Britain loses revenue due to poor online spellings
July 15th, 2011 - 11:36 am ICT by IANS
London, July 15 (IANS) Poor spellings in shopping websites is costing Britain millions of pounds in lost revenue, experts have said.
Charles Duncombe, director of the Just Say Please group that runs travel, mobile phone and clothing websites, said an analysis of website figures shows a single spelling mistake can cut online sales in half.
Duncombe said he was “shocked” when recruiting staff at the poor quality of written English, according to BBC.
Sales figures suggest wrong spellings put off consumers who could have concerns about a website’s credibility, he said.
“I know that industry bemoaning the education system is nothing new but it is becoming more and more of a problem with more companies going online,” he said.
“This is because when you sell or communicate on the internet 99 percent of the time it is done by the written word.”
Duncombe said it was possible to identify the impact of a spelling mistake on sales.
He measured the revenue per visitor to the tightsplease.co.uk website and found that the revenue was twice as high after an error was corrected.
“If you project this across the whole of internet retail then millions of pounds worth of business is probably being lost each week due to simple spelling mistakes,” he said.
Spelling is important to the credibility of a website. “You get about six seconds to capture the attention on a website.”
William Dutton, director of the Oxford Internet Institute at Oxford University, said that in some informal parts of the internet, such as Facebook, there is greater tolerance towards spelling and grammar.
“However, there are other aspects, such as a home page or commercial offering that are not among friends and which raise concerns over trust and credibility,” said Dutton.
“In these instances, when a consumer might be wary of spam or phishing efforts, a misspelt word could be a killer issue.”
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Tags: bbc, charles duncombe, clothing websites, credibility, education system, facebook, grammar, instances, misspelt word, mobile phone, oxford internet institute, oxford university, phishing, poor quality, shopping websites, six seconds, spelling mistake, spelling mistakes, tightsplease, william dutton