Damn Good Content To Grow Your Business In The Digital World

Insights, Ideas and Innovations from the brains of the Saucal NERDS.

Shipping with WooCommerce: Choosing the best option for your business
25 Apr

Shipping with WooCommerce - Ship in the sea

If you sell (or plan on selling) physical goods in your online store, you know that shipping is an important part of your customer’s experience. It can make or break your business, and you don’t wanna mess it up. It sounds like a big task (and it is), but Saucal is here to help you out!

WooCommerce offers basic yet solid shipping configuration by default. With it you can:

  • Create shipping zones (by country, state, or even by zip code), and assign different shipping methods to each of them or globally.
  • Create shipping classes (e.g. one class for shirts and another for shoes). This helps better categorize your products when shipping, and provide different rates to different classes.
  • Offer flat rate, free shipping and local pickup options.

If you’re starting a small online store, these out-of-the-box WooCommerce options can be just what you need. But they may not meet the requirements of the medium and large eCommerce.

Lots of companies find their sweet spot for free shipping. That’s a discussion not fit in this article, but it’s one stores should strive for.

It’s not an easy task to adjust just the right shipping costs for all cases. Doing it manually per state (or sometimes in an even lower level) can be overwhelming and cares for constant updates.

There enter’s live rates to save you countless hours!

Benefitting from live rates


Live rat
Live rat (photo by Ricky Kharawala).

With live rates, you don’t have to worry about shipping calculations! They are done automatically using the carrier’s API. Customers get live rates based on your store’s location, shipping address, and products’ dimensions and weight.

Bear in mind that it requires good planning and work upfront to implement live rates. You need to have all your products’ weight and dimensions set, as well as understand what service options and box sizes your business needs. But once it’s set, the benefits are great.

The good news is that the major players have their own WooCommerce plugins. In those cases, you simply need to install the plugin, enter the carrier’s credentials, and configure your shipping needs.

If you’re in USA you can benefit on live rates from FedEx, UPS, USPS, DHL, to cite a few.

You also have carrier options for other countries like Canada Post, Australia Post, UK Royal Mail, New Zealand Post, and Brazil Correios.

Live rates do the shipping calculation for you, but you still have to deal with shipping labels, fulfillment and stock management across channels, on your own. But you don’t have to take care of all of this alone!

Meet shipping services.

Shipping services


The shipping services provide much more than shipping costs calculation. They offer:

  • A web interface to manage all the shipping processes.
  • Integration with various carriers.
  • Integration with marketplaces such as Amazon and eBay.
  • Discounts in USPS rates (for USA stores).
  • Shipping documentation (including when selling internationally).
  • Shipping tracking emails.
  • Label printing: services get them ready for you to print them one-by-one or in batch.
  • Return labels.
  • Branded emails and labels.
  • Analytics.

As you can see, shipping service is a tool to rule them all!

Let’s take a look at three services that integrates to WooCommerce: ShipStation, Shippo and ShippingEasy. They all offer the same functionalities we discussed above. But what are the differences between them?

ShipStation

What differentiates ShipStation from its competitors is that it:

  • Integrates with carriers from USA, Canada, UK, and Australia.
  • Gives you FedEx discounts, not only USPS ones.
  • Has a free iOS and Android app to manage orders, print labels, scan barcodes, review analytics and performance insights, and much more.
  • Has the most integration options among accounting/ERP (15+), marketplaces (25+), fulfillment/logistics (10+), inventory/OMS (15+), carriers (35+) and even marketing/CRM tools and payment providers.

Pricing

Its pricing ranges from $9 to $159 (USD) per month.

The difference between plans in ShipStation is the shipments per month count. As you go up you also get more support options and customization for packing slips and labels.

Shippo

The differentiation points for Shippo are that it:

  • Connects to carriers from all continents.
  • Supports the most carriers’ integration (55+).
  • Offers a free plan not bound to a maximum shipment count, and you can use it for any number of orders. Instead of a monthly payment, Shippo charges $0.05 per shipment in this plan.
  • Provides technical implementation assistance for higher tier customers.

Pricing

Shippo pricing ranges from $0 to $125 (USD) per month. Above 5000 orders it’s custom priced.

The free plan has no shipping count limits, but you get more discounts for insurance and address validation as you go up in the tiers. Also, custom texts and branding are only available if you’re a paying member (starting at $10).

