Want to know how much website downtime costs, and the impact it can have on your business?
Find out everything you need to know in our new uptime monitoring whitepaper 2021



Over the past ten years, shopping online has changed from being merely a convenient alternative to being the norm. Before the advent of the internet, shoppers had to leave home, fight their way through traffic, and battle the elements on the high street to get what they wanted. Online shopping has changed all that – now, you don’t even need to get out of bed to buy what you want.
Today, consumers can find almost any item online and can compare quality and prices quickly and easily. With there being so much competition online, it can be difficult to get your products and services noticed, but there are several steps you can take to increase sales.
One of the most important factors in achieving success in online business is to clearly define your target market. Different generations prefer to receive information in different ways, and tailoring your online content to your target market is key to converting visitors into customers.
For example, millennials tend to prefer visual content when shopping online, while older generations usually prefer more detailed, text-based information. Consider the demographics of your target market, research their habits when shopping online and content that matches their preferences.
Creating a positive customer experience is essential if you wish to be successful selling online. Making it easy for customers to browse gives them a positive experience that will keep them coming back. However, a long, complicated checkout process gives them more time to reconsider making a purchase and can cause them to turn to competitors.
Give customers the option to save their payment details, as this will save them time when they return, increasing the chances of them buying again.
Being able to read reviews is one of the biggest advantages of the online shopping experience for the consumer. Online shoppers have become accustomed to using reviews to determine whether to make purchases; enabling your customers to review the products and services you offer is a simple way of both generating content that motivates prospective new customers to buy, and enhances your reputation.
With there being so much competition online, excellent customer service is essential.
Of course, while you do your best to ensure customers are happy with their purchases, occasionally you will get an unsatisfied customer. An excellent way of dealing with this is to offer a money-back guarantee for customers that are dissatisfied for any reason.
You should also aim to make it easy for customers to return orders and get a refund, and you should ask for feedback when they do so – this will help you improve your operations and leave customers with the sense that you’ve done your utmost to look after them, which could keep them coming back.
Following up with customers is an excellent way to both get feedback on their experience and let them know about new products, services, and promotions. Doing this helps establish credibility with customers and shows that you value them.
Always remember – happy customers are the key to long-term success.
Share this
6 min read StatusCake tells you that something might be broken. Hermes can check whether it really looks broken, decide who should hear about it, send the email, and keep the record for tomorrow morning’s summary.

3 min read The allure of OpenClaw is undeniable. You deploy a highly autonomous, self-hosted AI agent, give it access to your repositories and inboxes, and watch it reason through complex workflows while you sleep. It is the dream of the ultimate 10x developer tool realized. But as any veteran DevOps engineer will tell you: running an LLM-backed
7 min read There are cloud outages, and then there are us-east-1 outages. That distinction matters because failures in AWS’s Northern Virginia region rarely feel like ordinary regional incidents. They tend instead to expose something larger and more uncomfortable: too much of the modern internet still behaves as though one place is an acceptable concentration point for infrastructure,
7 min read Artificial intelligence is making software easier to produce. That much is already obvious. Code that once took hours to scaffold can now be drafted in minutes. Boilerplate, integration logic, tests, refactors and small internal tools can be generated with startling speed. In some cases, even substantial pieces of implementation can be assembled quickly enough to
10 min read Whilst AI has compressed the visible stages of software delivery; requirements, validation, review and release discipline have not disappeared. They have been pushed into automation, runtime and governance. The real risk is not that the lifecycle is dead, but that organisations start acting as if accountability died with it. There is a now-familiar story about
4 min read How AI Is Shifting Software Engineering’s Primary Constraint For most of the history of software engineering, the primary constraint was production. Code was expensive, skilled engineers were scarce, and shipping features required concentrated human effort. Velocity was limited by how fast people could reason, implement, test, and deploy. That constraint shaped everything from team size,
Find out everything you need to know in our new uptime monitoring whitepaper 2021