Posts Tagged ‘e-commerce’

Trivera Proves the Third Time is the Charm for Frabill

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

For 70 years, Frabill has been one of the most trusted names in the fishing industry. While Frabill is an industry leader in creating the world’s best fresh and saltwater fishing products and accessories, their ability to find a Web services vendor wasn’t as successful. A product of two different developers, the Frabill Web site was an underperforming, malfunctioning pain point. Needing a new developer and not having any room for error, Frabill made the decision to trust Trivera.

Following an analysis that identified deficiencies and uncovered new opportunities, the Trivera team embarked on a search and repair mission. The first phase of the project migrated the e-commerce portion of the site to Magento, currently the world’s fastest growing e-commerce platform, and the rest of the site’s content management to Wordpress.  The selection of those tools, combined with Trivera’s process, passion and proficiency quickly convinced Frabill’s decision makers that they had made a wise choice.

While the site was still under construction,  Frabill was already enthusiastically recommending Trivera to others.

“How refreshing it is to work with a design company that values communication,” said Frabill’s Jim Horvath.  ” Between the staging area, email updates, and 24/7 access to the project portal, the whole team has done a superb job to date in making sure we are apprised of improvements to the site…it is deeply appreciated.”

Since the site has launched, they have become even more enthusiastic. Frabill immediately began experiencing the increased sales due to Magento’s shopper-friendly features and improved performance. Their content developers are appreciating the ease with which they can maintain the site and keep it fresh and relevant.

Having earned their confidence, Trivera is now a true partner, with both companies working together to develop and execute a strategic plan over the next 12 months for further improvement of Frabill’s online presence.

Frabill  is happy to know they have found a partner that won’t leave them flapping like a tip up on windy winter day.

Chris Remington joins Team Trivera

Monday, March 16th, 2009

With a 10 year track record as one of Milwaukee’s leading Interactive and eBusiness strategists, Chris Remington joins Trivera Interactive, a Germantown based Web site Developer and Search Engine Marketing firm as Senior Account Manager.

Remington’s career includes successful stints at Mark Travel, Reiman Publications and most recently Hanson Dodge Creative.

Tom Snyder, Trivera Interactive President says, “Our paths first crossed nearly 8 years ago when Chris was the Interactive Account Manager for a company we were discussing a partnership with. The partnership never materialized, but meeting Chris was, in hindsight, the ultimate takeaway from that situation. Trivera has always prided itself in having a team of the best and brightest in the region. Chris allows us to continue that philosophy.”

Remington will also continue to serve on the faculty of the University of Phoenix, Milwaukee Campus where he teaches eBusiness, Management, Critical Thinking and Strategies for Competitive Advantage.

Trivera Interactive, since 1996, creates and develops Web sites, as well as developing and executing Search Engine Optimization, E-Mail, Mobile and Web2.0 Marketing Strategies.

2009 – The Most Important Year EVER to Get it Right

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

For years, our newsletters have stressed the fact that the success of your business depends on you taking the fullest advantage of all the Internet has to offer. This one is different. It’s not the success of your business that depends upon a well-designed, search engine-optimized, promoted, navigationally intuitive, e-commerce-enabled Web presence. Given the current economic climate, it’s your business’ SURVIVAL!

When the economy slows, the available market for many goods and services decreases. If the economy is impacting the demand for the goods and services your business provides, you have two options: accept the consequences of lower sales, or work to increase your share of the smaller market.

A textbook example of a company that took the latter route is Kohl’s. While overall in-store sales have been tumbling, their online sales are increasing, and not just by a little bit. While comparable store sales declined by nearly 7 percent for the quarter ended November 1, web sales for that same period rose by 92.2%! While many businesses are struggling, it’s a safe bet that nearly doubling your sales could be called a bright spot.

But just “being” on the Web doesn’t automatically guarantee an increase in business. Amazon.com just finished their best year ever, and American Apparel and Gap also increased their Web sales albeit by much smaller margins. But Web sales for Coldwater Creek and Williams Sonoma decreased during that same period. Watch for the possibility that both companies will be out of business by next Christmas.

