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  • @Miva_Merchant we will have the "dog" shirts at the 2012 Miva Merchant conference! You can get one early at #IRWD2012 :) 1 day ago
  • @GlendaleDesigns You bet! See you soon. 1 day ago
  • Come see us at #IRWD2012 in booth 308... And get your SearchSpring "dog" shirt! #InternetRetailer 2 days ago
  • Faceted Navigation Converts Higher

    • Author: Scott Zielinski
    • Category: Site Search
    • 0 comments
    • February 2, 2012
    SearchSpring Screenshot

    The results are in: The giants of the E-Commerce industry: Amazon.com, Zappos.com, Lowes.com, Dell.com, (You name it), have all proven that attribute-driven, dynamic, faceted navigation is the best navigation method for maximizing conversion rates of users who browse. Make it easy and intuitive to find the right product, and the shoppers will purchase more often.

    Here’s how faceted navigation does it:

    • Faceted navigation makes exploring a store intuitive. It enables shoppers to navigate by whats important to them (price, color, brand, size, ratings, anything), in the order that makes sense to them. One shopper may select a price range first, then a rating, then a color, and end up at the same products as a shopper who clicks the same refinements in the opposite order. Shoppers are completely set free from the constraints of pre-determined paths.
    • Faceted Navigation enables a shopper to visualize their navigation path, and whats available in a store. Refinement choices update quickly after each click, making remaining choices crystal clear. The dreaded “No Results” literally never appears because faceted navigation never misleads the shopper into selecting an incorrect combination of attributes.
    • Makes it easy to “back out” of refinement selections, without affecting other refinements already selected. Stores find that they receive more multi-item orders because shoppers have an easier time navigating to accessories after purchasing primary products.
    • Strategic placement of color paletes, pick grids, price sliders, and shopper-provided social navigation (ratings, pros, cons) extend faceted navigation’s effectiveness even further.
    SearchSpring

    Faceted navigation can yield an astonishing 20% increase in conversion rates, A/B tests have shown, when compared to heirarchy style and pull-down refinement style navigation systems.

    Faceted Navigation can be added to existing category pages without affecting SEO. Using AJAX to insert faceted navigation into a category page from a hosted service, shoppers benefit from improved navigation while spiders experience the same page, including all the same links to other pages on your site. Spiders largely ignore AJAX, and therefore generally don’t follow faceted navigation links.

  • Improving Engagement is More Important Than Ever for SEO:

    • Author: Kyle Wilson
    • Category: Site Search
    • Tags: Bounce Rates, E-Commerce, Faceted Navigation, SEO
    • 0 comments
    • January 24, 2012

    Google’s latest algorithm update highlights the importance of engaging users with a customer-friendly shopping experience. By analyzing page quality indicators like page layout and loading speeds, Google is looking to reward sites that are built for users, and not search engines. The importance of this algorithm adjustment suggests Google will now be analyzing bounce rates. Google defines a bounce rate as: the percentage of single-page visits or visits in which the person left a site from the entrance (landing) page. With high bounce rates for traffic driven to a site as a result of a Google search, organizations may find themselves bumped down a few notches on Google searches.

    Linda Bustos, Director of Ecommerce Research at Elastic Path, provides a great description as to why having a low bounce rate is important to a site’s SEO,  “ if your page’s content and incoming links suggest high relevance for the search query “learn to speak french,” but you consistently have a high bounce rate and very short average time on page before users return to search to try other results, Google’s simply not going to want to keep ranking you highly. Whether the reason for your high bounce rate is too much non-content above the fold, painfully slow page loads, cluttered and confusing design or something else.” To read the full blog article posted by Elastic Path click here

    For E-Commerce organizations, improving a site’s quality and lowering bounce rates can be accomplished through the use of faceted site navigation. Not only does the implementation of faceted navigation improve a sites quality, it also encourages users to engage with a site. When a Google search directs users to the category page utilizing faceted navigation, users are encouraged to click refinements like: color, price range, brand, rating, and size to narrow the amount of displayed products. Even though the product they truly desire is buried deep within the display of other products, users have the tools available to filter the results.  Faceted navigation refinements have proven to consistently driven down bounce rates 7% – 15% in every analytic study SearchSpring has seen.

