How to increase impulse sales

Shopping on the mobilePeople tend to make two kinds of purchases – things they plan to buy and those which they buy on a whim, those impulse purchases. It turns out that each one of us spends more than £300 a year on impulse. Plus, when we buy things on impulse we tend to be less fussy about the “right price”. That’s because we are buying overtly on emotion – the item appeals to us and we just “have to” get it.

If you sell anything online you want people to be more impulsive than planned. That’s because decision-making online happens at lightning speed, so if you hit that emotional trigger rather than the person’s analytical head, then clicking that “Buy Now” button becomes much more likely.

However, new research shows that most impulse buys in the UK happen after 7pm and almost two-thirds of those impulse purchases happen on a mobile device. It seems that there something about slimmed down mobile websites that make people more conducive to buying on impulse. There is a clue in the words “slimmed down” by the way…!

But the issue for business owners is two-fold. Are your websites which sell products and services available in mobile friendly form? If not, you are missing out on those impulse sales. And what about the timing issue? Most of those impulse sales are when people are at home in the evening. What if they have questions? What if they need some kind of quick answer? What if they want options that you only make available via a telephone call? Sorry – you’ve missed out on that impulse purchase if your site does not completely fulfil their requirements outside the normal working day.

These people will not revisit you tomorrow – they are in “impulse” mode, which means they will buy right now, but not later. It suggests that whatever you are selling online your site has to be “impulse ready”.

Like this article?

Share on Twitter
Share on Linkdin
Share on Facebook
Share via email

Other posts that might be of interest

Forget SEO just focus on real people

Owners of online businesses are spending more cash on “Search Engine Optimization” (SEO) than ever. Indeed, a search for the term will find you nearly 10m pages indexed on Google, indicating what a big topic

Read More »

Music buyers have stopped shopping

Music buyers have stopped buying CDs forcing retailers into drastic action. Fopp, for instance, has closed down all 105 of its High Street stores. At the same time, music giant HMV has seen its profits

Read More »

Hardly anyone is social networking

People all over the world are logging onto to social networks. At least that’s what you would believe if you looked at the media coverage of things like MySpace and Facebook. However, new research from

Read More »