know how much revenue will be generated from your home-based business. You may be very talented, but if you are not able to sell your product or services, your home-based business will not see success. You have to assess if people would be prepared to pay for this product or service? Will you make enough profit as per your expectation? Business survives on profit, and you will have many bills to pay.

Go through your list of business ideas again and evaluate the profit aspect of each idea. If any business idea does not provide satisfactory answer to the profit aspect, strike off that idea.

You have to decide on the revenue figure you want to achieve. Many people run part-time home-based businesses to earn supplement their home income and are happy with that. But is that your motive to start a home-based business? If no, then you have to do a lot of groundwork to find out the profit-making ability of your business idea.

5. Prepare a business plan to evaluate the success aspect

It is imperative that you make your business plan. Your idea when put into black and white will help you spot lacunas and give you an opportunity to mend it. A business plan not only helps you gain certain clarity but helps you keep in touch with your vision and guides you while you manage your business. Remember that it does not cost you anything to write and rewrite your business plan. However, once you are in business, every mistake proves costly. Sweat more on this. It will ensure that you manage your business better.

By following the above steps, you’ll find yourself better equipped to choose a business to start from home that will stand better chances to be successful, earning you not only the money but lots of satisfaction too.

By: Harrold Swalve

Harrold Swalve is a much sought-after online home business expert and has already published several online home business bestsellers including his latest E-book "Profit Shockdocs" in which he teaches how to Make Money Online for Free. Find out now how you can find the best Business to Start from Home


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Does 'Toyota Way' Really Work Outside Japan?

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TOYOTA CITY, Japan — It does not occupy much space on the office wall, but Latondra Newton calls it the hardest thing for Toyota’s new American employees to accept: those colored bar charts against a white bulletin board, in plain view for all to see.

No, they are not representing the company’s progress toward goals. Rather, they are the work targets of individual workers, visibly charting their successes or failures to meet those targets.

This is part of the Toyota Way. The idea is not to humiliate, but to alert co-workers and enlist their help in finding solutions. It took a while for Ms. Newton, a general manager at Toyota’s North American manufacturing subsidiary, to take this fully to heart. But now she is a convert.

“For Americans and anyone, it can be a shock to the system to be actually expected to make problems visible,” said Ms. Newton, a 38-year-old Indiana native who joined Toyota after college 15 years ago and now works at the North American headquarters in Erlanger, Ky. “Other corporate environments tend to hide problems from bosses.”

Toyota’s corporate culture has transformed it from a small manufacturer into a market-gobbling giant famous for quality circles and giving workers control over production lines. For years, aspiring factory leaders have come here to attend Toyota’s select technical high school, the Toyota Technical Skills Academy in Toyota City.

But Toyota — on course to become the world’s largest automaker — needs to sharpen its game to meet even larger challenges, including raising quality in the face of rapid overseas expansion and its largest recalls in history.

The nerve center for that task is a nondescript cluster of buildings in the lakeside town of Mikkabi, an hour away from the humble-looking headquarters of Toyota, in Toyota City.

It is the Toyota Institute, charged with preparing executives to enter the leadership class at Toyota by inculcating in them some of the most prized management secrets in corporate Japan. The institute sends off its executives to offices around the world as missionaries of sorts for the Toyota Way. The institute does not quite aspire to be Japan’s answer to General Electric’s famed Crotonville training center in Ossining, N.Y., which spawned a generation of top executives across American industry. But it is Toyota’s best effort to avoid corporate short-sightedness and to keep the company true to its original mission of winning customers with quality cars, even as it comes under intensifying scrutiny.

“There is a sense of danger,” said Koki Konishi, a Toyota general manager who heads the institute. “We must prevent the Toyota Way from getting more and more diluted as Toyota grows overseas.”

It used to be enough for the culture to be transmitted by word of mouth among Toyota’s Japanese employees, on factory floors and around cafeteria tables. But Toyota outgrew these informal teaching methods and created the institute, which is so secretive the company would not allow a reporter to visit it, let alone sit in on any classes. Mr. Konishi said Toyota was building similar centers in the United States, in Kentucky, and in Thailand.

“Before, when everyone was Japanese, we didn’t have to make these things explicit,” Mr. Konishi said. “Now we have to set the Toyota Way down on paper and teach it.”