    Conversely, organizations not utilizing any form of faceted site navigation provide users with few options to narrow search results. As Google search results direct users to category pages populated with many product options, users view products that are of interest, however, with no simplistic way to narrow the results many users become discouraged to browse through each and every product listed. As a result of seeing no easy form of refinements a user typically “bounces” from that page back to Google.

    Google’s algorithm change directs attention to the quality of a site and highlights the importance of utilizing faceted site navigation throughout E-Commerce. As SEO continues to advance, the E-Commerce industry is finding a direct correlation between quality and search optimization. Therefore, to truly optimize any E-Commerce site attention needs to be focused on quality and engagement. By offering powerful navigation tools to users will not just improve the quality of a site – it will preserve a sites hard earned SEO.

  • How to Save as Much as 45% on Facebook Ads

    • Author: Kyle Wilson
    • Category: Site Search
    • Tags: CPC, eCommerce, SearchSpring, SearchSpring Facebook, SearchSpring Facebook 2.0
    • 0 comments
    • January 17, 2012

    Earlier this week a study released by TBG Digital recognized organizations that direct traffic within the Facebook domain can receive discounted pricing up to 45% on cost per click rates. While many click ad campaigns direct traffic to external sites, Facebook is looking to encourage organizations to keep users within the Facebook domain by offering this price reduction. With SearchSpring’s newest application that integrates a live shopping catalog, search and navigation capabilities directly into Facebook fan pages, eCommerce organizations can fully take advantage of this reduced pricing plan. By setting up click campaigns to direct clicks to our applications product pages within the Facebook domain organizations qualify for reduced pricing.

    Included in the SearchSpring Facebook application is the display of a “Like” button next to all products in the search and navigation interface both on a sites product/category pages as well as within the applications product/category pages. Additionally, this application enables the creation of user-generated content through the integration of product ratings and comment boxes allowing customers to share product experiences optimized through Power Reviews. Finally, the appearance of “mini product pages” displaying full sized product images, in-depth descriptions, product ratings, and reviews similar to the product page or category page from any eCommerce site.

    The logic driving the idea of offering discounted cost per click pricing aims at rewarding customer loyalty for creating campaigns that keep traffic within Facebook.com and avoids disrupting the social experience. TBG Digital CEO, Simon Mansell applied reason to the idea of discounted pricing in that “if brands invest money coming up with campaigns that are social by design, Facebook gives some money back in lower advertising – that feels fair to me.” And with SearchSpring’s new Facebook 2.0 application directing traffic within the Facebook.com domain organizations utilizing this service are not only gaining a new sales outlet via social media, but more importantly, now possess a Facebook marketing tool helping reduce the costs associated with CPC’s within Facebook.com.

    Once business pages are integrated with SearchSpring’s Facebook application, administrators can create campaigns that drive traffic to mini product pages within Facebook.com. By directing traffic to Facebook mini product pages powered by SearchSpring, all activity aside from final checkout can remain within the Facebook domain reducing the fees associated with click campaigns.

    BTO Sports was one of the first SearchSpring clients to integrate this application earlier in 2011 – (facebook.com/btosports). BTO Sports indentified benefits provided from this service as; a new outlet for sales and marketing via social media, creation of user generated content and online exposure from followers posting reviews and liking products, collectively adding to the continuous expansion of social networks generated from increased exposure, and now with discounted pricing available from Facebook, BTO Sports can now spend up to 45% less on click campaigns.


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    To read the full study released by TBG Digital click here

    Or for more information regarding the SearchSpring Facebook application, customer feedback from users of the application, or general inquires regarding faceted search and faceted navigation powered by SearchSpring – please contact in any of following ways:

    Visit http://www.searchspring.net/

    Call toll free at (888) 643-9043

    Drop us a line on Facebook.com/SearchSpring or tweet us @SearchSpring

    Email: Info@SearchSpring.net

  • Is Your Site Search Intelligent?