ShippingEasy

With ShippingEasy you get:

  • Unified inventory management across sales channels.
  • Bundle products together using their platform.
  • Email marketing.
  • Ship using only your voice with Amazon Alexa.
  • Free iOS and Android app to help you print the labels.
  • Free warehouse fulfillment consultation (for large enterprises).
  • Integration with accounting and ERP platforms.

Pricing

Pricing ranges from $0 to $149 (USD) per month.

ShippingEasy free plan does not offer all the perks the paid plans do. Things like USPS discounts and shipping with all available carriers are only available if you’re a paying user (starting at $29).

It’s important to note that it currently has no integration with carriers outside of the USA, so it ships only from the USA.

Have you tried one of the services we discussed? What do you think of WooCommerce basic shipping options? Tell us in the comments how you handle shipping in your company.

How to Set Up and Run a Referral Program for Your WooCommerce Store
18 Jan

A good referral program can help your business to grow rapidly, and there is a WooCommerce plugin that makes it easy. That means you can focus on your business rather than the technology behind the referral program — and isn’t that what a good plugin should do?

Some businesses don’t set up a referral program because they fear that it will be too difficult, both for them and for their customers. The WooCommerce Referral program for your store makes it easy. In fact, it can be done in three simple steps.

Setting Up Your WooCommerce Program

The first thing you’ll want to do is sign up for a referral software program that creates personalized links for you, such as ReferralCandy. Next, you’ll want to decide on the reward structure. Oola Tea has a program that offers dual rewards like Uber’s program. The referrer and the referral both receive $10 off their next order. This provides motivation for current customers to share their link with their friends and family.

Setting up the program can be very simple. There are three main steps:

  1. Sign up for ReferralCandy
  2. Install the ReferralCandy for WooCommerce plugin in WordPress
  3. Setup your rewards, emails, pages and widgets

Promote Your Referral Program

Once you have it set up and the rewards structure figured out, you’ll want to ensure that your customers know about it. You can create a blog post about the rewards that you are offering and share it on social media. Facebook ads, Facebook posts, Twitter tweets and LinkedIn posts are all great ways to get the word out about your referral program.

Make sure you email your list and let your customers know what rewards they can earn and how they can refer their friends.

But most of all, make it exciting! Your customers really want to understand what the benefits of getting involved with you are. Referral programs that properly incentivize customers with desirable rewards reinforce customer loyalty and increase your customer base. The success of your referral program (and growth of your company’s bottom line) will hinge on your ability to share it with the people who can best take advantage of it.

Monitor The Referral Program

Referral software makes tracking referrals and rewards a breeze, meaning you can easily determine whether or not the program is working. You can easily adjust the rewards and test out different ones. And don’t worry if some aren’t working. It’s completely normal that some rewards don’t perform well and need to be changed up.

This is not set and forget, however. Keep your program fresh by looking for new ways to continually reward your customers. Adjust the program with the seasons. Do you have new products that are available in the spring? Can you offer a holiday incentive? Making it current and rewarding your customers as they share their links with friends will strengthen your relationship with your customers.

Create online events, like contests and VIP events, that your customers can engage with through social media. One common contest idea that online brands use is to encourage people to take pictures with their products and enter the photos to win. Visual promote social sharing and brand identity — and increase brand exposure.

Customers begin to feel special and a little more loyal to your brand. And potential customers trust what they hear from other customers more than what they hear from the brand itself. Everybody wins!

The key elements of successful rewards programs are:

  • personalized links
  • dual rewards
  • multiple incentives
  • contests

Incorporating these elements can take your business’ referral program to the next level. And there are some brands that have done a GREAT job using referral programs to climb to the top.

Here are some of the best and a look at what they’ve done so well.

Uber – Dual Referral Rewards

The infamous ride-sharing app builds referral marketing into their business. It assigns each customer a personalized referral code as soon as the app is activated. As customers share the code with their friends, both parties receive a free ride.

The secret to their success is offering dual rewards. Referring customers know their friends will receive something of value — a free ride — and they’ll get one too! This increases the likelihood of a referral happening in the first place.

Uber has a referral program for their drivers as well. Drivers whose friends sign up to become Uber drivers using their own car can earn a referral reward of $500.

