Find out what your customers are searching for

margo

We recently added the search box to all Flying Cart stores, but are you curious what your customers are searching for?  Wouldn’t it be nice to target your marketing efforts by being able to focus on products that you know they want? Now you can do that.

Our latest feature is a Search Statistics page where you can see a log of the last 200 searches done in your store.  Click on Marketing > Search Statistics in your Headquarters. For each search you will see the date and time of the search, the search term, and the user’s IP address.  This last field is the unique internet address of the user’s computer and you can use this to identify if the same user is doing a lot of different searches.

Note that the search logging begins today, July 2, 2009 so the data will be collected from this date forward.


CAFFEINE: Get Things Done

rishi

caffeine


Add custom content to your department pages

margo

You can now add custom content to the top of your department pages.  Add an image or write some descriptive text to give your pages some personality.

Here’s an example using Hana Bay Coffee (hanabaycoffee.flyingcart.com). I added an image to illustrate the “Hawaii” concept on this page and I wrote a few sentences about the Hawaiian beans.

dept_description

Here’s how to do it:

1. Log in to your heaquarters and go to the Products > Departments page.

2. Click on the word “Description” next to the department name and an HTML editor will appear.

3. Enter your content into the editor. If you want to insert an image, you can use one of the images you uploaded on your custom CSS page or you can link to an image that you have hosted elsewhere (try <a href=”http://www.flickr.com” target=”new”>Flickr</a>).

4. When you are done, click the blue disk icon next to the department to save your changes.

5. Go to your store and check out the department page. How does it look?

dept_description2


Now Hiring: Senior PHP Programmer

margo

Flying Cart is looking for a talented programmer to add to our small team. We need an expert PHP coder who knows how to think outside the box. We are looking for someone who is passionate about ecommerce and small business, and is filled with creative ideas about how to help business owners. Design skills would be a bonus. You must be located in San Francisco or willing to move there. (We are not there yet but will be soon.)

You should:

• have a minimum of 10 years of programming experience with at least 5 of those in the web startup world

• have expert-level knowledge of PHP, MySQL, Javascript/AJAX, OOP, MVC architecture and PHP frameworks, web-app scalability, SVN, HTML, CSS. You should have a good working knowledge of Photoshop and SEO/SEM.

• be able to get things done independently

• consider yourself an entrepreneur at heart

• be passionate about ecommerce and small business

• have good writing and communcation skills

• have a good sense of humor

If you are interested in this position, we want to hear from you. Write us an email (info@flyingcart.com) telling us where you think ecommerce will be in two years and how you can make it better. Please include links to the last three projects you worked on (no resumes please) and the name of the last book you read.


Simple way to round image corners

margo

Rounded corners are everywhere on the web, but they can be a little tricky to make. I was excited to find the free tool called RoundPic (http://www.roundpic.com/) that makes it really easy to round the corners of any image without using Photoshop. All you have to do is go to the site, browse for your image file, and a new rounded image is created. Then you can download it to your computer.

Consider using rounded corners on product images in your Flying Cart store to give it a clean and modern look.  If you want to do it, I’d recommend you do all or none so your design is consistent. Here’s an example of an image I created with RoundPic:

Original Image

bracelet

Image with Rounded Corners

bracelet_round

Rounded Corners for Images


Microsoft’s Bing Local Listing Center

rishi

I’m still on my local kick.  You can now enter in your local listing on Microsoft through the Local Listing Center on Bing.

Thank you to Lisa Barone of Small Biz Trends for the tip!


[Video] Google’s FREE Local Business Center

rishi

Google Local Business Center

Video of me explaining why you need to put your business on Google Local Business Center now!


How do I delete a fan?

margo

I get this question a lot. The answer is that store owners can’t delete fans. If you are a fan, you can choose to remove yourself from being a fan of a store or you can delete your account.  Here’s how to do it:

1. First log in to a Flying Cart store with your fan login.

2. Click on Profile to view your fan profile.

3. To remove yourself from a store fan club, click “Edit my Profile”.  Then scroll to the bottom where all your favorite stores are listed and click on the red X button next to the store that you want to remove.

4. To delete your whole fan account, click “Delete my account” at the bottom of the page.

Did you know…? Everyone with a Flying Cart store can use their account login to log in to the fan club of any other Flying Cart store. There is no need to create a separate fan account if you already have a store account.


Store uses own website to sell products from Flying Cart account

margo

Robeco Clarete of Pinoy Culture (www.pinoyculture.ca) came up with a way to use his own website to sell the products from his Flying Cart store.  That’s right - his own site hosted on his own server! He gets the flexibility of using his own site design, but also has all the benefits of using Flying Cart to manage his sales and market his products.

pinoy culture store screenshot

PinoyCulture.ca PreSchool department

pinoy culture screenshot

PinoyCulture.ca Shopping Cart

Really?

The design at the top and the sidebar are Robert’s own. The middle section of the screen contains the content of his Flying Cart store.

How does this work?

Robert’s solution is very clever and requires some technical knowledge to implement.  In a nutshell, he used the Flying Cart custom CSS feature to hide all the page elements other than the products. Then, he made a department navigation menu on his own site and linked to each department page in his Flying Cart store using the javascript “loadintoiFrame()” command. These links are targeted into an iframe in the center section of his site. This creates a seamless interface and most customers won’t have a clue that the ecommerce comes from a hosted solution.

The Flying Cart team is entirely impressed with this creative way to use the software.


Google Base Update - ACTION REQUIRED

rishi

Google Base now requires you to add in your location. This is an effort to make their search engine local friendly. In the next 30 days you need to login to your Google Base account and enter in your location and accept Google’s new terms of use or your account will go inactive.

Read more about the changes on the Google Base Blog.