    • Author: Kyle Wilson
    • Category: Site Search
    • Tags: eCommerce, eCommerce site search, Intelligent site search, IntelliSuggest, search and navigation, SearchSpring
    • 0 comments
    • January 13, 2012

    Is Your E-Commerce Site Search Engine Intelligent?

    Does it automatically leverage shopper behavior to capture more conversions?

    An intelligent eCommerce site search engine should leverage the wealth of customer behavior analytics that are constantly flowing through it.  Shoppers are telling you what they want every time they type a query.  This is golden information that provides a competitive advantage, if utilized properly.  After a search, shoppers are giving you even more actionable analytics by clicking on products, putting products in their basket, and finalizing transactions.  An Intelligent eCommerce site search engine should capture these analytics, correlate the clicks and purchases back to the individual query terms, and leverage that intelligence to drive more conversions.

    In SearchSpring, the “brain” that does all of this is called IntelliSuggest™.  IntelliSuggest™ utilizes Javascript page tagging, much like Google Analytics does, to capture shopper purchase and navigation patterns all the way through checkout.  The shopper analytics collected by IntelliSuggest™ are automatically applied to better influence subsequent traffic in order to capture more conversions, drive up average order values, and increase site usability in almost every area of the eCommerce search and navigation platform, including:

    − The E-Commerce store’s primary site search

    − “Rich” Autocomplete, which is the drop-down that appears as a shopper types a query. It provides both search term suggestions and product suggestions with product thumbnail images.

    − Up-selling and cross-selling suggestions on product and basket pages.  “Customer who shopped for this also shopped for…”

    − Search and navigation on Facebook and Mobile Sites

    In an eCommerce store’s primary site search, increased conversions are made possible by elevating the products that previous shoppers gravitated to after searching on the same keyword.  As smart as a search engine’s ranking can be out-of-the box, that one specific item that most shoppers really want when they search on a particular keyword may be buried on the 2nd or 3rd page of search results, meaning some shoppers will miss it.  When leveraging intelligent historical behavior patterns, you can place that “hot” item prominently near the top of results, automatically.

    Intelligent product suggestions, shown on product pages as “Customers who shopped for this, also…”, are a natural extension of site search intelligence. Data collected and applied from intelligent site search can greatly improve your site’s up-selling and cross-selling capabilities. Through the recognition of similarities between a new users search and navigation patterns, compared to those of a previous user, the right product suggestions can be presented to shoppers at the right time.  Ideally, alternative products should be shown on product pages, while complementary products should be shown on the cart pages.  Compared to utilizing 3rd party suggestion software, the economic advantage of utilizing site search for product suggestions is huge, as 3rd party suggestion software is typically very expensive.

    Automatically leveraging historical shopper behavior can put the optimization of search, navigation, and suggestions nearly on “autopilot”.  However, Intelligent eCommerce site search also enables administrators and merchandisers to easily configure intelligence into the shopper experience, to drive more conversions.  A strong suite of tools should be available to force the elevation of products from individual brands, for example, in site search results.  Merchandisers need to be able to easily trigger banner promotions, or elevate products by season, such as making a summer item float to the top of search results at the appropriate time of year.  Easy control of which data attributes will be searched, and what boosting factors are applied to them vs. other fields, should all be at administrators’ fingertips.  Generally, Title and Description fields should be assigned relevancy-boosting factors slightly higher than other data fields.  So many ecommerce search engines give very little control over these important things.

    Core technology of eCommerce product search also includes strong stemming, automatic spell-check, and strong synonym functionality.

    Intelligent E-Commerce site search enables administrators to easily make smart use of real estate on the page.  Easy control of layout, such as whether certain filters (facets) are expanded or collapsed by default should be at the fingertips of the administrator.  A smart search engine also leverages technology for speed, such as AJAX, which only requires the update of the refinement bar and products when a “color” refinement is clicked, for example.  AJAX does not require the re-load of the entire header/footer, making it very fast.

