Thursday, October 29, 2009

Hair Loss Myths - Busted!

Hair Loss Myths - Busted!: "

‘Damage-free hair in 7 days’… As you ogle the luscious-haired model on the poster, dismissing the advertising claim, don’t you secretly wish you hair was half as pretty? With pollution and fluctuating weather conditions in the city, a healthy mane seems like a distant dream. One of the biggest and most common hair problems is hair loss. If you truly care, you must go back to the roots and understand the hair. But before you do, let me tell you that there are many myths surrounding hair loss. Believing them could actually prove to be more harmful than leaving your hair unloved. So go ahead - start the repair, right after you deflate these myths about your hair…


Myth: Standing on your head will reduce hair loss


Fact: Standing on the head is practiced as a popular yoga posture called sirshasana; it is solely aimed at increasing the blood circulation and improving the bodily balance and rhythm. The follicles need more than flowing blood to arrest hair loss! Standing on the head does not help cure hair loss (and it certainly doesn’t help in hair re-growth!!!)


Myth: Hair-washing leads to hair loss


Fact: Washing/shampooing the hair helps keep it clean and healthy. There’s no issue with washing or combing the hair. This myth arises from the fact that, after shampooing, we see lost hair in the sink and freak out. As per your individual hair growth cycle, it is normal to shed 40-50 hair strands per day. If you’re seeing too much hair in the sink, its probably due to high stress levels! But shampooing by itselft does not cause hair loss.


Myth: Towel-drying causes hair loss


Fact: One school of thought is that rubbing the hair with a towel promotes blood circulation and stimulates hair growth - sadly untrue. The other is that towel-drying the hair makes strands fall out - again, untrue! The max you can do by rubbing your hair is alleviate the fall of those strands which were due to fall out anyway. You won’t be causing any additional hair loss.


Myth: Hair loss is inherited from mom’s side


Fact: Hey that’s a sexist myth! Hair loss is genetic, no doubt - but it is a combination of the maternal as well as the paternal genes you’ve inherited.


Myth: Wearing a hat causes hair loss


Fact: This holds true only if the hat is painfully tight (which usually isn’t the case with any sane jane)! As a matter of fact, hats can be quite useful in protecting the hair from sun damage and pollution. Any well-fitting head gear which gives enough breathing space to your scalp is safe to use.


Myth: Losing 100 strands of hair a day is normal


Fact: A hair follicle grows for four to five years. In its fifth year, it stops growing and enters the ‘rest’ cycle. In the sixth year it falls out and the growth cycle starts again. The average number of follicles in your scalp is 1,50,000… 90% of which is in the growth cycle at any given time. That means around 15,000 strands are in the rest cycle, ready to fall. If you lose 100 strands a day (and about 35,600 per year) you’re losing more than 50% more hair than you’re supposed to. Phew!!! The bottomline - you can safely lose 40-50 strands a day. Anything more than that indicates a hair loss problem.


Myth: Lack of sex causes hair loss


Fact: So we can keep having sex and never worry about hair loss? Duh! So not true. Similarly, lack of sex does not cause hair loss. There is no solid evidence or biological derivation to support this claim.


Myth: Hair loss is incurable


Fact: Definitely untrue. Though it is difficult to get rid of the problem entirely, it is possible to cure it to a great extent. Your diet may be lacking some essential vitamins and minerals. Rectifying the diet and taking prescribed vitamin supplements can help reduce hair loss issues. Leading a stress-free lifestyle by means of exercise, yoga and meditation can also help.

Top Tips for Healthy Hair

Top Tips for Healthy Hair: "

Now that we’ve debunked all those hair loss myths, lets move on to our next important mane mission - hair care! Treating the tresses is necessary for guys and girls alike. It should be reckoned as a part of the health and grooming regime.


As simple as it sounds, how many of us actually do a little something for our hair? Er, no boys - mommy caressing your head does not qualify as hair care! There’s slightly more to it. We’ve already spoken about how heat and pollution and pretty much everything urban is ready to assault the hair. You can run, you can hide… and you can also escape! Say goodbye to fly-aways and frizzies. Here’s how…



  • Have a balanced, healthy diet. Yep, healthy hair needs healthy food intake. Almonds, for instance, are a boon to the hair. Pop 4-5 almonds a day, and watch your hair growing stronger, shinier…just like they promise in ads - but for real! Green leafy veggies, turnips, carrots and apricots are rich sources of Vitamin A, which strengthens the hair at the roots. Include calcium (milk), iron (red meat, fish, leafy veggies) and protein (milk, soy, fish) in your diet. For silica, eat raw oats.

