Picking Up On Customer Anxiety: When to Trigger Live Chat
Posted January 6, 2009 by Linda Bustos
If customers linger for a while on your help page, or in
the checkout process, or any other area of your site, it may
indicate a customer has some anxiety (or got up to get a coffee
and a donut).
This is a good idea from an Internet Retailer article on
how to
employ live chat profitably:
Orvis invites customers to chat only when they are on certain
pages, such as customer service. "We have a lot of stuff on the
customer service page," Wolansky says. "If 15 seconds go by and
you're still on that page, you're probably looking for something
and haven't found it."
Orvis also offers chat to customers lingering on the checkout
page. But Orvis does not offer chat on product pages, where
visitors may linger reading reviews, examining photos, watching
videos and comparing products. "Sitting there for a long time is
not an indication you have a problem," Wolansky says. "I don't
want to bother you."
With the help of web analytics, retailers can map out the
typical paths taken by customers who buy, and identify deviations
that indicate a visitor is likely to leave, says Kevin Kohn,
executive vice president of marketing at chat provider LivePerson
Inc. If a lot of visitors abandon after two minutes on a
particular page, he says "when someone's there for a minute, 45
seconds, it's not a bad idea to reach out offering
assistance."
Source: GetElastic