The result
Expanding Algolia’s value
While Algolia is entrenched in its business, Anna Lowe, eCommerce Trading Manager at END., sees the opportunity to take even greater advantage of the platform.
“I think we are only touching, scraping the surface, with what we can do in Algolia at the moment, and I think the extent we can gain value is much bigger,” she says. “For example, this week I’ve just started working on failed searches, and I didn’t know how much I could manipulate it myself without using a developer.”
One of her first activities when she joined the END. was to test Algolia’s Dynamic Re-ranking (DRR) capabilities against manual merchandising. She found DRR performed “really, really well,” which has reduced the workload for her team. Testing is continuing around revenue driven by DRR, and the next step is to reduce excess indexes with the help of Algolia.
She says END. will soon duplicate indexes between its UK and US websites and localize content. “DRR will be a massive lever for that, because it can help with product localization and optimization by region which is a massive step for us as a business.”
Algolia is helping drive measurable improvements in key performance metrics, including product listing page and product detail page click-through rates (CTR). According to McVeigh, A/B testing with DRR led a 1.47% increase in site conversion rate.
Lowe says Algolia support, including bi-weekly calls with her Algolia CSM, has been “super helpful” as she learns more about the solution and its capabilities.
END. continues to implement and take greater advantage of Algolia. As the company works to deploy carousels to its website, it’s investigating how Algolia Rules can test their effectiveness. For greater customer segmentation, Lowe and her team are currently testing and becoming more comfortable with Personalization.
She says Algolia’s value to the business is “priceless,” noting, “I thought Algolia was just a search platform, but it is so much more than that.”