A Look Back At 2010

The one question you’re guaranteed to be asked a hundred times or more over the holidays in Ireland is “How’s it going?” This is basically a catch all question giving you the opportunity to talk (or avoid talking) about your personal and professional lives with people that you see only a couple of times a year.

The question, coming as it does from people you don’t see that often, gives you a chance to reflect on perhaps a longer period of time than we’re normally used to considering. A lot of our communications, be they business based or personal, are very much of the moment.

So, if you haven’t been talking to us in WhatClinic.com for a little while, here’s how it’s going:

Traffic Growth

2010 started as any web company would want, with our best traffic figures ever, and as the months rolled on the visitors just kept on coming. We grew from 170K unique visitors in January to 450K unique visitors by July.

This strong traffic growth allowed us to cement our position in our existing markets and to open up some new ones too, particularly around S.E. Asia, growing our customer base in line with our traffic.

Rebranding

In August we changed our name from RevaHealth.com to WhatClinic.com, and it’s fair to say that things got a bit bumpy for a while, particularly in September and October. As our RevaHealth.com pages disappeared from the search engines, the WhatClinic.com versions of the pages weren’t taking their place the way we all expected them too.

This obviously had a serious knock on effect to our traffic, bringing it back to January levels for a short period of time. In the end it took anywhere from a few days to several months for the various pages of RevaHealth.com to reappear under the WhatClinic.com domain in the search engines, but happily we are out the other side now.

The rebranding of the site was a painful experience for us, but one that was necessary for the continued growth of the company, and we’re all looking forward to building the WhatClinic.com brand during 2011.

New Features

2010 also brought with it some major changes to the look and feel of the site along with new features for visitors and customers alike. Our telephone call tracking system in particular is helping customers contact potential patients they might otherwise have missed. It also gives our visitors low cost calls to international clinics.

Late in 2010 we also recognised the businesses that are working the hardest to make sure that our visitors have a positive experience when they contact a clinic by giving out our inaugural customer service awards. The response from both the clinics and our visitors has been overwhelmingly positive, so we will be continuing these awards in 2011.

In 2010 we brought 3.2 million unique visitors to WhatClinic.com. We put hundreds of thousands of patients in touch directly with clinics through email or by phone, passing on more than a billion dollars worth of potential business to our customers. In 2011, we’ll be doing much, much more.

Tagged with:  

Worst. Feature. Ever.

Worst. Feature. Ever.

Sometimes you just get it wrong, and in this instance by God were we wrong.

Letting visitors create a shortlist of clinics they were interested in comparing and contacting was a feature we’d been discussing almost since the beginning of the company. It would come up for discussion every couple of months and eventually we got so fed up talking about it we decided to just try it out.

As features go it was pretty simple. All we needed was a link added to each clinic’s search result, one in their profile, and a page to display the visitor’s chosen shortlist. We thought it was a good idea that would be useful to our visitors.

This obviously wasn’t an original idea, and there were plenty of sites that had implemented similar features we could look to for some inspiration. Kayak.com and HostelWorld.com both had directly comparable features, and we also looked at shopping carts on ecommerce sites as well as light boxes on photograph websites.

We planned and rolled out the feature within a week and sat back waiting to see a truckload of visitors happily creating shortlists and coming back to them to compare their options.

That wasn’t exactly what happened.

The Result

We were able to get a pretty good picture in a very short space of time as we have a lot of traffic coming to site. Things weren’t looking good after an hour, and after a full day it became clear that close to no one was using the feature.

We’d had 22,000 visitors over the course of that 24 hour period and only 80 people (0.3%) had added any clinics to their short list. To make matters worse only 17 of those people (0.08%) had subsequently gone back and viewed their short list.

We decided to enter EMERGENCY FEATURE RESCUE MODE. Everyone in the office had their own opinion as to why it wasn’t working. These included:

  • The call to action – ‘Add to Shortlist’ wasn’t immediately understandable
  • People could not see the call to action link
  • It was a crap feature

We changed the call to action text to “Save this Clinic”, pushed it out and waited…

101 people added a clinic to their shortlist on day two. Now normally an uplift of 25% in usage is a cause for celebration. However, when only 0.4% of your visitors want to use a feature it can only mean one thing: turn it off.

So that’s what we did. Two days after launching a feature that we had great hopes for it ended up in the trash can.

Sometimes you just have to work harder on a feature, refining it over time to increase its usage, and other times you just have to accept that you were wrong in the first place and bin the idea. In this instance we figured that no end of finessing was going to create a feature that resonated with our visitors.

Not All In Vain

Over the last three years we’ve gotten pretty used to the idea of launching features that don’t get adopted. A lot of people would look at the effort that we put into these feature as a waste of time but that is not the way we think about it.

Every feature that we decide to develop we regard as a learning exercise. The purpose isn’t to create a fantastic feature; the purpose is to learn something new about our visitors. If you build something and it doesn’t add to the overall knowledge of the company then you’ve missed the lion’s share of the value.

To make this possible we have learned code as lightweight as possible and our processes are now fairly efficient. When we roll out a new feature now we try to expend as little effort as possible getting it to the stage that we can test whether the basic premise is viable or not. Once we decide it is viable we go ahead and refine and improve it.

What was the worst feature you ever rolled out, and how long did you leave it run for? Share your experiences in the comments below.

Tagged with:  

New Supplier’s Site On Its Way

We’ve been pretty busy these last few weeks working away on improving the one part of the site that most visitors never get to see – the supplier’s site. This is where the clinics using RevaHealth.com go to update the information that is displayed about them and to check how many people have been in contact with them.

This part of the site has stayed much the same for most of this year, but we always felt it was a bit too complicated to use properly. So, we set about reworking it from the ground up, making it easier to use and hopefully more useful too. It will be going live to our suppliers next week all going to schedule.

One new feature we’re going to be offering is giving clinics the ability to create their own website, www.myclinicswebsite.com, without having to go near a computer. These days the majority of people looking up a phone number or an address are turning to the web to find it, yet the majority of clinics don’t have their own web presence. We can solve that problem for clinics with the minimum of fuss.

Full details of both the new supplier site and the new website service will be posted here next week.

Tagged with:  
© 2010 WhatClinic.com Blog