If I was tackling this space without a monstrous marketing budget, I would pick a niche (art and craft, hobbies, gardeners, cookware, etc) and run with that. A lot of the best niches already have players - young mums has MumGo, wine has VinoMofo, etc.
Going with a generic spread of products means you won't be ideal to anyone and you'll have to compete aggressively on price against established companies who already have volume, capital, marketshare and so on.
For best results as a new entrant, if you can pick a niche you have an interest in, that would help a lot. You might already participate in niche forums that would make ideal advertising partners or early users, for example.
My first thoughts were: 1. Don't make customers login to make a purchase, allow guest checkouts and this will improve your conversion rate. 2. The homepage is too crowded, reduce the number of call to actions/buy now choices.
Yes, as nithinpb has said too, just focus on a single deal on the homepage. Users/customers will find it easier than having to scan through multiple options/deals.
We wanted to make ours more fun for the buyer and have a 'theme'. All our marketing has been aviation themed, such as "fly in for a great deal".
At this stage we kind of went broad, having a bit of everything to see which products sold more. We are a little limited to what our suppliers have at this stage. But the prices are still cheap
My $0.02 is that daily deal sites like this are tough to market, as you're only real ongoing customer base are those who want discounts. The tricky part is that they're a very diverse customer base so you can't base your pitch on what the products are and who should get the message.
Like other people here have mentioned - if you had a niche it could make things easier. Ie: if you're providing deals on baking products only, then you can build some customer profiles (stay at home mums, japanese girls (don't ask, but it's a thing)), find where they gather and get your message in front of them consistently and build up a following.
Plus, it'll be very difficult to get repeat business. I run a couple ecommerce sites and repeat purchases / customer loyalty is a major part of sales. If your products don't have a central theme (i.e. target a focused segment), it is unlikely that a customer who bought random product A would be interested in random product B.
At the bottom you say it's SSL secure. And it even says "Click to verify". I clicked on it and it says
"www.rogerthat.com.au is not a valid identity."
Huh? SSL is.. almost.. mandatory as a bare minimum when you are doing some e-commerce transaction to at least give the customers some sort of confidence.
I resonate with another comment that the homepage looks crowded. This idea reminds me of woot.com. I would do something like that. When someone opens the homepage, I would show one product to grab their attention and have them browse other products by scrolling or through Menu bar. Also, what does the button "Roger that" suppose to do? It wasn't intuitive for me that it's a menu button. Finally, I think you should use the top left space above the logo for something important rather than leave it empty. It will be displayed on all screen sizes and can be used for Menu options or something else.
The site only ships to Aus., that might be obvious to you but doesn't seem to be to me - to avoid traffic that's wasting your bandwidth perhaps you could sniff for ex-territory (using a geoip service) and refer them to a similar Amazon product on the local Amazon or to a site you have a link with in their territory?
Not a lot! Struggling with marketing at the moment. We are running multiple facebook ads and we are about to approach our local newspaper. Not sure what else to do. Google Ads?
I was one of the founders of itsadeal.com.au, we've since stopped about 6 months ago to pursue other ventures. I would strongly advise against a newspaper ad, we went down this path and for $500, this got us about 5 subscribers. Google ads work, but remember to tie them into something you can make money off. It's not smart to compete using keywords such as "daily deals" unless you have a sizeable budget. A better approach is to customize ads which sell your products and if you have something with a large margin you should be able to come out on top (more effort, but much better ROI).
I wouldn't be rushing to spend big on ads until the site was settled and smooth. If you can get a few niche products running at once and get some ads promoting that field, you might have some luck.
I've used Reddit (you can advertise on specific subreddits such as /r/australia) and StumbleUpon. If you go the Reddit route, don't use an annoying amount of fluff words in the post title. That'll make 'em upset.
Hey thanks! I haven't got any experience with reddit but I have heard that you can upset them easily. I will look at some of the other posts to get an idea of what is suitable.
StumbleUpon is a great idea! I used to use that all the time. Didn't cross my mind to use it. Thanks
Going with a generic spread of products means you won't be ideal to anyone and you'll have to compete aggressively on price against established companies who already have volume, capital, marketshare and so on.
For best results as a new entrant, if you can pick a niche you have an interest in, that would help a lot. You might already participate in niche forums that would make ideal advertising partners or early users, for example.