The dual referral rewards program has enabled uber to expand to more than 60 countries and over 400 cities since it started in 2012. That is a lot of growth in a few short years.

Person using Uber on their mobile phone

Image source: Flickr

Dropbox – Multiple Incentives

Dropbox logoDropbox is an online file transfer service. It launched a referral rewards program for its customers with product-based perks rather than monetary incentives. Dropbox rewards its customers with an extra 500 MB of free storage space to the customer who makes the referral and the new user.

The referral program was so successful it resulted in a 60% increase in membership in 2010 as Dropbox users sent a whopping 2.8 million direct referral invites. This initial referral program was so successful, it not only put them on the map, but it continues to run it to this day. Dropbox customers preferred product-based discounts, perks, and upgrades rather than simple cash incentives. Providing your customers with multiple types of incentives can strengthen their loyalty.

“In the business of referrals, trust is the most important reason a recommendation is made and, conversely, lack of trust the single greatest reason referrals don’t happen.” – John Jantsh, The Referral Engine


Evernote – Continually Reward the Referrer

Evernote Logo

Evernote is a note-taking software with a points-based referral program that rewards customers with points every time they make a referral. Points can then be redeemed for free access to the software’s premium features.

Evernote offers three different tiers for their app – Free, Premium and Business. Evernote Free has a limited amount of functions, but enough for the casual user. The brand realized that the more users continue to use their app, the more valuable it becomes to the user. This increases the likelihood that they will upgrade.

This freemium model allowed Evernote to gain their first million users in 446 days and then hit 11 million only two years later. Evernote relied on word of mouth marketing and an excellent product. They don’t spend money on user acquisition or SEO or SEM, according to Phil Libin, ex-CEO of Evernote.

Evernote uses their referral program to allow their users to experience Evernote Premium free while making referrals. This entices the users to upgrade if they like it, and it encourages more referrals. Users earn points when the referred user upgrades to premium features. This motivates them to encourage others to upgrade.

Tesla – Contests

Even the world’s most famous electric car company, Tesla, has integrated referral programs into its business. Tesla’s referral program has transformed over the years to reflect its increasing customer base. Initially, their referral program offered $1,000 to refer a friend. However, now they have switched to free charging of the vehicles for 6 months with new Model S, Model X and Model 3 orders. A reward of free charging encourages the customers to use the vehicles to maximize their reward. Increased usage will also promote customer loyalty.

Tesla uses referral contests in new territories when they want to get established quickly. They offer access to private events or a VIP experience. These incentives make the customers feel valued. They also tap into the customer’s competitive spirit.

For Tesla customers, the best rewards are those that money can’t buy. Tesla customers love private events and VIP treatment. Offer these referral rewards to ensure that your customer feels valued. This will build a community of dedicated consumers who go out and share their love of your product with others who will become loyal customers as well.

A Tesla Car, the Roadster

Google – Personalized Links

Google Apps for Work logo

Google became the giant behemoth search engine in part because of its referral program. It rewards business customers for each new user that signs up for Google Apps for Work. Upon joining the referral program, customers are provided with their own personalized referral link to share with their network.

For every new Google Apps for Work account, the advocate receive $15 which is deposited directly into their bank account.

Google’s program makes it simple and easy to refer friends through an automated process. The personalized links are easy to share with friends and family.

There. I bet setting up a referral program looks a lot less scary to you now, right? So have it! Your brand might not be a Tesla or a Google yet, but follow what some of the leaders have done, and you too can have a great referral program. Who knows. It may help you become the next business behemoth.

Configuring the Canada Post Custom Declarations Form via the API
11 Apr

I had a question roll through on the WooCommerce Slack, which I think could be of assistance to our readers –

When shipping using Canada Post, the majority of orders go from CA to USA. So there needs to be a “customs declaration” form for each order. Apparently this “customs declaration” form is somewhere readily available in the Canada Post account. How do I know?

Well, the client is sick and tired of having to bounce back and forth for every order and jumping back into the Canada Post dashboard just to retrieve the “customs declaration” form. Is there a way to ‘pull’ this info from the Canada Post API?

Lol, somewhat dramatic – anyhow, it’s completely possible. Thanks to the helpful folks at Canada Post, here is a guide on how to get it done.

