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IRWD 2012: Listen. Create. Test. Repeat.

The key to success in e-commerce lies in matching a retailer’s strengths with the needs of its customers, explained Paul Miller, vice president of e-commerce at W.W. Grainger Inc. And the first step is to understand what the customer is trying to accomplish, Miller said in a keynote address this morning at the Internet Retailer Web Design & Usability Conference 2012 in Orlando, FL.

“You’ve got to clear away the clutter and find out what it is they’re trying to do,” Miller said. “How do you make it so they can find it, buy it and move on?”

At Grainger, which sells maintenance supplies, tools and spare parts mainly to businesses, that started with understanding that the company services two primary types of customers: the person in the field who is using the equipment or supplies and the purchasing agent back at the company’s headquarters. With that understanding, Grainger redesigned its web and mobile sites and apps to serve both types of customers.

Purchasing agents want to know the status of their orders and what they ordered before so that they can replenish their stocks. Since Miller joined Grainger a year and a half ago the company has redesigned its web site so that when agents return to the site they are recognized and can go directly to their current and past orders.

To make it easier for the purchasing agent to find what she has ordered in the past or that she is authorized to buy, Grainger allows customers to refine their searches by past purchases and by “my catalog,” which features the items within Grainger’s 900,000 SKUs that each customer has selected for possible purchase.

For the other type of customer, the contractor or maintenance manager who may need a part in a hurry, the site now enables him to enter his ZIP code to see whether a part is in stock at a nearby facility and when he can pick it up, sometimes to the day or hour.

Grainger also created mobile apps with both types of customers in mind. For the end user who is generally in the field, Grainger’s mobile app lets him quickly identify the part he needs and request purchasing approval. For the procurement specialist, who may be stuck in a meeting, the app lets her see purchasing requests and give approval without going back to her desk and logging on to the Grainger site.

Innovations like these, Miller explained, helped Grainger increase its e-commerce sales 17% in 2011 to $2.1 billion. Grainger is No. 15 in the Internet Retailer Top 500 Guide.

All e-retailers, large and small, can prosper by understanding their customers’ needs and coming up with creative ways to meet them, Miller said. He concluded with a five-step process for accomplishing that:

By following this approach, Miller said, “you can drive businesses that go well beyond expectations.”

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