    For a free site search and site navigation review please inquire at info@searchspring.net or call (888) 643-9043

    Dewey Halden is the Director of Sales at SearchSpring. SearchSpring offers advanced site search, faceted category navigation, Facebook product search, mobile site search, automated SEO of site search terms, and up-sell/cross-sell product suggestions.

  • How To Increase Conversions with Site Search

    • Author: Scott Zielinski
    • Category: Site Search
    • 0 comments
    • January 5, 2012

    Many shoppers begin their online shopping session by typing into a site’s search box. The results they experience affect as much as half of the typical E-Commerce company’s total sales. While shoppers who use site search comprise only 15-30% of visitors, site search users consistently convert 2x – 3x higher than shoppers who only browse. The higher conversion rates reflect the fact that site search users have a higher propensity to buy. This means shoppers who engage with the site search feature are closer to a purchase decision and use site search as the quickest path to the items on their shopping list. A poor site search experience undoubtedly sends them speedily along to the next online store on their Google list.

    So how do merchants ensure these ready-to-buy shoppers convert?

    Lukie Games Search Powered By SearchSpring

    Here are six ways to increase conversion rates with site search:

    1. Provide Faceted Navigation

    Many shoppers use broad query terms that yield lots of results and few of them will wade through more than the first page of results. Search result refinement options, commonly referred to as “faceted navigation”, for sizes, colors, price ranges, and other attributes can greatly help shoppers narrow in on what they are looking for quickly and easily. Faceted navigation empowers shoppers to visualize their options and explore a store with ease. Here’s a bonus tip: Faceted navigation works well on category pages too, often boosting category conversion 15-20%.

    2. Use Analytics to Identify Under-performing Query Terms

    Google Analytics and similar solutions offer a wealth of insight into site search performance. For E-Commerce merchants, analytics tools correlate site search queries with sales so metrics like number of transactions, total revenue and conversion rate are available. This makes it easy to identify frequently searched queries that have low conversion. Queries that have weak engagement, like those with high bounce rates, are also prime candidates for review. Studying the search terms customers use inside an online store offers a wealth of insight into product demand trends and keyword patterns. Demand trend insight helps merchants more effectively source and merchandise products, opening the door to new revenue opportunities. Customer keyword patterns can offer fresh ideas to improve paid search campaigns.

    3. Master the basics: Use Synonyms and Site Search Merchandising

    Understanding basic site search features helps merchants address problematic or under-performing queries and maximize revenue for popular searches that already do well. Synonyms offer a simple but powerful tool to map customer search keywords to keywords found in product names and descriptions. This simple feature can solve findability issues when customers use or frequently misspell keywords. Synonyms can even improve search results when brand name or product name searches match common words found in product descriptions. Site search merchandising, another common feature, offers merchants the ability to display promotional messages to customers who search for specific keywords. This provides highly targeted, relevant in-store advertising for things like featured brands or higher-margin items. Merchandising features often allow merchants to customize results which is useful for top search queries. Merchants with a strong grasp of the basics can improve their site search performance dramatically.

    SearchSpring

    Discovery is a big part of value that site search provides shoppers. As shoppers explore an online store’s merchandise they often find it useful to explore by searching. Providing relevant search suggestions as customers type helps guide them in the right direction. Search query autocomplete displays related search queries and sometimes even top product results, is useful to customers.

    5. Make sure customers can find items by SKU

    Comparison shopping customers and those in automotive or office supply markets frequently search for products using the MPN or similar universal product code. Merchants should ensure that customers can enter all or part of the product code to find the appropriate items.

    6. Leverage Historical Search Trends in the Ranking Algorithm

    Correlations between individual query terms and the products that are clicked on and purchased is valuable historical data for an E-Commerce site search engine. These correlations can be automatically incorporated into ranking algorithms to promote relevant best sellers higher in the results list, minimizing the risk that shoppers will miss the product that they are most likely to purchase.