Via the API, Canada Post always return the custom forms for USA/Intl destination. It can be combined with the shipping labels, or in some instances it comes separately. This is where it becomes important to make available all copies when you get an answer back from Createshipments. It would require also that on the front end, you offer the capability for the end user to fill in the customs information.

Reference:
Soap: shipping web service : https://www.canadapost.ca/cpo/mc/business/productsservices/developers/services/shippingmanifest/soap/createshipment.jsf
Rest: shipping web service : https://www.canadapost.ca/cpo/mc/business/productsservices/developers/services/shippingmanifest/createshipment.jsf

Below are 2 examples where you see the customs info combined with the shipping labels. The 2nd example shows where it is a separate copy. It all depends on the shipping service and paper format opted for.

#1 Xpresspost USA (Canada Post combines the custom info on the shipping label)

Notice the answer, we only one instance of the endpoint name : LABEL

<root>
<shipment-info xmlns="http://www.canadapost.ca/ws/shipment-v4"><shipment-id>383611490629946833</shipment-id><shipment-status>created</shipment-status><tracking-pin>EM070235895CA</tracking-pin><links><link rel="self" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment/383611490629946833" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="details" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment/383611490629946833/details" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="price" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment/383611490629946833/price" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="group" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs//0004567/0004567/shipment?groupId=PICKUP" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="label" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/artifact/0185703c30xxxxx/10017530553/0" media-type="application/pdf" index="0"/></links></shipment-info></root>

Result:
Xpresspost USA Sample

#2 Here is an example where Canada Post returns 2 labels, one outgoing and the second is a commercial invoice needed with the shipments for customs purposes.

Answer from Canada Post:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<root>
<shipment-info xmlns="http://www.canadapost.ca/ws/shipment-v4"><shipment-id>384861490630238430</shipment-id><shipment-status>created</shipment-status><tracking-pin>304611863552</tracking-pin><links><link rel="self" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment/384861490630238430" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="details" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment/384861490630238430/details" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="price" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment/384861490630238430/price" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="group" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/0004567/0004567/shipment?groupId=PICKUP" media-type="application/vnd.cpc.shipment-v4+xml"/><link rel="label" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/artifact/0185703c30xxxx/10017531513/0" media-type="application/pdf" index="0"/><link rel="commercialInvoice" href="https://soa-gw.canadapost.ca/rs/artifact/0185703c30xxxx/10017531514/0" media-type="application/pdf" index="0"/></links></shipment-info></root>

When receiving the answer back from Canada Post, I always read the entire answer back using for each, so I can capture everything back from Canada Post and translate in a button:

Canada Post Admin

Here is the printout of the second test showing 2 different copies for this shipment:

Canada Post FedEx Sample

Canada Post Invoice

There you have it folks. Thanks again to the team at Canada Post for helping to put this together.

Woo vs. Shopify, The Definitive Discussion
03 Apr

So, as per usual, I was chatting with someone about the inner workings of WooCommerce. In this case, it was Patrick Garman. Reason being, I get a lot of questions of whether or not a business should use Shopify, or WooCommerce. For me, the answer is simple: with WooCommerce, you own your shit. That alone is enough reason to end the conversation. However, let’s take it a bit deeper. More often than not, this boils down to technical expertise vs. convenience.

Please note that some text has been redacted and replaced with equivalent statements, omitting references to individuals or projects.

cally
Hey Patrick amigo, quick q for you..

I’m working on getting a pretty good sized retailer onto WooCommerce. They’re very much a recognized brand. However, for bandwidth/usage it’s not too intense1.

cally
They asked about “clunkiness” in WooCommerce, and I was wondering if you had a chart, or threshold where you start to see this?

pmgarman
Really depends on the site and how it’s built, to be honest REDACTED [we’ve built and run WooCommerce sites with databases over 100GB in size, which ran better than some sites that have databases less than 1GB].

Do you have new relic or anything running?

cally
It’ll be built from scratch and put on an entry level dedicated box at WP Engine, so we could run New Relic.

At this time they’re contemplating platforms, and it’s between Woo and Shopify.

