Case Study: Copyhackers

Escrito por Mark Forrester on octubre 26, 2011 Customer Stories, News.

Joanna Wiebe

A case study by Lance Jones on building an e-commerce store selling digital downloads using Coquette and WooCommerce.

Joanna, my amazing wife, is an equally amazing Web copywriter, who recently left her senior position at Intuit (makers of QuickBooks and TurboTax) to build her own online business. Over the past year and in her spare time she has been helping Web startups and entrepreneurs improve their conversion rates by writing more effective copy.

Humble beginnings

It all began with a humble request for help by a start-up co-founder, and ended up on the front page of Hacker News (kind of a Digg for developers and start-ups), resulting in a massive wave of emails flooding Joanna’s inbox with additional pleas for copy and conversion advice.

Copy Hackers Book 1

Knowing she couldn’t possibly help everyone who responded, Joanna asked what I thought about the idea of tailoring a series of copywriting e-books to start-ups and selling them online. It made complete sense to me. But should we sell the e-books on Amazon? Build our own site from scratch? The latter sounded pretty daunting, even with my experience putting sites together (you could call me a developer lite), as you have to deal with payments, refunds, PCI compliance, content management, etc.

Six months later, Joanna had completed the initial versions of her three e-books, each about 150 pages in length. Copy Hackers was born. Initially we thought we’d go with Amazon as our primary sales channel, but several advance copy readers had trouble with the length of the e-books. They felt too big to the developers we were going to be selling to. And so Joanna decided to break them up into 50-page PDFs, each one delving into a very specific area of Web copy such as creating amazing headlines, stellar product messages, and get-your-attention-and-click-right-now buttons.

With this shift to bite-sized PDFs, which would eventually result in a series of 8 (or more) e-books. We decided to market them ourselves instead of on Amazon, using our own Web site, www.copyhackers.com.

The Copy Hackers homepage.

Building the Copy Hackers site

With domain name in hand and the [shorter version] e-books 1 through 4 completed, I considered our options for a Web site. Having a site designed and built from scratch would be time-consuming, expensive, and a pain to continually edit. Alternatively, we’d tried our hand at premium WordPress themes before, and loved how you can produce a very professional-looking design while at the same time get a fullyfunctioning content management system.

I took the plunge and spent $35 at ThemeForest, but after having installed the theme and several plug-ins, I learned that it did not support digital products (i.e., downloadable items such as e-books). Live and learn. Then I purchased a second theme from ThemeForest (this time, one that supported downloads!), but its e-commerce features were somewhat lacking. No real biggie, as the theme also supported third party e-commerce plug-ins.

I turned to reading reviews of several WordPress e-commerce plug-ins, and learned about the newly-released WooCommerce plug in. Since I’d already spent $70 on themes, the free and highly-rated WooCommerce plug-in was a great, but I was disappointed to learn that in order to make everything work together visually, I would need to modify the ThemeForest theme extensively.

But instead of trying out more e-commerce plug-ins for my existing theme, I decided to stick with WooCommerce, and went in search of a third and final theme thinking that perhaps I should look at WordPress themes from the developer of WooCommerce. WooCommerce offered everything we needed, and it seemed extremely likely that using it in conjunction with a WooThemes theme would meet our ever-expanding list of requirements. We were not disappointed and went with Coquette.

Out of the box, everything worked as it should. Installation was a snap. Configuration took no time. And getting it all working with PayPal Standard was surprisingly easy (love the PayPal Sandbox feature!). Even setting up the theme to work with MailChimp was far less efort than I had anticipated.

From there, we wanted to make a few adjustments for our online business. I [eventually] took WooThemes advice and modified the various templates using the Custom CSS option rather than modifying the core CSS files. I learned it the hard way, however, after upgrading the WooCommerce plug-in and watching a bunch of tweaks disappear from our site. Live and learn again.

The shop page with Joanna’s copyrighting books displayed.

We also needed to modify many of the form field labels and page headings, and I quickly discovered that WooCommerce and Coquette come with the ability to create custom language files. Modifying pretty much anything on a page template is simply a matter of find & replace via the theme’s localization control panel.

In all, we spent about a week’s worth of time setting up the Copy Hackers site. And on October 18th, Joanna submitted a blog post about her start-up journey to Hacker News.

