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This past weekend I decided to buy a new couch for my home. Wearied of endless trips to Fourways, battling through the traffic, wasting petrol, dodging Metro Police roadblocks, I decided to check out online catalogues for the stores before traipsing off there. Genius.

First port of call: Google. Search “couches johannesburg”, “furniture johannesburg”, “couches”, “furniture”. Ridiculous results. A handful of Google Ads that a handful of more up-to-date furniture stores have purchased, however mostly leather and mostly nothing that I would be putting into my home. Well done to the stores that took the trouble to advertise.

The organic rankings are appalling. There is obviously not one iota of common sense in the entire South African furniture industry. By the fourth or fifth result we were already into US stores and designers.

So scratch that.

Start brainstorming names of stores I know of. Start with Sevens, a really big furniture store in Fourways. Surely they would have a big site with all their products neatly organized?

Yeah right. Check out this dodgy piece of junk. A seven-page scanned brochure with giant, single images on each page. No prices, no categories, no search, no nothing. Not even descriptions of the pages before you get into them. Just “Page 5″.

From here I figured I’d try a bigger retailer. How about Game? Massmart? Sophisticated? National?

After about seven clicks called “Catalogue” and “Furniture” just to get to the product page, check out this pink-bordered beauty will you? In particular, notice the really effective product naming (”Home Furniture” anyone?) No prices, no sub-categories, no stock availability, no information, sweet f* all.

Next, Weatherly’s. Ok, so their navigation didn’t work in Firefox. When I did finally get into the site in my cobwebby copy of IE 7.0, it was a big improvement on the others. This catalogue actually has descriptions, decent photos and seems comprehensive. That said, it does use 100% of the CPU of my machine to open up zoomed versions of the pics, but at least the information is there. Pity I think their couches are super-ugly and best suited for my granny’s granny.

@Home, I was pleased to find, do have a product catalogue. The “marketing” version of it, however, consists of the kind of gratuitous scrolling Flash widget that first-year design students get 60% in their final exams for using. It contains badly chopped up scans of yet another print brochure, with no information.

However there is a full catalogue two more clicks, a pop-up window and a different skin away. Offered as part of their Wedding Registry, it is well-structured and contains prices, photos and even a stock-level reading for the different @Home stores.

So, having finally found a couch I liked in the colour I liked, with stock, at Design Quarter, I headed off to see it in real life and order it. I guess I should have kept my enthusiasm under control.

Yes, they had that kind of couch. However, not in the colour I wanted. Yes, there was stock of it at another branch. So at least their online system wasn’t completely wrong. Or was it?

On Monday morning I phoned the store to confirm my order and was told: “Sorry, there is actually no stock in the country”. This despite this catalogue saying (and still saying) there are at least four at four different branches. As of today (Thursday — 4 days later) it still says that. So don’t gimme no story about delayed stock feeds.

Needless to say, I’m back where I started now. Clearly the furniture industry has a massive wake-up to catch when it comes to digital. Clearly they haven’t gotten the message that a vast number of consumers are now using the Web to research high-ticket items before they buy them. And that that is one of the biggest trends around.

Continuing to ignore these consumers creates an enormous gap for digital-savvy businesses in their vertical to come along and kill them. As is happening in the electronics business, where online stores with sharp, smart, detailed sites make their real-world counterparts look positively archaic.

As for me, I’m sitting on the floor tonight.




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12 Responses to “How bad, bad, bad the SA web can be”

haha, that’s sad and funny at the same time. I had a slightly better experience searching online for beanbags (long story). i was pleasantly surprised at finding (yep, via google!) these guys: http://www.ambientlounge.co.za/index.htm

maybe set your sights lower? pardon the pun.

(Report abuse)

alan on August 15th, 2008 at 8:13 am

Try buying clothes online in SA… now there’s a nightmare if I ever saw one.

(Report abuse)

skoembs on August 15th, 2008 at 1:10 pm

if the providers of access to the medium can’t get it right.. we have a long way to go before users do.. wouldn’t you say.

i think us hyperconnecteds expect too much because we live half our lives on a perfect internet..

(Report abuse)

arthurficial on August 16th, 2008 at 10:58 pm

@alan: that might be the most useful comment anyone has ever posted on one of my pieces. Thanks!

(Report abuse)

Jarred Cinman on August 18th, 2008 at 9:49 am

I hardly think that people are expecting an orgasmic design experience, nor a transcendental IT epiphany, when looking for furniture.

A case of “hyperconnecteds expecting too much”?

Quite.

In a country where a fraction of the population has access to the internet, we’re alright, jack.

(Report abuse)

hedmekanik on August 19th, 2008 at 9:16 am

hedmekanik: i don’t think that was the expectation either: it was to _find_ something firstly, then find something that works on a modern browser (bonus points), and then to find something that’s in stock.

getting it delivered on the same day (or even week), now that would be orgasmic.

btw jarred: i ordered two of those beanbags and i can vouch for them: perfect for GTA4 marathons and other home-uses..

(Report abuse)

Alan Alston on August 19th, 2008 at 10:17 am

i have to admit that the one good thing that flows from this is the opportunities it present for SEOs and web designers.

(Report abuse)

arthurficial on August 19th, 2008 at 11:13 am

@hedmekanik: You will be surprised at the amount of people that are connected via mobile phones. much larger percentage than you think ;-)

(Report abuse)

anon on August 20th, 2008 at 3:47 pm

Personally i found that many of the established businesses are run by ‘old school’ guys who are not willing to take the plunge and invest in their online presence.

They’ll sign up with those crappy 3grand for 5 page type of websites and have zero interest in actually maintaining and nurturing it.

I found with our online store, i got the guys involved, from the owners to the sales guys. It is now treated as a seperate branch. Dedicated staff, time, resources & adspend is allocated accordingly.

The sooner SMME’s look at the web & ecommerce as a viable source of income and NOT just an online business card, they’ll rake in some $$$’s

Strangely, in these troubled economic times we live in. Online sales have shown healthy growth while brick n mortar stores have hit a plateau of sorts.

(Report abuse)

naeem on August 26th, 2008 at 10:11 am

well it seems the quality of the sites pretty much matches the quality of the onfloor customer service you get. Anyone bought anything from crappycraft recently..?

(Report abuse)

flooted on September 30th, 2008 at 2:06 pm

Hey Jarred

I completely agree with you, South African search engine optimization (SEO) is in general horrendous. Doing just a little bit of research online will show any web master/marketer/business owner exactly how to optimize their site for the main key words within their niche. It’s not a problem limited to furniture stores, sadly. And as for usability and website design, don’t get me started. First port of call - put yourself in your customers shoes, use multiple browsers to test your site and take it from there. If you can’t bother to find the time to do so yourself, hire a specialist.

(Report abuse)

Tony Lopes on January 31st, 2009 at 10:21 am

I moved from the UK to Cape Town two years ago and got the fright of my life when I first fired up my laptop and done a little searching of the South African online world - things have not improved much I am afraid to say!

(Report abuse)

Craig Wilson on June 1st, 2009 at 7:58 pm

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Jarred Cinman is software director at Cambrient, South Africa's leading developer of web applications. He co-founded Johannesburg's first professional web development company and was one of the founders of VWV Interactive, for many years the premier creative web business in the country, winning numerous Loeries and various international awards. In 2001, Jarred co-founded Cambrient, which has, in its six-year history, built the leading local content management system and serviced an impressive list of corporate customers. Cambrient Contentsuite is also the engine behind Moneyweb.
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