“Mutual ownership of problems,” is one slogan. Other tenets include “genchi genbutsu,” or solving problems at the source instead of behind desks, and the “kaizen mind,” an unending sense of crisis behind the company’s constant drive to improve.

The whole company prizes visibility. To nurture a sense of shared purpose, Toyota has open offices — often without even cubicle partitions between desks.

Dissemination of the Toyota Way overseas, however, can be spotty, executives and analysts warn. Toyota prides itself on pampering customers, but analysts are reporting weak or uneven service at Toyota sales subsidiaries, particularly in emerging markets like China and India.

Worse, some executives like Mr. Konishi complain of managers at Toyota factories who have not adhered to some of the company’s most basic creeds, like allowing workers to stop factory lines when they spot defects. Empowering factory workers has long been central to Toyota’s quality control.

And analysts say Toyota’s recent and embarrassing surge in vehicle recalls was partly a failure by Toyota to spread its obsession for craftsmanship among its growing ranks of overseas factory workers and managers.

“If Toyota can’t infuse its philosophy into its workers, these quality problems will keep happening,” said Hirofumi Yokoi, a former Toyota accountant who is now an auto analyst at CSM Worldwide in Tokyo. “The institute was founded because Toyota is afraid of growing too fast and losing control. It’s still too early to know if it will work.”

For Toyota’s 26 board members — all Japanese salarymen raised on the founder’s ways and with an average age of 62 — the adjustment to its recent emergence as a global leader will not be easy. It was not until 2001 that the company first set the Toyota Way down in writing, at the orders of Fujio Cho, the president at the time who helped orchestrate Toyota’s rapid overseas growth. The company established the institute a year later.

In the last decade, as Toyota has expanded into a vast international group, it has often exported its manufacturing and management methods to 200,000 workers at 27 plants overseas without always taking the time to explain the ideas behind them, analysts and executives say.

So now, with only a third of its total workers employed at its 18 plants in Japan, much of Toyota’s sprawling global empire does not always march to the same tune, these executives and analysts warn.

“Toyota is growing more quickly than the company’s ability to transplant its culture to foreign markets,” said Takaki Nakanishi, an auto analyst at JPMorgan Securities in Tokyo. “This is a huge issue for Toyota, one of the biggest it will face in coming years.”

Ms. Newton, a general manager in charge of training and employee development in North America, can testify to that. She said that while new American hires often had difficulty at first with some tenets of the Toyota Way, they quickly caught on.

Ms. Newton includes herself in that group. At first, she confessed, she did not embrace some of these practices, especially the white bulletin board, which she said she overlooked at first as “wallpaper” because she did not look at it closely. But Ms. Newton said the institute — which has already trained about 700 foreign executives — changed her. There, she says, Toyota tackles the problem of cultural education with the same intensity that it applies to building drive trains and transmissions.

After arriving at Mikkabi last September, she and her 40 classmates from the United States, New Zealand, Singapore and Japan were immediately plunged into a week of 12- to 14-hour days, starting with lectures about the Toyota Way from the company’s president, Katsuaki Watanabe; Mr. Cho; and other Japanese executives. Each day was focused on a specific core concept, with students discussing the meanings in their own words.

Ms. Newton says the students often worked late into the night on group presentations summarizing the Toyota Way and how to apply it to actual problems back at their home offices. One tenet that she studied was “drive and dedication,” a practice of always seeking out problems and then solving them by breaking them into smaller, more manageable pieces. The class also discussed other slogans, like “effective consensus building” and “respect for people.”

After an additional week at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylania, she spent five months in Kentucky on an independent project about teaching Toyota culture to generations that would enter the company around 2020. She says she flew to Japan in December to give a 10-minute presentation to Toyota’s president, Mr. Watanabe.

Toyota’s culture, she said, is still grounded in a Japanese-oriented brand of group-think. But in some cases, Toyota has also adapted it to fit American culture, she said, dropping group calisthenics at American factories, for example, although that is still common at Japanese plants.

She said she understood the Toyota Way better after learning from people who had lived it their entire professional lives. She now uses the wall chart as a critical motivating tool for managing her employees.

“When I saw folks in high ranks, like Mr. Watanabe, and how consistent and dedicated they were, I knew they were true believers” in the Toyota Way, Ms. Newton said. “Now, I’m a true believer, too.”

