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Hayneedle

By Home Furnishings Business in on October 2012

Online home furnishings retailer Hayneedle.com concentrates on removing consumers€™ perceived barriers to buying products via the Internet.

Donna Faust, director of brand management and media relations at Hayneedle, said the company uses real-life experience for continuous improvement of the site€™s user-friendliness.

€œWhen you look at how we developed the site, we have an in-house usability testing center,€ she said. €œWe show people the new iterations of our shopping experience, see where they click and what they look for so we can learn from their behaviors and how they navigate the site.€

That allows Hayneedle to tweak its presentation€”Faust offered a brick-and-mortar store analogy: €œIf you walk in my showroom, and I see you spark to certain chairs, I change my pitch.€

An eye for motivated talent in the recruiting process, in-house service on best-selling items, and consumer-friendly policies also grease the wheels for online purchasing.

€œWe opened our Omaha customer service center in Summer 2010, and all our customer service is in-house,€ Faust said. €œCustomer service isn€™t measured by time on the phone, but by closing of sales. That means we€™re giving the customer the best experience by finding the right thing for them.

€œWe€™ve done research on different categories as to why people by something online or not. We work on processes to reduce that friction, that resistance to making a purchase online. If you€™re not selling online, you might lose that opportunity to make that sale, because customers can find it online. You have to understand the friction point and work to remove it.€

An investment in in-house product training also helps make shoppers more comfortable about buying big-ticket items such as sofas online.

€œWe do significant in-house product training in our customer service center,€ Faust noted. €œLast year, we sent them to learn about high-end outdoor furniture. We have product training specific to questions that customer care rep has experienced with that product.€

Hayneedle also promises free shipping on nearly everything, even 3,500-pound bathtubs; easy, hassle-free returns with no re-stocking fees; personal shopping assistance to help customers find their style; and 3 percent back in €œHaybuck Rewards€ on every purchase.

Reducing friction points in online purchasing is only a set-up for what Hayneedle has to offer shoppers€”breadth and depth of product selection. The company sees itself as the place to find €œeverything home€€”from club chairs to rain barrels and coffee makers to cuckoo clocks, with complete selections for every room, style and budget,
€œIn a retail store, you€™ll see three, at most six colors of a patio umbrella,€ Faust said. €œYou can€™t provide in the store the selection you can online. We pride ourselves on our selection. We have more than 1,500 vendor partners for drop-ship. We inventory our top sellers and product exclusives, also based on customer feedback.€
Hayneedle recently added 500,000 new products, and continues to add new product categories and SKUs.

The recent consumer-sourced site improvements Faust mentioned, designed to empower shoppers to more easily develop complete room solutions and facilitate their purchase process, have immediately garnered strong response€”customer satisfaction metrics have increased up to 300 basis points, and conversion is up 15 percent.

Those upgrades include improved category navigation and enhanced search capabilities that generate a more honed merchandise selection; enhanced product pages that better illustrate item details, including more images and larger swatches to help shoppers more accurately assess and match colors; a shipping calculator that estimates an order€™s date of delivery based on location ZIP code; crowd-sourced customer service reviews that highlight item pros, cons and suggested uses; social shopping functionalities that share trending items and what others are buying; and social media connections with €œlike,€ €œshare,€ Google+1 and Pinterest buttons.



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