They’re familiar with REDACTED. 😉

pmgarman
Well if you need to bring in some expertise,
I’m not longer at REDACTED 😉 REDACTED is my sole focus.

cally
I saw.
I creep you once and a while, y’know? 😉

pmgarman
Ha keeping tabs on me

cally
Lol
Mostly wanna know what you have your hands in!

pmgarman
We’re working with REDACTED on their managed platform and part of that is *the* feature plugin for custom order tables

cally
Deep down tho, you still hardcore Woo? Or, if a large brand lands on your doorstep, would you ever recommend Shopify? What would that tipping point be?

pmgarman
Just to start 😀

cally
I’m like 100% against Shopify, lol. But I haven’t put it all into words yet.

pmgarman
I work heavily on both now, depends on their level of customization and how much they want to “manage” it

cally

*the* feature plugin for custom order tables

You’ve always got your hands in something good!

pmgarman
It’s good for someone who has a simple site and doesn’t want to deal with the headache of WP/WC

cally

depends on their level of customization

How far can you customize Shopify? For example, could you easily add subscriptions, or multi-language as an add-on? I’ve never built on it.

pmgarman
multi language basically means you run multiple stores, thats essentially your only real option

customizations, you can customize the html essentially. and then whatever you can do via the API.

with enterprise “plus” plans, you can do a bit more. but thats minimum $2k/mo. and that is now going to go up a lot from my understanding

unless you are paying $2k/mo, your checkout URL is my.shopify.com or something

cally
Yea they’re definitely considering Plus, and it’s funny you mention price, because that is definitely an uncertainty I wondered about.

pmgarman
plus: it can handle a significant number of orders/min. REDACTED

con: all customizations are significantly more involved

cally
To me it sounds like the advantage of Shopify is:
– Allows for a lot of orders.
– No worries for maintenance

Is that about it?

pmgarman
apps have long term costs you can’t ever get away from. customizations of your own if it touches the API means you need to host and run your own custom application

yeah thats the main points

a lot as in, it handles the biggest flash seller in the world

cally
lolol
Good to know.

pmgarman
REDACTED

cally
So a very extreme edge case.
What about the payment gateway, too? I think they penalize you for not using their’s, correct?

pmgarman
they don’t “penalize” you, but, you don’t get the benefits their white label stripe offers.
stripe won’t even talk to you if you are using shopify, you *must* use their shopify payments

cally
I heard they add a % point for using a 3rd party.

pmgarman
which you don’t get your own stripe
yeah you have transaction fees unless you use theirs. but i’m not sure if plus changes that

cally
So the benefits really aren’t that much.
IMO
Then concerns if the company goes bankrupt, restricts features, etc. It’s a lot to pay for some convenience.

About Woo scalability, progress is being made then, as you’re working on it now?

pmgarman
the benefits to the lay person is “you dont have to manage your site, they do it for you” where WP/WC you *really* have to manage it. you need someone monitoring it if you are doing any sort of volume or want to run it right, you need to deal with updates/etc

cally
Okay, so assuming they have a Saucal or Patrick Garman, they’re covered. Plus, all the benefits of full flexibility and ownership.

Patrick Garman REDACTED

pmgarman
yeah basically
tl;dr – if you are paying more than $2k/mo to run your site (hosting and maintenance), then it’s worth considering, if you have a simple site that doesn’t require much customization.

without plus you can’t even use the discounts api
so you can’t create coupons unless you do it by hand
$2k/mo to have the power to import coupons

at the end of the day i’ve worked on the largest WC site ever, and now the two largest Shopify stores ever. I’ve broken things on both, Shopify has banned my API keys because i was stressing things.

cally
Lol, you’re the man.
And that’s at current pricing. If pricing goes up at Shopify, things change.

What are the two sites on Shopify?

pmgarman
Which, it is going up
i don’t know if they have publicly said it or not. plus is now also a transaction or % based model

cally
You know by how much?

pmgarman
let me look it up, i can find out from some other people. REDACTED was grandfathered in

REDACTED was #2 at shopify, REDACTED was #1

cally
That would be great. And, is it okay if I share this information? Ofc, I want to ask you first.
Dude, how do you land these all star customers?

pmgarman
REDACTED wasn’t a client, REDACTED was my full time job, REDACTED was under the umbrella of REDACTED and REDACTED was the second brand. REDACTED < i built that site

cally
I’m gonna wear a Patrick Garman t-shirt at WooConf2

pmgarman
theres a lot of separation and similarities at the same time. but at the end of the day architecturally what my role became when on shopify was connecting things together and building internal tools and applications

ha you should. some mindsize jerseys, garman on the back

cally
hahahaha, i was thinking more like those rapper t’s.. your face on the front.
Maybe wearing a crown ?

