|
Credit_Card_Snafus_Tons_of_Dog_Food_Whats_Going_On_Online
| Credit Card Snafus! Tons of Dog Food! Whats Going On Online?
Imagine this scenario. You are ordering vitamins at
drugemporium.com. You register for the site, put in your
shipping and payment information and press "Express Checkout."
Up comes an order not for your vitamins, but for the products
ordered by Ester Levitts in Kentucky. Her Discover card
information is given, along with her name, address and ordered
items.
Think it's unlikely? Think again. It happened to restaurant
broker Ray Tekosky of New York City on Friday, Jan 28. He had
the presence of mind to download the errant order page and fax
it to me. I, in turn, faxed it to a reporter at The Wall St.
Journal. Was it news? You bet! On Monday, Jan 31 the Journal
reported that drugemporium.com had to close down the site for an
afternoon while it tended to its database problems.
What happened here? Something that will happen again, maybe in a
much bigger way, maybe on your site. "We're still in the early
stages of ecommerce," says Tekosky. "There will be much bigger
mistakes on a much larger scale. Who's to say it wouldn't happen
with a banking situation? That could create the ecommerce
equivalent of the Mad Cow scare."
"Donate the excess to charity" Tekosky is not some
ecommerce-basher. He buys online all the time. He bought his
Palm Pilot, his printer, many books, vitamins and other goods on
the Internet. And he's not the only one who's having trouble
with online buying.
Consider the plight of web developer Ira Wexler and his wife,
Barry, who is an attorney. They thought they found a great deal
for dog food at petopia.com. All they had to do was pay in
advance to lock in a great price for six 40 pound bags of dry
dog food for their yellow Lab puppy. One 40 pound bag would be
sent every 8 weeks. They would pay for the first three bags and
get the next three free.
Great idea, until the second 40 lb bag arrived one week after
the first and the third 40 lb bag arrived a few days later. The
Wexlers now have 120 lbs of dry dog food crammed into a closet
in their small New York apartment. Duncan, their puppy, sits
hopefully in front of the closet door for hours on end, dreaming
of the contents. Petopia.com thoughtfully told them that they
could donate their excess to charity.
An email to Petopia went unanswered. The first phone call netted
no result. Finally someone emailed to say that the remaining
three bags in their order have been placed on hold until April
first. But that's April Fool's Day and the outcome remains to be
seen.
Failure to plan for success What's going on? It would seem that
drugemporium.com has a problem with its secure server and
petopia.com has a problem with its shipping procedures. Actually
it's a good bet is that they both had the same problem - they
skimped on the back ends of their sites in a rush to get online.
My company and many others do a good trade in re-doing web sites
that were skimped on the first time around.
Companies that sell online need to seek out the expertise of
ecommerce integrators to design and implement an intelligent
infrastructure for their sites. The days of having a
brother-in-law who "knows a lot about the net" design a site
have gone the way of the dinosaur. The ecommerce stakes get
higher every day and budgets must follow.
Instead of planning for success, a lot of companies throw up a
site and figure they will beef up the back end once the money
starts rolling in. And sometimes that happens a lot faster than
anyone planned.
We are likely to continue to live with a variety of snafus
caused by poor planning. The way your site can avoid these
problems? Plan for success. Build a system set to grow with your
business. Or pay the price later. Like poor Ester in Kentucky.
And Duncan in New York City.
About the author:
B.L.Ochman.What's Next Online ? Building global traffic and
sales for Internet businesses Subscribe to our biweekly
marketing techniques newsletter http://www.whatsnextonline.com
mailto:BLOchman@whatsnextonline.com 212.385.2200
|
|
| |