    Dewey Halden is the Director of Sales at SearchSpring. SearchSpring offers advanced site search, faceted category navigation, Facebook product search, mobile site search, and automated SEO of site search terms for 3D Cart stores

  • SearchSpring co-founder interviewed by Practical eCommerce

    • Author: admin
    • Category: Press
    • 0 comments
    • October 12, 2011

    Recently Scott Zielinski, co-founder of SearchSpring, was interviewed by Practical eCommerce on “How to Make Category Navigation Dynamic”.

    http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/3096-How-to-Make-Category-Navigation-Dynamic

    Sophisticated site search helps consumers find products on ecommerce sites, and therefore increases sales. But site search can also work with faceted category navigation to help consumers too. To explain it, we are joined by Scott Zielinski, co-founder of SearchSpring, a leading search provider.

    Practical eCommerce: Your company, SearchSpring, provides sophisticated site-search services. Why do merchants need sophisticated site search?

    Scott Zielinski: “The biggest thing is, out of the box, most ecommerce systems offer what I call a ‘white or black’ type search. It lacks many of the advanced features and functionality that a third party search provider can bring. Number one is pure relevancy, allowing the customers to get the expected results they’re looking for when they type in that search term or keyword into the search box.

    Scott Zielinski

    “Another feature would be stemming. What stemming is going to do is, if I did a search for ‘shirts,’ I’m going to want results for the word ‘shirt’ to come back as well. It also takes in consideration things like punctuation, hyphens and things of that nature. Another capability is offering suggestions, such as ‘Did you mean?’. So if someone were to type in a misspelling, maybe I type in ‘yelow’ with one ‘l’ or something similar to that, it’s going to give me the suggestion of ‘yellow’ with the proper spelling. Another is suggested search terms. Basically, what you can do with that is give your customers suggestions of what they searched or give them suggestions of what they might be looking for based on what they searched for.”

    PEC: How does a merchant manage all of that? In your example of shirts, how do merchants know that their users may be typing in, say, “blouse” rather than “shirt”, and make the same results appear, regardless of the term?

    Zielinski: “There are two different ways. A lot of it can be done dynamically. If it were things like ‘shirts,’ ‘t-shirts,’ ‘shirt,’ ‘t-shirt’ — based on the hyphen or pluralization — the search system would do that automatically. If the differences are larger, such as ‘blouse’ versus ‘shirts,’ then we have a synonym system built into our console to where they can actually map keywords to other keywords. A common example that I use is if I sell motocross parts and I have several of my customers doing a search for the word ‘rim,’ but yet I use the word ‘wheels’ on all my product descriptions. I can easily create a synonym so that when someone does a search for ‘rim,’ it pulls back the search term for ‘wheels.’”

    PEC: Google has its own on-site search feature that is free. Why should merchants pay money for a search solution, versus using a free one?

    Zielinski: “There’s a lot of added value that comes with a paid solution. I like to use the term you get what you pay for, but that’s always not necessarily the case. Price really doesn’t dictate the value these days. The solution that you’re going to be getting with a third party provider is going to be a comprehensive administration panel in most cases to really get in there and dial in your search, really fine tune it to what your product set is. You’re also going to get a feature set that’s not going to be available in your ecommerce platform or with Google, things like the faceted navigation, allowing your customers to drill down their search results by color or size, or maybe it’s year, make and model for automotive parts, [and using] the suggested term for ‘Did you mean?’. Also, another characteristics of a lot of third party solutions is being able to leverage historical shopping behavior and make your search become smarter as more people use it by harvesting the shopping behavior from the customers.”

    PEC: You mentioned faceted navigation versus regular site search. Which of those two methods is more important to a merchant?