While sales for brick and mortar locations continue to disappoint almost universally, smart business owners and corporate decision makers see the Web as the greatest potential area for growth. And Kohl’s commitment to improve and more aggressively promote the Kohls.com “brand” has paid off in spades.

And while your business may not experience the same $40 million bump in sales Kohl’s got just by re-designing your shopping cart and doing a better job of promoting your online brand, it’s a safe bet that you’ll see some sort of increase in sales… especially if your competitors are using the down economy as an excuse not to.

Even if your business isn’t a pure play “shopping” site, you can experience an increase in meaningful transactions by doing the same thing Kohl’s did: analyzing your online transactional processes, improving them, and promoting them… and not just haphazardly, but strategically, methodically and consistently… as if the survival of your business depended on it.

Because it just might.

-Tom Snyder

How’s Your E-fitness Quotient?

Monday, December 31st, 2007

Originally published, December 2007

For many Americans, a brand new year signals a commitment to improving their fitness. Resolutions are made to eat better, work out more often and make lifestyle changes to reduce stress and increase longevity. TV, radio and print ads at this time of year mirror the huge spike in interest in fitness with hundreds of weight loss, smoking cessation and exercise ads…each with an important disclaimer: Make sure to consult your physician before beginning this new regimen.

For many American businesses this should also be a time to re-commit to improving their fitness. With that in mind, Trivera is encouraging you to make a resolution to make your Web site better, communicate with your email list more often and make Internet strategy changes to reduce business process inefficiency and improve your vendor and customer relationships.

But like personal health changes, a change in Web business practices needs to begin with a consultation with your Web Doctor. So to wrap up 2007, Trivera is recommending a complete Web physical, and is offering a free 15 point custom e-Fitness report to our clients and our potential clients.

Included in this report are answers to many important questions:

With most companies reporting a 25-50% percent increase in their Web sales this year, there’s no question that the businesses that “get it,” are reaping the rewards. Are you? How are your Web conversions?
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Are you communicating with your opt-ins? Are you doing so frequently enough? Too often? How do you know?

Does your Web site maintain current navigation best practices? Is your site taking advantage of current monitor resolutions, desktop sizes, greater audience bandwidth availability, differing browsers and mobile delivery systems?

Is your credit card processing mechanism in compliance with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards? 85% of all sites aren’t, and will risk being totally prohibited from taking card transactions in 2008. Will your site be among them?

Does your site come up in search engine results that count? Do you come up high in keywords and phrases that nobody’s actually searching for? Do you come up at all in the keywords that people are actually using to search for a business, product or service like yours? Are you an unnecessary victim of click fraud in your paid placement campaign?

Is how your site was built now hurting your position in the search engines? If you have the words “click here” anywhere in your site, the answer is yes. Image Alt tags, link text, page names, incorrect use of images vs. text, file names and content are critically important to your placement. And how they work has changed since last year. Have you made any changes? When was the last time you checked your position against your competitors?

And there are more:

Does your site contain broken links? Are you paying too much for your digital ID? Are you inadvertently giving your employee email addresses to spammers? Is your site experiencing downtime you’re not aware of where it’s hosted? Is your content management strategy doing you harm? Are there Web 2.0 opportunities you’re missing out on?

The new year is right around the corner. 52 weeks to succeed or fail. And while many personal health resolutions require a commitment and discipline that lasts more than the first few weeks of January, all it may take to create benefits for your business is a resolution to act on your e-fitness report from Trivera.

If you’re serious about success, let us help you achieve that success today!

Breaking News – Web Success Will Not Find You

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

A few weeks ago, a stranger walked into our office.

No big deal, it happens frequently. Sometimes it’s a courier dropping off something from a client or a vendor. Frequently it’s a lost soul trying to find the office of one of our neighbors. More often than not, it’s a salesperson.

Despite our prominent location, and the over 100,000 cars that drive by our office and see our logo every day, I don’t believe we had ever had someone show up in our lobby to talk about doing business with us.

sidebar2.jpgBut this time it was just that: it was someone who wanted to talk to us about being a customer!