Notorious B.I.G.

my role became when on shopify was connecting things together and building internal tools and applications

And these were hosted off-site, therefore putting you back in the realm of maintenance, etc.

pmgarman
haha

yeah it was a custom application that i developed myself (built on laravel spark) from the “ground” up

thats how we did reporting, i exported all shopify data through the API, thats why ops hated me

would run 20 threads of API calls

cally
wow, so exporting the data pounded the API and they didn’t like it..
ha damn.

pmgarman
their API kind of sucks for large data

cally
Metorik for that type of thing.

pmgarman
yep – which doesn’t support shopify, yet
bryce has promised me an API 🙂

cally
lol

So, there you have it. Whether you like it or not, you’re going to need some technical chops. Might as well suit up, or let us handle it. Trust me, it’s a lot better than censorship, or this.


  1. I have a breakdown of this, but I cannot share it all. However, per day, it’s estimated to be 600-800 page views and 30-40 orders. 

  2. I guess you’ll know how to find me! 

WooCommerce Subscriptions and Payment Gateways, Who Manages What?
21 Feb

We had a question come through, followed by a tweet. The tweet went on it’s own tangent talking about things not previously discussed, however it did raise a good question about payment gateways and WooCommerce Subscriptions.

Q:
I was always under the impression that in Subscriptions, it does not set up a recurring profile on the payment provider, rather Subscriptions sends single charges each month to the payment gateway1. I know at least it’s that way in Stripe. But I had a guy come through, and said I was wrong for PayPal.

A:
You are right for almost all gateways. With PayPal Standard (and one or two other gateways, like WorldPay), the only option is to create a subscription at the payment provider. With all other gateways, including PayPal Reference Transactions (also built into Subscriptions, but requires special approval from PayPal’s end before it can be used) we just need a payment token, and can do everything else ourselves2. Although that said, for PayPal Reference Transactions, the “token” is actually a billing agreement, so the custom can still cancel/suspend that billing agreement at PayPal. AFAIK, there is no PayPal product which does not allow the customer to also manage the recurring payments. Something like PayPal Pro, which is just a credit card gateway, might do that though. But in those cases, you’d just want to use Stripe or something better anyway.

So there you have it. If you’re using PayPal Standard, or 1 or 2 other gateways, the subscription is managed on their platform. Otherwise, it’s managed within Subscriptions directly. And by “manage” I don’t mean it’s storing credit card data locally.

I hope that clears things up. Cheers to the team at Prospress for the answer. 😉


  1. By no means are we implying storing credit card data on the local server. This is a question of using a token and where and when charges are authorized from. This is explained in the answer. 

  2. This is what I was referring to. 

Bundle WooCommerce Products for All Your Greedy Shoppers
09 Nov

Do you want to increase profits and improve customer satisfaction?

Silly question, we know. But the reason we ask is that many ecommerce stores often overlook a simple competitive pricing strategy that could easily incentivize more purchases, they just never do it.

It’s called bundling, and if you’re not already doing it, you should be. Here’s why.


Here are 5 tips for pricing your bundled products.

The Power of Bundling

Bundling is exactly what it sounds like: Combining similar products together into one kick-ass product.

The reason bundling is so appealing from a consumer perspective is that customers are inherently greedy. They want the most value for the least amount of money, which bundling gives them.

product_bundling
They’re essentially receiving way more value for their single purchases than they would by buying each product individually, and they usually save a bit of money in the process. They also don’t have to waste time searching for other products that they may need, which means they’re more likely to return to your store to find what they’re looking for in the future.

From a business perspective, bundling is great because you’re making more money on the total value of the order. Sure, you may lose some margin here if you’re offering an extreme discount, but you also have the potential of selling more products.

But how exactly do you bundle? Maybe your products don’t readily lend themselves to bundling, or you’re not exactly sure which products to combine with others. Well, take a deep breath.

There are several ways you can approach it.

Bundling Techniques to Try

If one bundling strategy won’t work for your products, chances are that another will. Here are a few options you can try to maximize your earning potential.

