The Grinch Who Stole E-Commerce: Will Site Downtime Ruin Your Black Friday?
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by Brian Easter November 02, 2009
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| Brian Easter |
Brian Easter is the
CEO of NeboWeb As CEO, Easter has led NeboWeb to explosive growth, attracting Fortune 500
clients and driving strategic partnerships, which have fueled NeboWeb’s
expansion. He is well known in the interactive
marketing industry and frequently speaks about capturing the power and
potential of online marketing.
Contributors
included: Kimm Lincoln, Director, Search Engine Marketing @ NeboWeb James Charlesworth, Senior SEO Specialist @ NeboWeb Katie Croteau, Search Engine Marketing Specialist @ NeboWebChris Allison, SEO and Social Media Specialist @ NeboWeb |
| Brian Easter
has written 3 articles for HostReview. |
| View all articles by Brian Easter... |
When
choosing a hosting provider for your online store, your decision can make or
break your holiday season. Today’s economy has forced many businesses to
reassess their budgets and lean toward cheaper services. However, if costs
eclipse reliability, cheaper may end up costing more in the long run. If you
want robust online sales this holiday season, the first step is to make sure that
you have a reliable host that will keep your site up and running through the
traffic surges of Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the rest of the holiday
shopping season.
What’s
the Worst That Could Happen?
Due
to the hype of holiday shopping during the past few years, Macy’s, Wal-Mart,
and Sears have all experienced downtime on Black Friday, one of the largest
online shopping days of the year. On Black Friday 2006, Walmart.com and
Macys.com were down from around 4 am until a little after 2 pm. Sears.com
experienced the same Black Friday trauma two years later.
Gap
faced similar issues in 2008 on Cyber Monday, the Monday following Black
Friday, as the site oscillated from accessible to inaccessible throughout the
day. A number of maintenance and internal server error pages were displayed.
Eventually, Gap solved the issue and stated "unprecedented levels of
traffic" as the cause.
For
all of these companies, having a hosting infrastructure designed to handle this
capacity would have made a dramatic difference in sales. In recent years, sales
for online U.S. stores between November 1st and December 20th have averaged
around 21.7 billion. Last year, Cyber Monday alone saw 846 million in online
spending.
However,
the holiday season isn’t the only time site failure occurs. Spikes in traffic can
cause outages anytime of the year. Socks4Life, an online diabetic socks
company, faced this problem after a CBS news spot aired which praised the
company for their tremendous growth. Within minutes, the website became
inaccessible. Luckily, their managed host was a reliable provider who was able
to quickly remedy the problem.
Sephora.com,
an online beauty site, was not so lucky. Sephora fell victim not only to Cyber
Monday downtime during 2008’s holiday season, but also faced numerous
reliability issues throughout the following two weeks and even into this year.
Excuses about server connection problems do little to appease their increasingly
frustrated 3 million monthly visitors.
Downtime
Ripple Effects
Site
downtime doesn’t just affect your ability to generate revenue, but it also
damages your brand’s image. Regardless of whether a visitor converts into a
customer, maintaining a site without hosting problems is important to
establishing a good impression with your visitors. The look and feel of your
site resonates as the definitive description of your services. For Sephora, an
inaccessible site could leave visitors with the negative impression that
Sephora’s marketing message, one of quality and reliability, is inconsistent
with the actual quality of the company.
Imagine
that you own a brick and mortar shop that closes randomly and whose sign has
fallen over. Even if your products are great, it’s unlikely that you’ll
establish the reputation you desire without taking the effort to create a
consistent presence. Downtime during major shopping days like Black Friday and
Cyber Monday leaves a bad taste in the mouths of holiday shoppers.
How
to Find a Reliable Host
When
searching for a reliable host, it’s important that you pay attention to their
history and their specialties. You may be signing on with an excellent
provider whose specialty is in a different platform than the one you’ve chosen to
use. They’ll take your business, but you may not be getting the same quality of
expertise that you would get if you were on their choice of platform, or if you
had chosen a hosting provider who specialized in the type of hosting you
require. Once you decide what kind of platform your site requires, you will
want a host that actually specializes in that platform, not just does it.
The
hosting industry is a diverse field filled with a variety of offerings. Some
hosts specialize in Windows hosting or Linux-based offerings, while others specialize in specific shopping cart solutions.
Once you’ve defined what your specific needs are, proceed accordingly.
Some
hosting companies may outright broadcast their specialty because their business
depends on their market share in that niche, but others may claim expertise in
a broad range of services. If you’re having trouble deciding if the host you’re
considering is right for you, don’t be afraid to investigate their history.
Have they received outside recognition for their work with the platform you’ve
chosen? If they’re a specialist, were they a part of the technology beta? Can
you talk to any of their current and/or past clients? These are important
questions you should think about asking any potential hosting provider.
Conclusion
For
many online retailers, the holiday season is “the big game”. For both
traditional shops and e-commerce-based
businesses, Black Friday marks the beginning of a dramatic increase in
revenue. When it comes to keeping websites up and running this time of year,
there’s historically been no lack of shortcomings from the e-commerce industry.
The question is: will you be ready? If you’re launching a new e-commerce effort
or have had even minor hosting issues in the past, you need to evaluate your
position to ensure that you’re ready to deliver a consistent shopping
experience during this year’s holiday season. Your success depends on it.
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