    Zielinski: “That question comes up all the time and the answer is they’re both equally important. Analytics will consistently show that visitors who use your search will make up about 15 to 30 percent average of your overall visits, leaving the other 70 percent to use your faceted category navigation. However, the visits with search typically have a conversion rate that is two to three times higher and that’s consistent across all industries. So, analytics will also show that a store’s revenue is almost equally from users who search and users who browse [via faceted category navigation]. So, you may only have 15 to 20 percent of your customers that have actually used search, but it could be driving 50 percent or more of your overall revenue.”

    PEC: If a consumer is typing-in a specific product, he is much closer to the buying decision, presumably. Is that it?

    Zielinski: “Yes. Typically customers are very schooled in the world of Google today. When they type in the keyword, they expect to get what they’re looking for immediately. I think that’s why the conversion rates are much higher with search. When they type in that keyword on the search, they’re getting to what they’re looking for a lot quicker and more efficient than having to go through a hierarchy of categories. Yet, it’s still a popular way of navigation. Seventy percent or more of customers are still going to be using that method to navigate the site.”

    PEC: Faceted category search is frequently rigid, in terms of a consumer going through the different pre-programmed categories. It’s the way that cart is set up, essentially for that type of navigation. But it doesn’t have to be that way, right?

    Zielinski: “Yes. There is potentially a magnitude of subcategories for all the possible different product combinations. If I want the customers to really be able to drill down by, say, color and size, I’ve got to create all these different combinations of categories and then that doesn’t even solve the problem because it’s still creating a one-way route to the product in a sense. What SearchSpring has is an Ajax implementation that lies on top of your existing category pages to bring in all the faceting capabilities right to the top-level category page. So, once I hit, say, the ‘auto motor parts’ category, I can quickly select the year, make and model, for example, and it’s going to refine my results right there instantly on the page without me having to figure out the category hierarchy that I need to get to. So, the cool thing about that is that I could maybe pick make first and then model. Maybe another customer will pick model first and then make. But ultimately I’m going to get to the same result set. So, now I have multiple passes that I can take to get to the product that I’m ultimately looking for.”

    PEC: Consumers get to the categories and that’s where your dynamic navigation would take over. The merchant can control what it is that the consumer sees after that category page?

    Zielinski: “Right. So, instead of having them drilling down into multiple subcategories or having the customer to figure out what your taxonomy is, you could place the Ajax navigation tool right on that top level category and it’s going to bring you back all the facet values or attributes for that result set or those products within that category. They can filter or sort their results by any of those different characteristics instantly and at any different order.”

    PEC: Give us an example of a merchant that uses that dynamic category navigation.

    Zielinski: “One example would be Lukiegames.com. They sell video games and components. They had a hierarchy of categories: Nintendo, PlayStation, Xbox. They had multiple levels of subcategories that categorize what the products were. They brought SearchSpring right into that top level positioning. So, for example, when you click on Nintendo or Xbox, you’re seeing faceting capabilities instantly on that top level page, which allows you to drill down instantly based on what kind of system it may be, price facets or price ranges and a couple of other characteristics as well and it allows the customers to really find what they’re looking for, for the Nintendo system even quicker. It equates to less clicks.”

    Lukie Games uses dynamic category navigation.

    PEC: What about implementation? Does the dynamic category navigation work with any cart?

    Zielinski: “We try to make it as simple as possible, as plug and play as possible. The Ajax system really deploys with a couple lines of JavaScript and a couple ‘div’ tags. So, I guess the answer to that question is as long as you have some sort of template access to those pages, it’s very doable and, in fact, for every single shopping cart that we’ve worked with to date, we have not run into a problem. So, I can say right now, it’s version compatible with every single shopping cart. We’ve also directly integrated it with BigCommerce, Volusion, Yahoo!, Miva Merchant, Magento.”

    PEC: How do merchants actually implement your solution?