Site performance and sales

Within one hour of submission to the site, her post received enough up-votes to hit the home page (where there are 30 other tech-related stories). And soon thereafter, her post rose to #2 on the home page, staying there for several hours and funneling a ton of trafc to the Copy Hackers site. By the end of the second day (when her post eventually disappeared from the home page), Joanna’s site received more than 10,000 unique visitors. And better yet, by using the same tips she outlines in her e-books, Joanna persuaded more than 500 visitors from around the world to purchase her top priced product (and best deal), the 4-book bundle. For us, it was a mind-blowing launch, and our WooTheme didn’t buckle once under the pressure.

What’s next for us? Analyzing the recent sales and trafc data. More blog posts. PPC landing pages. An experiment with afliates. More e-books. And perhaps a go with PayPal Express — when it’s available in WooCommerce.

Thanks a million for creating something so amazing, guys! You’ve given us the ability to focus on our business instead of the technology that powers it.

Would you like to feature on our blog? Share your experiences working with WordPress and our themes and if we believe it will benefit our community we’ll publish it. Contact us.
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14 Responses

  1. Martin Lucas
    octubre 26, 2011 at 1:34 pm #

    What a great story, a really inspiring one too. I’ll definitely be using WooCommerce on my next project – can’t wait to try it out!

  2. Scott Webb
    octubre 26, 2011 at 1:42 pm #

    All I can say is *BOOM*

  3. Magnus
    octubre 26, 2011 at 1:55 pm #

    Very inspiring story!

  4. Fred Romano
    octubre 26, 2011 at 3:44 pm #

    Super story! If the real estate market in the USA was better, I could be writing one like this too 🙁

  5. sk
    octubre 26, 2011 at 4:19 pm #

    “For us, it was a mind-blowing launch, and our WooTheme didn’t buckle once under the pressure.”

    I was one of the many people that bought the four book bundle during this time period. The site had numerous outages and errors. There were a large number of complaints about the WooCommerce package. Many people, including myself, purchased the e-book package in spite of the mediocre check out process, not because of it.

    • Mark Forrester
      octubre 26, 2011 at 4:58 pm #

      We’d love to hear an official response to this from Lance or Joanna. The outage/errors could have been as a result of numerous factors, other than the plugin itself, like hosting/server load. Even so it seemed to deal well with $20k of transactions in 24 hours we like to think 🙂

  6. Lance
    octubre 26, 2011 at 7:07 pm #

    @sk, we’re sorry about the trouble you had on our site last week. The traffic and volume of sales over the 2 days took us a bit by surprise — and our Web hosting company, too. We’ve since upgraded our hosting package… which will hopefully speed things up for future visitors.

    As far as WooCommerce goes, we saw two primary issues:

    1. The checkout page was not SSL — which is our fault. We’ve since purchased a SSL certificate and we’re using WooCommerce to serve up a secure checkout page prior to the hand-off to PayPal.

    2. A handful of purchasers informed us that the coupon code did not work. It appears as though some of those folks were looking to enter the code on the checkout page or on PayPal’s site… but of course it needs to be entered on the cart page. We updated the Hacker News blog post immediately to let people know (and included a screenshot) where they need to enter the code to receive the discount.

    In all, we’re very pleased with the WooThemes package and support team.

    And we’re very thankful that you persevered to purchase Joanna’s books.

    Sincerely,
    Lance

  7. Leslie Nicole
    noviembre 3, 2011 at 4:28 pm #

    Hey, I’ve been on the verge of getting Coquette myself. One thing holding me back to figure out – where to store my LARGE database of digital downloads. Have you guys thought of creating an integration with either the Fetch app or Amazon S3 to make it easier for those selling digital downloads?

  8. Leslie Nicole
    noviembre 3, 2011 at 4:42 pm #

    Ok – should have said this FIRST – but this is indeed very inspiring! Congratulations.

    It’s also coming at a serendipitous time for me – being on the fence about going with WooCommerce and another platform. Would you mind explaining more about purchasing the SSL certificate and applying it to WooCommerce?

  9. ben
    noviembre 3, 2011 at 6:29 pm #

    I love the irony of the first paragraph and the typo in ‘writing efective copy’. Effective x 5 please 🙂

  10. Mikel
    noviembre 9, 2011 at 9:32 am #

    Awesome. “What’s next for us? Analyzing the recent sales and trafc data. More blog posts. PPC landing pages. An experiment with afliates. More e-books. And perhaps a go with PayPal Express — when it’s available in WooCommerce.” This is truly exciting stuff. Bring on the PayPal Express option, guys. Many of us are looking forward to this one! 🙂

  11. Mark
    diciembre 20, 2011 at 12:09 am #

    When is Paypal Express coming??? We are dying out here without it!

    • Magnus
      diciembre 20, 2011 at 10:33 am #

      Hi, It is still in development so hopefully not to far away.

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