Sorry, Our E-Store Is Closed. Come Back Later. Or Not.
published: cw 50, 2006 in eLogistics & eFulfillmentWhat if, in the days leading up to Christmas, a crush of shoppers forced a retailer to lock its doors during peak business hours?
Unimaginable–but that’s exactly what happened to varying degrees at the Web stores for Wal-Mart, Macy’s, and other retailers as the holiday e-commerce season got off to a blazing start. Here’s what’s more shocking: There’s no guarantee it won’t happen again during the all-important shopping days ahead, when even bigger throngs are expected at e-retail sites.
You’d think retailers would have licked the problems of site downtime and slow response times by now, even during the holiday rush. Yet while everything else associated with online shopping keeps rising–the number of visitors, sales volume, site sophistication, and consumer expectations–site performance is still a wild card. As companies load up on Ajax- and Flash-powered interactive features that can stress sites, simple uptime and performance could be the differentiators this season.
Wal-Mart’s failure on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, was the most stunning. Walmart.com was down for a total of about 10 hours that day, according to Internet monitoring firm Keynote Systems, forcing it to greet shoppers at times with a “come back later” notice. “I’m afraid it was too much of a good thing on Friday,” a Wal-Mart spokesman says. Wal-Mart expected order activity to be double the level on last year’s Black Friday, but it came in at seven times the previous year’s volume. Wal-Mart set big online goals for this holiday season, having spent 13 months adding faster checkouts and an interactive toy section, the kind of features it hopes will lure about 300 million visitors this holiday season. Not if the door’s closed it won’t.
Macy’s site performed poorly for about nine hours on Black Friday, according to Keynote, and was down for about an hour that day and then again part of the following Tuesday. Zappos’ and Foot Locker’s sites also had some performance problems. Keynote says most sites, including Wal-Mart’s, recovered Monday and didn’t have major problems that day.
Source: Information Week
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