  • If you’re running around all day, especially in hot and humid climate, your hair is bound to get sticky and dirty which in turn could lead to hair damage. Just as you clean your skin, its important to cleanse the scalp. Shampoo your hair using a mild, preferably sulfate-free shampoo. Using herbal shampoo? Make sure its strong enough to cleanse the hair. Work up a lather with the pads of your fingers, don’t scrape the poor scalp with your finger nails!

  • Beer is good for the hair! It helps remove residue and dirt. Use 1 cup of warm water with 6 tablespoons beer as the final rinse.

  • Conditioning the hair is an indispensable ritual especially if you have dry hair. After shampoo, wring out excess water. Apply conditioner to the mid-section and ends (not the roots)… then run a comb through the hair to spread out the conditioner evenly. Avoid - if you feel you’re losing too much hair at this step. In any case, let the conditioner seep in for 5-10 minutes. Then wash off.

  • Been using a lot of conditioner, styling serums and gels or hair spray? Rid your hair of product build-up. Mix 1 tablespoon baking soda with your regular shampoo once a week. Rinse and dry as usual.

  • Towel-drying the hair? Avoid rubbing too harshly…Just ’soak’ it dry with a towel.

  • Using a blow-dryer? Just blast-dry instead of heat-drying and styling. It will simply take off the extra moisture without ripping your hair off the essential bit.

  • Its important to comb and detangle; but gently so. Use a wide-tooth comb in the downward direction (or simply use your fingers!) to even out the hair before running a comb through it.

  • Avoid combing when the hair is wet. This is when your hair is at its weakest!

  • To cut down on static electricity, dampen your comb with some water. It works ;-)

  • Avoid using scrunchies or clips on wet or damp hair. Believe it or not, tying up the hair when its damp could cause dandruff!

  • Use comfortable bands and scrunchies. Tight ones will only cause hair breakage.

  • Regular trimming is necessary. Chop off those split-ends to ensure your hair is growing in a healthy manner. Girls need a trim every 2-4 months. Guys could go in for a trim 1-3 months, all depending on one’s hair growth rate.

  • Choose a hairstyle that’s in keeping with your lifestyle. If there’s a lot of leg work involved in your job, it would be best to keep the hair short and sweet and easy to maintain.

  • Get 7 to 8 hours of beauty-sleep everyday. It will show, on your crown!

  • Dry hair? Take edible oil and honey in a 1:1 ratio, mix and leave it on for 15-20 minutes. Rinse off with cold water. Otherwise, get an olive-oil massage.

  • Oily hair? Wash your hair regularly but go easy on the conditioner. Add a tablespoon of malt vinegar and a pinch of salt in a glass of water. Pour out 2-3 tablespoons on your scalp and massage gently. Doing this twice a week will help reduce the oil on your scalp.

  • Dandruff? Mix lemon juice and vinegar in 1:2 ratio. Massage it on the scalp and let dry. Rinse off with cold water, using a mild shampoo.

  • Hair spa treatments work wonders! Get a special protein, aroma therapy or natural hair spa treatment at least once a month.

"

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

15 Common Mistakes in E-Commerce Design

15 Common Mistakes in E-Commerce Design: "



Selling online can open up huge new markets for many businesses. When your store can be open 24/7 and you can reach a global market without the costs of mailings and call centers, it can be a huge boon to your business. But there are plenty of things to consider when designing an ecommerce site. It’s not as simple as throwing up some shopping cart software and plopping products into a database.


There are tons of mistakes that online retailers make every day, all of them avoidable with a little careful planning. And even if you’re already committing some of these mistakes, most of them are easy enough to fix. Avoiding them will greatly improve the experience of your customers.


Below are 15 of the most common mistakes that e-commerce sites make, as well as advice on how to avoid or fix them. Take the advice under consideration before embarking on a new e-commerce project or when thinking over your current ecommerce site, and make efforts to follow the recommendations outlined here.


1. A lack of detailed product information


When you’re shopping in a brick-and-mortar store, you have the advantage of being able to pick up an item, feel it, look at it from every angle, and read any information on the packaging or labels. Shopping online removes that interaction. Ecommerce sites need to do the best they can to improve upon the in-store shopping experience.


How often have we gone to an online store and found their descriptions to be completely lacking? And if a customer is left wondering about the specifics of a product, they’re more likely to go look for the information elsewhere. And unless your site’s price is significantly lower than your competitors’, they’ll likely just buy from the other site.