    Zielinski: “Everything is data feed driven. Once we have a data feed of your products — and in most cases for a lot of shopping carts, we have a direct API integration so we won’t even need a data feed. You tell us the shopping cart you’re on, and we access that data. Once we have the data, we can go in and configure your fields, we’ll set up your search and really get it dialed in to your liking and what’s best for your product set. The integration process is really painless for our merchants. Not only is it wizard-based — point and click in our administration panel — but we have a full support team that will walk you through the process and in a sense do 99 percent of the integration for you. We’re here to make sure that merchants get the best value from the product and the best experience. We’re here to cater to the developers, too, that want to get in there and take a stab at it on their own and really hack it up and style it up. Then we have the customers that don’t know anything about design or HTML and we’ll go in and we do that completely for them as a service.”

    LISTENListen to the complete audio interview with Scott Zielinski. 

    PEC: What does SearchSpring cost?

    Zielinski: “Rate plans start out at $99 per month and go up from there. It’s all based on usage. We have bucket pricing, so it’s real cut and dry. There’s no special prices based on quotations or anything like that. It’s you paying for what you’re using.”

    PEC: That’s the cost. It starts at $99 per month. What have you seen in terms of conversion increases or sales increases by switching over to a dynamic solution?

    Zielinski: “I’m going to reference Lukie Games, again. They recently implemented our site search and the faceted category navigation and they were able to attribute an immediate 27 percent jump in sales with no other changes in ad spent or seasonal changes. Their average order values went up; the time spent on pages went up; page views also moved up significantly. So, they saw a huge response and this is pretty common amongst our clients. We have a tie-in with Google Analytics right in your dashboard. So, when you log in to your SearchSpring console, the first thing you’re going to see is what kind of revenue is my site search generating for me and we make those numbers really cut and dry for you so you can see exactly what’s going on.”

    PEC: Tell us about SearchSpring. When was it founded, who owns it, that sort of thing.

    Zielinski: “SearchSpring was founded about four years ago by me and Gareth Dismore, our CTO [chief technical officer]. We’re a site search and category navigation provider. We’ve been in the business for about 11 years prior to becoming ‘searchologists.’ We were Internet consultants, building out enterprise-level platforms. So, it gave us a really good understanding of what our customers are looking for and what the best solution is.”

    PEC: Anything else on your mind for our readers?

    Zielinski: “There are so many different things that you can take into consideration when you think about site search. A few years ago, when you heard the term site search, you would attribute that to typing a keyword into the search box and receive your search results. But site search is a lot more to that these days. We’ve got the category navigation that can be powered by your site search. We’ve also got mobile implementations now. With the world of mobile growing and growing, that is another consideration you have to take in too. We can bring site search into your Facebook page, allowing your customers to engage with your products, do search and navigation there. We’ve got different mechanisms for learning about your shopper’s behavior and ultimately applying that to your category navigation as well as site search.”

  • Webinar: SearchSpring and 3dcart

    • Author: admin
    • Category: Videos, Webinars
    • 0 comments
    • October 3, 2011

  • Site Search & Navigation with 3dcart

    • Author: Scott Zielinski
    • Category: Webinars
    • 0 comments
    • September 23, 2011

    Shoppers who search convert 2x – 3x higher than users who browse. Its consistent across the ecommerce industry.  So, while only 20% of your users may use search, they can contribute nearly half of your site’s revenue!

    And the results are in: Faceted navigation on your category pages is the best method for converting more shoppers who browse. The giants of the ecommerce industry have proven it (Amazon, Dell, Zappos, and many others).

    In this webinar you will learn:

    • How to add conversion-boosting site search and faceted navigation to your 3dcart store
    • How to optimize results ranking in a number of ways
    • How to leverage historical shopper query trends and behavior
    • How to merchandise based on shoppers’ query terms and refinement clicks
    • Engage Facebook fans with your products
    • Maximize your mobile site’s revenue with search and navigation
    • Automate the SEO of your shoppers’ site search terms.

    When: Wednesday, September 28th, 2011, 2PM Eastern, 11AM Pacific

  • SearchSpring is hiring (and there’s free ice cream!)

    • Author: admin
    • Category: Jobs
    • 3 comments
    • July 1, 2011

    Who doesn’t love ice cream? We’re on the hunt for a talented web developer to join our team. To help find the best candidate, we’re offering a sweet reward to anyone who refers a candidate that works out.

