Setting Up Shop (on the front end) By Tiffany Patterson
Shop Setup Part 2 Adding Products Adding Shelves Importing & Exporting Products to your shelf Donations Flat Discount Coupons Subscriptions Batch Codes to Subscriptions Event Manager Managing Transactions The Shopping Cart Macros
Add Product
Add Product – Shop Tab
Add Product – Product Setup
Add Product – Add Variant
Final Product Setup
Adding A Shelf
Importing Inventory
Importing Products Create inventory in CSV File
Imported Products On Shelf Why? For organization.
Donations
Donations – Shop Tab
Donations – Final Setup This allows users to manually enter the amount that they would like to donate. You can also use this as a payment module for invoices.
Flat Discount Coupons
Flat Discount Coupon – Shop Tab
Setting Up A Subscription Setup the Group the subscriber will belong to Create the Subscription
Setup Group For Subscription Purchase
Add Subscription
Add Subscription – Shop Tab
Add Subscription - Final
Batch Codes Generate a batch of codes that you can give out as a promo. With our subscription maybe we’ve raffled off a season pass for indoor surfing. We can give the winner a batch code to redeem their free season pass
Create A Batch of Subscription Codes
Managing Codes
Event Manager
Main Event Setup
Adding A Badge
Adding a Badge – Shop Tab
Adding Event Manager Ticket
Event Manager Ticket – Shop Tab
Purchasing A Badge
Badge Purchase
Checking Out Adjust Quantities of Product, Continue Shopping, Change Shipping Address, See Totals including tax and in-shop credit
Adding A Shipping Address
Multiple Shipping Addresses
Payment Option Depending on what is active under the Shop section, is what will be displayed
Managing Transactions
Adding Tracking Numbers to Transactions
Shopping Cart Macros Make it easier on your user to shop and know what they’ve added to their cart Quick access to the shopping Cart New Macros are: ^MiniCart; - ^ViewCart; - ^CartItemCount;
MiniCart Macro - ^MiniCart;
View Cart Macro - ^ViewCart;
Item Count Macro - ^CartItemCount;
QUESTIONS ?????????????????????????
Fun Statistics Impulse purchases represent almost 40% of all the money spent on e-commerce sites. Over 40% of all Americans have made a purchase online. - Source: NDP Group Over 75% of online consumers do not care whether an online store is run by a large or small company. - Source: TNS $1.6 trillion was made via e-commerce in 2003; $7.1 trillion is expected in Source: IDC Small and medium businesses (SMBs, or companies with up to 999 employees) in China will see a 45% increase in numbers with e-commerce-enabled websites this year as compared to About 200,000 companies in China will have an e-commerce-enabled website this year, compared with about 135,000 last year. By 2010, the number of e-commerce-enabled businesses in China will reach 370,000. Total U.S. online retail sales (excluding travel) reached approximately $31 billion in Q2 – July 2008 Cross-Sell and Up-sell Recommendation Offering Found to Lift Online Revenue by as Much as 20 Percent - USE THE ACCESSORIES AND RELATED PRODUCTS ON YOUR ITEMS FOR SALE In 2007, store sales influenced by online research totaled $471 billion. Comparatively, retail e- commerce sales were $136 billion. From 2007 to 2012, Web-influenced store sales are forecast to grow at a 19% average annual rate, compared with a 12% rate for retail e-commerce. New technologies that enable surfing the web visually rather than textually, then link directly to transactions, are the next 'secret weapon' for eCommerce. Seventy-five percent of online retailers surveyed cited multi-channel expansion as a key component in their marketing strategies. Ninety-eight percent report they market on at least two online channels. Consumers spend an average of three minutes visiting an ecommerce site, research by Pindar Graphics has concluded. Just four out of ten consumers (41.5%) land on the home page when they visit The first week of November marks the start of the online holiday shopping If consumers had to choose just one method of researching their purchases, 58% of respondents said they would choose the Internet—far more than would choose their own friends and family.