Over the years, he had mostly done his own Web stuff, but lately had been relying on “some guys” to do it instead. But he had come to a point where he was being let down with bad service and second-rate deliverables. So he had decided to get serious and needed to enlist the help of an expert. And he came to us.

I asked him how he found out about us, and he told me that he’s been on our newsletter list since 1997 and has read every issue. I was honored. And I wasn’t really surprised, as over the years I’ve had countless people come up to me tell me how much they enjoy
our newsletters and informative they find these articles. What IS surprising is how many people read these, tell me how helpful the information is, but don’t actually use it.

Admittedly, we have covered a lot of ground since we started these newsletters back in 1997. In nearly 60 issues, we’ve shared our expertise in just about every single area of Web strategy. From pre-project discovery and research through development and implementation to post launch support and promotion. We’ve kept you up to date on all the current best practices for email marketing, search engine optimization, pay per click strategies, content management, and more… lots more. Our newsletters have been reprinted in print and on the Web. Some of our articles have caught the attention of the media and gotten us interviewed on the radio, TV and Webcasts.

But none of this information is worth the digital impulses that carry it to your browser or your brain unless you decide to use it. As many of our customers (and all our honest competitors) will attest, it’s all right on. Admittedly, it would be difficult and expensive to do everything we recommend. But is that a valid excuse not to?

That boils down to how serious you are about being successful on the Web.

Back in 1997, one customer of ours who had just started a business decided to put himself into our hands. He said “tell me what I need to do and I’ll do it.” So we worked with him to develop his strategy… e-commerce with the features that re-enforced his brand and his business model; multiple Web sites for different markets; weekly bulk emails to his customers with success tracking and improvement metrics; search engine optimization and pay per click programs; aggressive promotion of the Web sites in print and broadcast; constant content and feature upgrades and enhancements.

It wasn’t easy for him to invest this much trust and effort. He had previously attempted several business ventures, but none of them panned out. But with this one, he saw the power of the Web, and wanted to make sure he didn’t screw it up. Doing everything we told him he needed to do was at times a real stretch for him, and in the early days, a financial challenge. But he trusted us because he was confident that we knew what we were talking about, and that we would take our responsibility very seriously.

And most importantly, we both knew that on the Web, as in life, success doesn’t just find you, you need to relentlessly pursue it until you catch it.

And 9 years later, because of his relentless pursuit, he now owns the top positions in all the major search engines for all of his keywords. He has an email list of over a quarter million addresses. But perhaps the most important, and relevant statistic: in 2005, he caught success in the form of $70 million in sales.

Are his results typical? No. But his willingness to trust our advice enough to act on it all is not typical either. Is there a correlation?

We can’t state for sure, but of the hundreds of clients who have come to us over our ten years in business, there are three categories. At one end, we have our Hall of Fame… the small number of successful businesses and organizations who look to us to provide expertise and guidance. They rely on us to create and execute quality Web initiatives. They chase success and in many cases catch it. On the other end, are the ones who were underperforming monuments to stubborn reluctance, who feared the cost, tried to cut corners, and assumed that success would somehow still manage to find them, and are now just memories.

Chances are, you are one of the people in the middle. You’re someone who reads our newsletters every month. You nod your head in silent agreement at much of what we tell you is necessary for your success, but you still don’t do it, believing that somehow success will catch you anyway. And you’re constantly disappointed with your results.

Someone once said unless you change direction, you’ll end up where you’re headed. And while you may be moving, the terms of success are constant. So the question is whether you are moving toward success or away from it.

Next month we’ll give you a checklist for Web success. For most of our readers it will be an eye opener as they realize how much they’re NOT doing. Your response to this article and next month’s checklist will be the answer. You may start chasing success by taking this seriously, re-reading previous newsletters and resolving to plan a winning strategy. Better late than never.

Or you may unsubscribe. And while we’ll be disappointed, we won’t try to get you you to reconsider. Because it’s not our style to chase people.

Kinda like success.

-Tom Snyder

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