Google will suspend merchant sites that show higher prices in the checkout - The Entrepreneurial Way with A.I.

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Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Google will suspend merchant sites that show higher prices in the checkout

#Tech

Google announced it will begin on April 6, 2021 to enforce its longstanding policy of requiring merchants to show the price of an item from their Google Merchant feed to their e-commerce page, all the way through the checkout process in the shopping cart. If you show a higher price than what is on your landing page, Google can suspend your account.

The guideline. Google posted its guidelines for the checkout requirements over here, it, in part, reads:

“People expect to pay the advertised price for your products. If the price of a product advertised in a Shopping ad or free product listing is different from the price shown in a customer’s shopping cart, that could create a negative experience for the customer and could result in the loss of a sale.

To ensure that your product’s price is clear, follow these requirements. The price of your product should be consistent throughout the checkout process, not just between the product feed and your landing page. The price shouldn’t increase at checkout. It may, however, be lowered after the product is added to the cart if a promotion is added.”

The enforcement. Google said “beginning April 6, in addition to reviewing and enforcing price accuracy between your Merchant Center product data and your landing pages, we will begin to review and enforce price accuracy at checkout.”

The penalty. If you do violate this guideline, Google said “you will receive a 28-day warning to resolve these mismatches, otherwise your account will be subject to suspension at the end of the warning period.”

How Google enforces this. You may remember that several months ago, Google told us that GoogleBot can add items to your shopping cart. The purpose was to not mess up your conversion metrics, but rather to have “automated systems to ensure consumers are getting accurate pricing information from our merchants.”

So Google knows about some merchants violating this rule and has decided to start enforcing it with suspension notices.

Why we care. If you run an e-commerce site or have a client that runs and e-commerce site, you should ensure that the price that is displayed at checkout matches or is less than what is displayed on the landing page.

Google wrote “consistent and accurate pricing is one of the most important factors shoppers take into considerations when making a purchase. If the product’s price at checkout is higher than the price shown in an ad, free product listing, or on a product landing page, shoppers are more likely to abandon the purchase.”


About The Author

Barry Schwartz a Contributing Editor to Search Engine Land and a member of the programming team for SMX events. He owns

RustyBrick

, a NY based web consulting firm. He also runs

Search Engine Roundtable

, a popular search blog on very advanced SEM topics. Barry's personal blog is named

Cartoon Barry

and he can be followed on Twitter here.



via https://AiUpNow.com February 3, 2021 at 07:17PM by Barry Schwartz, Khareem Sudlow,