Pure Bundling

Pure bundling is where you offer certain products that are only available in a bundle. Customers either won’t be able to find them separately, or wouldn’t necessarily need or want to purchase them separately.

purebundle
A real life example of this would be cable providers bundling their channels together, or how Adobe or Microsoft bundle their software services together in one suite. The plus side is that customers purchase products they would otherwise never consider.

If you have several products that work really well together (or really don’t work well without each other), consider packaging them together as one offering. You can even use subscription pricing with pure-bundled products, like how Microsoft Office 365 uses a month-to-month subscription.

Mixed Bundling

Mixed bundling is similar to pure bundling except customers can also purchase the products individually. This is probably the most popular type of bundling out there, and for good reason. Mixed bundling gives customers the option to purchase products individually, so even if they can’t decide on your bundle, you’re still more likely to make a sale.

The goal here is to:

  • Choose products that are already best sellers, so you can charge a special price to package them together
  • Choose products that are okay sellers individually, but would be a better deal for the customer if sold together
  • Choose one product that sells well and another that doesn’t sell well, so that you can sell more of both products

The nice thing about mixed bundling is that shoppers often can’t resist a great deal. If they’re already paying for something they want, and they get a little something extra along with it, they’re more than happy to spend a few extra dollars.

Cross-Sell Bundling

If you’ve ever shopped on Amazon, you’ve seen an example of cross-sell bundling. They usually have a section on each product page with items that are “Frequently Purchased Together” featuring the original product along with other recommended products.

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This can work well for many online shops depending on what you sell. But, even if you don’t necessarily have products that are “frequently purchased together,” you can use data and analytics to bundle products that could be purchased together.

By analyzing customer data and tracking product performance, you can create “recommendations” based on other products you think would benefit the customer. You can also create groups of users who may be more interested than others in purchasing your bundle, and target them specifically.

If you have two or more products that could benefit from being used together, or you have products that could benefit a single user group, consider cross-promoting them as a bundled offering.

Bundling in WooCommerce

The good news for WooCommerce users is that they offer a variety of bundling options like:

  • Product Bundles – Where you can create combos of bundled products
  • Chained Products – Where you can gift other products to customers when they make a purchase
  • Forced Sells – Where you can required certain items to be bundled, like a service and a part, for example
  • Grouped Products – Where customers can directly add items to their cart from a range of products
  • Mix and Match Products – Where you can bundle up products based on customer preference, like picking the different fruit they want in a fruit basket, for example
  • Composite Products – Where customers can select between different, compatible product alternatives and adjust quantities as needed

WooCommerce also has documentation, tips, and additional tricks for helping you bundle your products together here. (Of course, if you need more help with specific bundling advice, we’re always available to help.)

Other Considerations

If and when you’re ready to start bundling, there are a few other details you may want to keep in mind.

Focus on customer experience. As much as possible, tailor the experience to your customer’s needs and wants. Give them options to customize, add, remove, or edit products from your base bundles if possible. This will make the buying process more satisfying overall.

Mitigate decision exhaustion. Customers are a fickle bunch, and while they love choices, they don’t want to be overwhelmed by a million options all at once. So even though they want the ability to customize their bundles, you shouldn’t necessarily provide them with every option out there.

Make sure you direct customers toward choices you think would be beneficial, and eliminate anything that would confuse them or otherwise keep them from buying the bundle outright. The best way to do this is by recommending bundled options. You get the benefit of eliminating decision-making from customers while also being seen as the “authority” on what products go best together.

Use customer feedback to drive confidence. It’s important to let the customer drive his or her own experience. You certainly don’t want to force them to purchase a bundle if they don’t want to (that’s why mixed bundling is more popular than pure bundling).

You can also use customer feedback to help with this while first starting out. If your bundling endeavor is a success, you can also use feedback to help drive confidence for other customers considering purchasing bundled items.

Get advice on pricing your bundles with these 5 tips.

Final Thoughts

Bundling can be a great solution to improve your bottom line while giving something of value to your customers.

Remember that not all of your products need to be bundled together, but if you have some products that you believe really should be purchased together, offer them as a bundle at a competitive price. (This also works for products that aren’t selling as well as they should.)

You can choose from any type of bundling to fit you and your customer’s needs, just remember to get feedback during the process to see what works and what doesn’t work. Use that feedback to create better bundles and to boost confidence for customers looking for a good deal.

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