NYTimes.Com


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Earn Residual Income Through Different Payment Methods

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If a person is going to earn residual income then one of the first things they should understand are the payment methods used for paying a residual income. Nobody gets into residual income opportunities that is not interested in making money, so it is only smart for a person to understand how they will be paid that money. There are seven ways generally used to pay out residual income. Some ways have been very successful, but others have not. That is why it is so important that a person has some idea about these methods before getting started in any residual income opportunity.

In the beginning the main payment structure for residual income was a uni-level matrix plan. This was also known as a pyramid. This method hinged on getting people to sign up in multiple levels. The original person would be on top of the pyramid and rely on those below them in their pyramid to make them money. If all worked out then the person at the top would make a great income, but this type of plan is hard to build. It relies on people to keep recruiting and building that down line. It rarely works out because the person at the top is usually the only one making money, which is why newer payment methods were developed.

A forced matrix plan is the most common. Forced matrix plans also have some other additional payment methods associated with them that makes earning potential much greater. The basic forced matrix plan is like a uni-level plan, but each level has a limit of people. For example, the people the person recruits are limited to only 5. Then if they recruit more they fill a new level. This ensures everyone is making money. Under a forced matrix a person may also earn bonuses. There is a fast start bonus where a person earns an incentive to get as many recruits as possible within a limited time. They then receive a nice bonus pay out. There is also a sponsor bonus where a person gets a little extra bonus for every person they sign up. Matrix plans are also set up so that once a person recruits enough people they can then leave their original sponsors team and start their own. To prevent the original sponsor form losing out they earn a breakaway bonus where they still get a commission from the team that became independent. This helps everyone to work together and help each other instead of trying to keep those underneath restrained so they can not recruit too many people and break away.

The type of payment in a residual income opportunity can be confusing. There is always a lot of talk about down lines and commissions. It is really important for a person to make sure they understand the payment method. It is the bottom line of any residual income opportunity. Many opportunities have fallen by the wayside because they did not have a string payment method. By making sure the payment method is understandable and logical a person should be able to feel comfortable with their chosen opportunity.

By: Diep Tran

Diep Tran is Internet marketer, owns a Plug-In Profits Site and webmaster of Internet Home Business Opportunities. For An Internet Home Business Opportunity To Make Money Online, Visit: www.internet-wealth.biz


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New Rules for Retirement Plans

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I own a small S-corporation and I would like to set up a retirement plan for myself and perhaps eventually for any future employees. I am married, filing jointly, and we have about $200,000 in annual income—the majority of which comes from my spouse's job. What are my options for opening an IRA or 401(k) plan through my business? I'm very confused about the new laws.

—F.E., Long Island, N.Y.

You're not alone. A recent survey conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers Private Company Services (PCS) showed that a majority of chief executive officers of the nation's fastest-growing private firms are not knowledgeable about the 2006 Pension Reform Act guidelines that took effect on Jan. 1. And although the legislation creates an automatic enrollment feature for employees, only 5% of the CEOs surveyed planned to take advantage of that feature.

"The pension reform act was passed to help companies boost plan participation and do right by their employees," says Paul Bracaglia, investment advisory partner with PCS. "The lack of knowledge regarding the new guidelines means that…companies are not taking advantage of the opportunity to provide employees with the best options available to help them save for retirement."

Most Popular Plans

For an entrepreneur with no employees, a solo 401(k) plan tends to be the simplest and least expensive retirement plan to administer, experts say. However, you should research your options thoroughly, particularly if you are considering adding employees as your company grows. Talk to your accountant or tax preparer about the various retirement plans available.

If your CPA is not knowledgeable about the topic, she or he will likely be able to refer you to someone who is. Be aware, however, that it's always smart to get a couple of opinions. Some of the plans out there will not be right for you, depending on your age, how many years you have before you plan to retire, and the additional retirement resources you and your spouse have already accumulated.

The 401(k) plan is the most popular pension plan in use in the U.S. today, according to the Internal Revenue Service. The PCS survey, which targets the fastest growing entrepreneurial and family-owned firms, showed that 92% of respondents offer retirement plans, and 85% of them offer 401(k)s. Nationally, smaller firms and startups are less likely to offer retirement plans for their employees.

