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Associate News Editor Ann Bednarz covers the latest news on application acceleration, content delivery and more.
The big test of retailers' Web sites occurred in the days following Thanksgiving, and a number of top retailers at times couldn't keep up with the heavy loads, according to Web monitoring firms.
2008 Cool Yule Tools Gift Guide
In particular, a number of retailers struggled with availability issues on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving.
Costco averaged roughly 64% availability between 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. (ET) on Friday before significantly improving performance on Saturday, when it delivered more than 91% availability, reports Gomez, which tracks the Top 25 online retailers’ site performance. Sears similarly suffered availability problems, averaging just over 61% availability for Friday. Sears also turned things around on Saturday, when it delivered 100% performance, Gomez says.
HP Shopping and Overstock.com suffered from sluggish response times on Friday -- nearly 45 seconds on average for HP Shopping and 17 seconds for Overstock. But both returned to normal levels (13 seconds for HP Shopping and 5 to 6 seconds for Overstock) on Saturday.
On Dec. 1, “Cyber Monday,” the Web sites of Dell, Victoria’s Secret and Williams-Sonoma experienced issues during the morning hours, according to Gomez.
Victoria’s Secret shoppers trying to place items in a shopping cart received a site unavailable page and were unable to proceed during the morning of Dec. 1, Gomez reports. Meanwhile, at Williams-Sonoma’s shopping cart/view payment pages, a typical transaction slowed from 26 seconds at 6 a.m. to almost 50 seconds between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. At Dell’s site, returning shoppers were briefly (between 9:40 a.m. and 10:15 a.m.) unable to retrieve pre-populated account information, meaning they had to start-over filling out forms when checking out, Gomez reports.
Despite the site hiccups, online retailers managed strong sales in the days following Thanksgiving.
Black Friday saw $534 million in online spending, up 1% over last year, according to Web measurement firm comScore. For the Saturday and Sunday following Thanksgiving, online sales came in at $769, a strong 19% gain relative to last year. For Cyber Monday, comScore says online sales hit $846 million, a gain of 15%. Overall, the four-day period from Black Friday through Cyber Monday saw e-commerce spending jump 13%.
Ann Bednarz is associate news editor at Network World.
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Comments (2)
These sorts of broad benchmark tests are not usefulBy Anonymous on December 4, 2008, 3:57 pmI think Keynote stopped publishing these tests for a reason. Gomez may have picked up the mantle - but the tests are still useless. 64% availability? What the heck...
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BenchmarksBy Anonymous on December 4, 2008, 8:55 pmGomez, Keynote and others maintain benchmarks. They are a healthy comparison of site performance vs competitors and the results, good or bad, should be taken seriously.
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