What To Do About It


Provide as much product information as you can. Sizes, materials, weight, dimensions, and any other pertinent information depending on what the product is. For example, in an online clothing store, you might include the fabric type, sizes and colors available, a size chart (usually linked from multiple products), the weight or thickness of the item, the cut and fit of the item, care instructions, and comments about the brand or designer. Using descriptive words rather than simply technical terms can have a greater impact on the consumer.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


2. Hiding Contact Information


Consumers want to know that they’re dealing with a real company when they hand over their credit card information. They want to know that if they have a problem they’ll be able to talk to a real person and get the help they need. If your site doesn’t provide any contact information, or hides it so the consumer can’t find it easily, they’re less likely to trust your site, and therefore less likely to do business with you.


What To Do About It


Put your contact information in an easy-to-find place on every page of your website. The most obvious places to put your contact information are either in your header, the top of your sidebar, or in your footer. Provide multiple means of contact if possible. A contact form, email address, phone number, and mailing address all add to the level of customer trust. Remember, too, that the more expensive or technical the product you’re selling, the more likely a consumer is going to want more contact information.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


3. A Long or Confusing Checkout Process


This is one of the most damaging mistakes an ecommerce site can make. You have to make it as easy as possible for your customers to hand over their credit card information and complete their order. The more steps you put between them placing an item in their cart and actually paying for it, the more opportunities you give them to leave your site without completing their purchase.


The ideal checkout process includes a single page for consumers to check their order and enter their billing and shipping information, and a confirmation page before they submit their order. Anything more than that is only an obstacle to completing the checkout process.


What To Do About It


Follow the ideal model as closely as you can. If you have to include other pages, try to make them as quick and easy to fill out as possible. Combine pages if you can, and use two-column layouts for certain sections (like putting billing and shipping information next to each other) to make pages appear shorter.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


4. Requiring an Account to Order


This ties in directly to the previous item. If you require a customer to sign up for an account before they can place an order, it’s another obstacle you’ve placed in their path. Which is more important to you: getting the order or capturing customer information? Remember that the second option may mean losing some customers.


What To Do About It


There’s an easy fix for this. Instead of requiring a customer to sign up for an account before they order, offer them the option at the end of their ordering process. Give them the option to save their account information to make placing future orders easier or to track the status of their current order. Many customers will opt to save their information, and you won’t be driving away customers before they’ve completed their order.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


5. An Inadequate Site Search Engine


If a customer knows exactly what they’re looking for, many will opt to use a search engine instead of sifting through categories and filters. You need to make sure that the search feature on your site works well, and preferably has filters for letting customers refine their results.


How often have you searched for a product on a large ecommerce site and been returned with hundreds of applicable results? While the variety of options can be nice, if half of those results are nothing like what you’re looking for, it’s more an inconvenience than anything else. Including a way for customers to filter their search results by category or feature eliminates this problem.


What To Do About It


Make sure the ecommerce software you’re using has a good built-in search engine, or look for plugins to extend its functionality. Ideally, an ecommerce search engine should let users search by keyword and then refine results based on the categories your site includes. Let users sort their search results based on standard criteria (most popular, highest or lowest price, newest item, etc.) as well as eliminating items that don’t fit within a certain category.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


6. Poor Customer Service Options


This is similar to the hiding contact information bit above. You need to make it easy for customers to get in touch with you if they have a problem or question. Make it clear what the best way to contact you is if they have a technical question, a sales question, or they want to return an item. Offering a help request form for customers to fill out can instill more confidence than just an email address.


What To Do About It


Use a ticketing system for customer service inquiries, especially if you don’t have a phone number available. Make sure that you post a FAQ that covers common questions customers might have, like what your return policy is or what to do if they need to order parts or replacement items.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


7. Tiny Product Images


Since consumers can’t physically handle the products you’re selling before placing an order on your website, you need to do as much as you can to recreate and improve upon that experience. Tiny product images don’t effectively do this.


What To Do About It


Either provide large images right on the product page or allow users to click on an image to zoom in. You want users to be able to view the image as large as is practical on an average monitor. This means an image that enlarges to 1024×768 pixels is a good size to aim for.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


8. Only One Product Image


Unless your product is delivered digitally (and even sometimes if it is), you’ll want to provide multiple images from different angles. An image in each color, of the front, back, and sides, and even detailed shots of specific features can all go a long way toward making a consumer more likely to buy from you.


