Paul Rouke Bio

I'm the user experience director at PRWD, and have 7 years commercial experience at Littlewoods Shop Direct. Delivering User Centered Design processes to improve systems and applications is what I do.

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PRWD

Usability and software development agency specialising in:

  • User Centered Design
  • Best Practice E-commerce capability, UCDCommerce
  • Business Modernisation

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PRWD, specialists in online user experience
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Posts Tagged ‘Usability Training’

In-house Usability Training For Retailers

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Along with providing public training courses, most notably for Econsultancy with a course entitled “E-commerce Usability and Best Practice For Online Retailers” I also provide in-house training and consultancy, especially for retailers.

Most recently I provided a full day of in-house training for The Scout Association. What was most interesting with this work was that they where embedding usability at the very start of their new e-commerce and ERP platform development project, rather than putting a focus on usability and customer experience at the latter end of the project, which is often the case.

In the words of E-commerce and ERP Project Manager Mark Selwyn,

In order to deliver the system within budget, my objective was to build “usability” into the design of the new web stores, using industry best practices, rather than have to rework at a later stage as a result of usability testing

E-commerce Areas Covered

The areas that I provide training on for the in-house e-commerce training are as follows:

  • Homepage
  • Search
  • Navigation
  • Category page
  • Product page
  • Persuasion architecture
  • Cross-selling and up-selling
  • Shopping basket
  • Checkout process
  • Web forms

Case Study For In-house Training

We have recently published a case study for the training course I delivered for The Scout Association which provides plenty of detail in the following areas:

  • Background to The Scout Association
  • Objectives for The Scout Association
  • What I Delivered
  • The Benefits and Impact for The Scout Association
  • Testimonials
  • Training Course Feedback Ratings

I must say I was delighted to receive the feedback that I received and its great to see how they are progressing with the project since I delivered the training course.

Are You Looking To Up-skill Your Internal Team?

If so then please give me a call and I will be delighted to provide a quote for delivering training and consultancy for you and your business. Typically one day of in-house training costs around £1000 plus expenses, and if a bespoke training course is required then planning time will also be charged. Please note prices exclude VAT @ 15%.

Tips For Increasing E-commerce Conversion Rates

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

2009 more than the last few years looks like being a year where retailers are more focused on improving the performance of their existing e-commerce site rather than re-platforming.

Top Tips for Increasing Your E-commerce Conversion Rates

Below are a few top tips for improving both the usability of your e-commerce site and small changes which can help improve conversion rates. Further resources are provided at the end of the article.

Search and Navigation

  • Make search an integrated and intelligent piece of functionality – if it isn’t, visitors will quickly dismiss the tool as something that will help them find what they want, and in turn could consider jumping over to a competitor site.
  • Provide predictive/suggestive search results – benefits include reducing the number of ‘no results found’ pages, promoting saving information which will appeal to shoppers, plus exposing some of your product catalogue which the shopper may not have realised existed
  • Allow visitors to filter your product range by relevant attributes (price bracket, specification, colour, size etc) – the easier you can make it for shoppers to find products which match their requirements the more likely they will be to purchase from you

Shopping Basket

  • Don’t hide your delivery costs until the checkout process – even if a shopper can specify a more expensive delivery option in checkout, at least ensure your standard delivery charges are provided
  • Make it clear what payment options are available, before the checkout process – especially important if you don’t accept debit card payments like www.booking.com
  • Promote free delivery options clearly, if you provide them – this can play a significant part in persuading visitors to both make a purchase, but also increase their order value if it means triggering a free delivery level

Checkout Process

  • Rule number 1 – enclose your checkout process. There are a range of key reasons why this is so important for retailers, one of which is ensuring you are focusing the shoppers mind on the 1 key action you want them to do – place their order with you. More advice on why you should enclose your checkout process can be seen in the resources at the end of this article
  • Make it absolutely clear the levels of security you provide – concerns over credit card fraud are here for the long term, and you should make sure your visitors have every confidence in you to keep their details secure
  • Pay close attention to how to present forms – by adopting form field best practice you make the checkout process more streamlined and you keep the shopper in a positive buying mood. Straight to the point error messages that point the finger at the visitor is one way of putting a small usability barrier in front of them

All Areas, Especially Shopping Basket and Checkout

  • Carry out split testing and multi-variate testing – alongside best practice principles, this is one of the primary ways of affectively measuring the differences in click-throughs and engagement when adopting different designs, buttons, colours and messages

Looking for More Best Practice Tips and Advice?

Econsultancy logoIf you are interested in gaining a much greater understanding of how small but integral changes can be made to e-commerce sites to help improve conversion rates, then the upcoming training course on the 23rd April in London is for you.

There is also funding currently available which could cover the cost of the course.

Below are further details on what will be covered in the days training course:

Product page best practice

  • how to introduce best practice into your customer experience
  • how some of the biggest e-tailers are following or defining best practice
  • how to cross-sell and up-sell affectively
  • how to introduce persuasion architecture

Shopping basket best practice

  • pros and cons of the most popular implementations
  • understand the impact you can have on consumer confidence
  • how to channel customers into the checkout process

Checkout process best practice

  • the rational behind enclosing the process to reduce checkout abandonments
  • a framework for delivering a best practice checkout process
  • how to reduced usability barriers to completing forms during your checkout process

Advanced user experience techniques

  • how to engage and delight customers with memorable interactions

Useful resources

E-commerce Usability Training Course with E-consultancy

Friday, October 17th, 2008

I am currently developing an intensive 1 day training course which I will be delivering through E-consultancy early next year, entitled:

E-commerce Best Practice for Maximising Conversion Rates

E-consultancy

E-consultancy.com provides information, training and events on best practice online marketing and e-commerce. They are the UK’s leading online publisher of best practice internet marketing reports, research and how-to guides. They also publish buyer’s guides and have the largest directory of UK e-marketing suppliers.

Founded in 1999, they now have over 42,500 registered users and around 150,000 unique site users per month. Their weekly newsletter is sent to 20,000+ e-marketing professionals.

E-consultancy also provides a range of public and in-house training programmes, which is where I will be involved in. Take a look at the training area at E-consultancy for more detailed information.

Course Description

Usability for e-commerce sites is one of the largest contributors to customer conversion rates.

By applying best practice usability principles throughout the customer journey site owners can increase the amount of visitors who convert from browsing to shopping. In turn, increasing in customer conversions leads to increased returning visitors and average lifetime value, which subsequently establishes greater brand credibility.

Focusing on 3 key stages of the buying journey, Product Page, Shopping Basket and Checkout Process, this interactive workshop will expose some of the most important best practice techniques which retailers can adopt in order to maximise their conversion rates.

Further Course Information and Booking

Full details and course content hasn’t yet being finalised, but what I can say is that if you are in some way involved with or responsible for an e-commerce website then the course content will provide a variety of key best practice techniques which you can adopt in order to maximise your conversion rates.

Further Usability Training Courses

Aside from this specific training course I will also be delivering other courses on the following topics:

  • Advanced Navigation and Findability for Blue Chip E-commerce
  • Adopting User Centered Design Principles for E-commerce
  • Achieving Lean Manufacturing through User Centered Design

If you would like any further information on these training courses then please give me a call in the office on 0161 918 6729.