Is Your Web Site Held Hostage By Service Providers?
Do you use third-party services to track the links on your Web
site? What about for processing your online credit card
payments? If so, you are probably losing sales that you don't
even know about. Sorry, but it's a fact.
Third-Party Services Defined.
Let me explain what I mean by "third-party" services. These are
the "link tracking" type of services that one can purchase from
various online companies. People use the special html link codes
that these services provide to keep track of how visitors move
around their Web sites. In return for a monthly fee, the user
gets online access to a Web site that stores their link tracking
information on a database, and gives them access to tracking
statistics. This allows users to quickly and easily find out
such things as which links visitors to their Web sites click on,
and how often.
But, it's not just link tracking services I'm talking about
here. Payment processing gateways is another type of third-
party service that many of us are dependent upon.
These third-party services are great in theory, and when they're
working well they're also great in practice. BUT there can be a
definite downside to them. That downside is this. If that
service company's servers or and/or network go down for any
reason, you go down with them!
A Case In Point.
After a few bad experiences over the past year, I have made it a
habit to check all of my Web sites every morning. I quickly open
each of the home pages and click on a few key links and make
sure they are working as they're supposed to. Of course, I don't
have the time to check each and every link, but I do test the
key ones I know my visitors tend to click on most often on their
way to making a purchase. And, I definitely check the main
"order" links on each page.
If I find that these links are not working for some reason, as I
have on numerous occasions, it is about the worst thing that
could happen. In fact, it could ruin one's whole day, because it
means lost sales! Last week while doing one of these routine
checks I discovered that a number of links were not working on
one of my sites. I did some further checking and realized that
these links had not been working for more than 12 hours! What
this meant was that visitors to my site had been/were clicking
on these links and getting a blank page full of gibberish that
indicated that my service provider's data base was corrupted. In
effect, this problem was crippling my site.
You know what that meant to me of course - lost visitors AND
lost sales!
Long story, short. It took more than 24 hours from my initial
call until the problem was fully resolved. This was during a
prime sales period in the middle of the week. Consequently, I
estimate that during the 36-hour period that my site was
intermittently "out-of-action" due to this problem, I lost
somewhere between 6 and 8 sales. Ouch! I can't afford that. Can
you?
Here are a couple of other quick examples of similar occurrences
that some of you might be able to identify with.
Lost Weekend. Lost Sales.
One Friday night a few months ago I discovered that the links on
two of my sites were not functioning properly. These links were
being tracked by one of the "big name" services that is widely
marketed across the Net. Believe it or not, I spent that whole
weekend checking my links regularly and then trying to get in
touch with this so-called "service" provider (I use the term
"service" advisedly here).
Well, my links didn't work for that entire weekend. At the time,
I did some research through my ISP that put me in touch with the
gateway site for my service provider. When I contacted the
gateway company by telephone, they advised me that my service
provider's servers were dropping all connections and nobody
there was responding!
It just so happens that that particular service provider
prominently advertises "24/7" support service in all of their
marketing copy! Well, I'm sad to report that not once that
weekend did anyone at that company ever respond to one of my
many e-mails or phone calls. It appears they all took the
weekend off and crossed their fingers that problems wouldn't
occur. Unfortunately for their customers, problems did occur.
So, effectively, my two sites were shut down for an entire long
weekend because of that problem. There went another 5 to 10
sales!
To add insult to injury, these people never once contacted me
the following week to apologize for the inconvenience and loss
of business they might have caused me (as well as to thousands
of others, presumably).
Lost Weekdays. Lost Sales.
A couple of months ago, the links to my "big name" payment
processing company stopped working for an extended period of
time. I found out later that they had experienced a major power
outage that shut down their entire network. They were out of
commission for somewhere between 12 and 20 hours. Apparently,
they did not (do not?) have a backup power source in case of
such an interruption! Duhhh, this is the year 2002 isn't it?
This is a major online payment processor I'm talking about here
folks. Shouldn't such back-up be standard for a major payment
processor? The implications of this for the small online
business person were enormous of course: during that period,
literally tens of thousands of dollars in sales were lost by
thousands of that service provider's customers!
At least three more examples of such shoddy third party service
provider incidents that occurred over the past year come to mind
as a write this. But alas, I'm out of space.
Bottom Line. Don't Accept It.
If you use third party services for anything like link tracking
or payment processing, don't assume that things are always
running along smoothly on "automatic pilot" as some of the
Internet gurus would lead you to believe.
Be constantly vigilant, and when you discover a problem, sound
the alarm right away, and don't let your "service" provider off
the hook until the problem is fixed.
If you get any kind of "run-around" at all, head for the major
message boards and discussion forums. That should get them to
take you a bit more seriously in a hurry.
Finally, whatever you do, DO NOT accept the type of third party
service breakdowns that I describe above. They wouldn't be
acceptable in offline business, so why should we accept them
online?