What To Do About It


This one’s simple: include more images. Four or five images of each product are ideal, offering enough views to allow a consumer to feel comfortable that they know exactly what they’re getting.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


9. A Poor Shopping Cart Design


Your shopping cart is an incredibly important part of your ecommerce website. It needs to allow users to add multiple products, to revise the quantities or other options about those products, and it needs to remain transparent at the same time. Not exactly the easiest thing to do, right?


What To Do About It


Make sure your cart lets a user add an item and then return to the last page they were on. Even better: allow them to add an item to their cart without ever leaving the page they’re on (by using a mini cart). Let your customers edit the quantities of items in their cart or remove an item from their cart. And let them preview what shipping charges will be before they start the checkout process.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


10. Lack of Payment Options


There are plenty of sites out there that only allow users to pay with Visa or MasterCard, or to only pay with a PayPal account. There’s no reason for this anymore. What about the person who has an AmEx and doesn’t have or want a PayPal account? What about the person who doesn’t have a credit card and wants to pay straight from their bank account? You need to provide as many payment solutions as is practical to optimize the number of orders you get.


What To Do About It


Use a payment service that lets customers pay with each major credit card, and preferably also with an electronic check. Adding a PayPal checkout option increases the choices your customers have, making them more likely to purchase from you. Considering different consumers have different preferences when it comes to making online payments, catering to as many as you can means you’ve expanded your customer base.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot



11. Not Including Related Products


You’ve probably noticed when you go to a brick and mortar store that they group similar products together, or otherwise make it easy for you to find products that are related to you. They’ll put a battery display in the electronics section, or include cell phone cases near the cell phones. The same can be done on your website, and can increase add-on sales for you business.


What To Do About It


Use an ecommerce platform that lets you include related products on product description pages. A platform that will let you manually choose related products can also give you a big advantage, since you may see relations that a software program doesn’t (such as coordinating clothing pieces to create an outfit).


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


12. Confusing Navigation


There’s nothing worse than trying to find a product on a site with confusing navigation. Or even worse, an online store that doesn’t use categories or otherwise separate their merchandise to make it easier to find a specific type of product. The same goes for sites that have categories with no products in them or with only one or two items. Why even bother with a category?


What To Do About It


Think through your categories and navigation elements carefully before you start putting products in your catalog. Make sure that every category has at least a few products in it, or else group smaller categories together (or include them in larger, similar categories). Make it easy for customers to look through different categories, get to their shopping cart, and otherwise move around your site.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


13. Not Including Shipping Rates


There’s no good reason not to include accurate shipping rates on your site. I’ve abandoned purchases on numerous occasions because it said something like “We’ll email you with an accurate shipping quote for approval before processing your order.” When shopping online, I want to be able to complete my order all at one time, without having to wait around for an email to decide whether the shipping charges are too high. Include your rates on your site, no matter what.


What To Do About It


Most major shipping companies and the USPS offer shipping calculators on their website, and there are plugins or widgets available for most major shopping cart systems to figure shipping charges on your site. Use one. If you can’t use one for some reason, then use a flat shipping rate that’s high enough to cover whatever it is you need to ship. For particularly heavy or large items, you can always include a freight surcharge in the price (just be sure to indicate that’s where the additional cost is going).


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


14. Not Including Store Policies


Before a customer buys from you, they’ll likely want to know what your shipping policies, return policies, and other store rules are. And there’s no reason not to post this information in a FAQ or somewhere else on your site. Making your store policies clear upfront can save a lot of headaches later on from customers who are unhappy with an order they’ve placed.


What To Do About It


Use an FAQ or store policies section on your site to spell out exactly what your rules are for different kinds of customer interaction. It’s something that can save you tons of problems down the road.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


15. Not Putting Focus on the Products


The goal of an ecommerce site is to sell products (or, at least, that’s what the goal should be). If your site puts more focus on bells and whistles or the design itself, it’s not achieving that primary goal. Make sure your site displays your products first, and everything else second.


What To Do About It


Think about how products are displayed in brick and mortar stores. While an in-store or window display may show a lot more than just the products for sale, they all contribute to showcasing the products in their most flattering light. Do the same with your website. Make sure that every design element present is doing something to showcase your products in their best possible light.


Examples


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot


ecommerce screenshot

About the author

Cameron Chapman is a professional Web and graphic designer with over 6 years of experience. She also writes for a number of blogs, including her own, Cameron Chapman On Writing . She’s also the author of Internet Famous: A Practical Guide to Becoming an Online Celebrity.

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