Background Check

Many companies—80% in the PCS survey—retain independent investment advisers to manage their plans and complete the paperwork involved, which can be substantial. Firms that do this kind of work include: third-party administrators, brokerage firms, benefits consulting firms, banks, and accounting firms. You can find more information on many of them online but again, talk to more than one provider. You may find that some groups charge far more than others to do the same work, and you also want to ensure that any adviser you hire is independent and not selling the investments she recommends.

"Ensuring that the investment advisory firm is independent involves scrutinizing the adviser's accreditation, fee structure, and investment methodologies and philosophies," says Bracaglia. "Company owners want to make sure that the adviser is bias-free; for example, has no financial compensation tied to the plan assets. Every company should ask to review its investment adviser's Part II of Form ADV which is filed with the SEC [Securities & Exchange Commission] to determine precisely how the firm is compensated. An investment adviser [who is] is paid solely for advice creates a relationship that will be truly independent."

For more information on 401(k)s, visit the IRS Web site, www.irs.gov/retirement/article/0,,id=120298,00.html, the U.S. Department of Labor Web site, www.dol.gov/ebsa/publications/401kplans.html. Details on the PCS survey can be found at www.barometersurveys.com.

Karen E. Klein is a Los Angeles-based writer who covers entrepreneurship and small-business issues.

[via businessweek.com]


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How To Choose A Business To Start From Home And Start Earning Immediately

http://eat-healthy-every-day.blogspot.com/
A good business to start from home is the one for which you have the greatest conviction, talent and means. The choice should be uninfluenced by your friends or any commercial ad.

Following steps will help you decide on your choice of a business to start from home.

1.Evaluate your skills

Evaluate yourself for your strengths and weaknesses. For example, you may have an artistic nature or have good communicating skills, or you love to interact with children or animals. Your skills will be the basis of your successful home-based business. After assessing yourself, ask yourself, “With these skills, what type of home based business can I start?” Supposing if you have excellent accounting and managerial skills, you can have multiple home-based business ideas not limited to just payroll, submission of tax and returns, year-end accounting etc. This accounting talent further combined with other skills might as well open doors to various other related home based business opportunities. Don’t restrict yourself with a few home business ideas. Make a list of all your ideas at this juncture.

2. Take a test for your business idea

Now from this list, strike off those businesses which are difficult or simply not possible to run from home, like starting a manufacturing unit in a residential area. You also have to consider that you can’t run a home-based business, if it involves dealing with a lot of clients coming and going. Many people start a home-based business with the first business idea coming to their mind and they plunge into it. Don’t do this. You will ruin your precious money and time.
The success key to a home-based business is to go through the business selection procedure.

3. Profit and Business Plan Are Major Keys to any Business to Start from Home

The two important factors to be considered before starting a “business to start from home” is to calculate expected revenues and preparing a business plan. To make your home-based business a success, you got to take these factors into consideration.

4. Figure out the profit aspect

It is important to know how much revenue will be generated from your home-based business. You may be very talented, but if you are not able to sell your product or services, your home-based business will not see success. You have to assess if people would be prepared to pay for this product or service? Will you make enough profit as per your expectation? Business survives on profit, and you will have many bills to pay.

Go through your list of business ideas again and evaluate the profit aspect of each idea. If any business idea does not provide satisfactory answer to the profit aspect, strike off that idea.

You have to decide on the revenue figure you want to achieve. Many people run part-time home-based businesses to earn supplement their home income and are happy with that. But is that your motive to start a home-based business? If no, then you have to do a lot of groundwork to find out the profit-making ability of your business idea.

5. Prepare a business plan to evaluate the success aspect

It is imperative that you make your business plan. Your idea when put into black and white will help you spot lacunas and give you an opportunity to mend it. A business plan not only helps you gain certain clarity but helps you keep in touch with your vision and guides you while you manage your business. Remember that it does not cost you anything to write and rewrite your business plan. However, once you are in business, every mistake proves costly. Sweat more on this. It will ensure that you manage your business better.

By following the above steps, you’ll find yourself better equipped to choose a business to start from home that will stand better chances to be successful, earning you not only the money but lots of satisfaction too.

By: Harrold Swalve

Harrold Swalve is a much sought-after online home business expert and has already published several online home business bestsellers including his latest E-book "Profit Shockdocs" in which he teaches how to Make Money Online for Free. Find out now how you can find the best Business to Start from Home


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