    Here’s the deal:

    Refer a qualified candidate, we’ll interview them and make sure there’s a good fit on both sides, finally we’ll hire them and bring them on board. After accepting the job, we’ll send the person who referred the candidate 4 pints of the best ice cream Ohio (ah, probably America) has to offer!

    We ❤ Jeni’s ice creams because it’s lovingly produced in small batches in Columbus, OH (where our tech office is located). It’s made from locally grown organic ingredients and features cream made from pasture-grazing cows. Most importantly, Jeni’s tastes AMAZING!

     

     

    So help spread the word! Here’s the official job description and programming challenge for applicants: SearchSpring Web Developer Job

    Be sure to tell us when you refer a candidate.

  • SearchSpring Releases Product Catalog App for Facebook

    • Author: Scott Zielinski
    • Category: Press
    • 0 comments
    • January 10, 2011

    Colorado Springs, CO (PRWEB) January 10, 2011

    Today SearchSpring, a leading E-Commerce site search vendor, announced the release of their Facebook social commerce app for online retailers. The app allows merchants using SearchSpring’s site search and navigation service to easily market their products to Facebook’s rapidly expanding network of consumers around the globe.

    Until now, it has been difficult for merchants to deploy a social commerce app on Facebook that focuses on findability. Powerful search and faceted navigation capabilities are the main component of the SearchSpring Facebook app while providing an experience that’s congruent with other parts of Facebook. Design consistency increases usability and aids retail brands in establishing trust with their newly introduced prospective customers.

    Important benefits of the SearchSpring offering include ease of management and increased social commerce reach, enabling retailers to engage fans and Facebook users with their products in new ways. Weaving featured items or product specials into conversations and other social marketing interactions is now also easy to achieve, simply by linking to a search result or category listing inside Facebook.

    SearchSpring’s software-as-a-service (SaaS) works by integrating on top of merchants’ existing shopping cart software or Facebook page. SearchSpring’s category refinements for size, color, price range and many other attributes can be easily added to existing website category pages without compromising SEO, utilizing AJAX technology.

    A product feed from the shopping cart or E-Commerce software provides regular updates to SearchSpring to ensure syndicated product information is current. First-class support for popular platforms like NetSuite, Pinnacle Cart, Volusion, Miva Merchant, and hundreds more platforms makes SearchSpring virtually plug-and-play for thousands of e-tailers. Findability, the ease with which shoppers can find, narrow and select relevant items, is imperative in creating customer-winning experiences – and is the key theme in SearchSpring’s Facebook app.

    About SearchSpring: Developed by B7 Interactive and a team of veteran E-Commerce software developers, SearchSpring’s E-Commerce site search and faceted navigation solutions empower online retailers to unleash findability. Delivering the latest in search and AJAX technology, SearchSpring enables merchants to provide a rich and engaging online shopping experience. For more information, visit http://www.searchspring.net or call 888-643-9043.

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Testimonials

  • SearchSpring provides a feature-rich search option that has proven over time that it was created to help customers find what they want, faster. Fast-Growing-Trees.com has seen increased sales and conversions from search since day one. Their knowledgeable staff has been there every step of the way to help with troubleshooting, implementation and even creating a...

    Justin French Fast-Growing-Trees.com

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  • The number one complaint on MivaCentral.com was how hard it was to find products. Overnight SearchSpring solved that problem, radically improving the customer experience

    Rick Wilson Miva Merchant

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  • This is why I love you guys… extraordinary customer service!

    Mike B. FashionableCanes.com

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  • SearchSpring has proven to be a tremendous asset to our e-commerce toy store. We’ve been able to finely tune the end user search experience based upon the extensive reporting that SearchSpring offers us.

    Brian Almashie ShopWildPlanet.com

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  • Partnering with SearchSpring has allowed us to offer a robust and intuitive product. Their platform has literally improved customer experiences for our merchants overnight.

    Rick Wilson Miva Merchant

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