Is your website or mobile app prepared for the high volumes of traffic expected on Black Friday (and Cyber Monday)?
Be ready with these performance testing tips from Ferdinand Nell, lead consultant: test automation/performance testing at DVT Global Testing Solutions.
24 November 2018 is the official day for Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving (Friday) in North America and takes place in countries all around the world, including South Africa. While it may seem like months away, this favourite annual online shopping day is the cause of many sites and apps to crash leaving consumers disappointed and social media buzzing.
According to Nell, too many companies do not prepare for the high volume of traffic to hit their website on the day. As an example, the retailer Takealot revealed to MyBroadband that it saw a record number of visits to its site on Black Friday in 2017, with over 2,2-million hits.
However, in November 2017 a handful of South Africa’s largest e-commerce websites crashed or experienced erratic behaviour on #BlackFriday. Websites and apps were temporarily down due to overwhelming volumes. Headlines like ‘The glitch that stole Christmas: Black Friday crashes online stores in SA’ hit the news.
Nell points out that there are specific steps businesses can take to ensure that their sales run smoothly on Black Friday plus to avoid brand reputational damage.
“Performance testing your website and app are essential to prevent any bottlenecks and to identify potential application issues that may surface under extreme conditions.”
Performance testing allows you to validate your application capacity such that it performs under various loads and conditions. Nell suggests the following performance testing practices to avoid brand embarrassment or loss of revenue:
Obtain a Baseline, then Benchmark and Repeat
* Identify Business as Usual processes and typical user load over a period of time
* Develop a suite of performance tests to simulate that and obtain a baseline
* Execute those tests whenever changes are made to the underlying system and compare your results with that of your baseline
* Understand how your system reacts to load and what affects performance.
Find the Ceiling – Stress Testing
Use your BAU performance suite to drive ever-increasing load against your system in order to determine the point at which:
* Functional errors appear.
* Performance degrades to unacceptable levels.
System Endurance – Soak Testing
Determine the behaviour of your system during prolonged use; garbage collection, SQL cursors, storage space etc. have a tendency to only illustrate potential problems over time.
Brace for Impact – Risk Mitigation
Determine the stress points of the system and identify points of failure.
Plan for failover and mitigate risk around those areas by:
* Increasing hardware capacity.
* Optimising system configuration and load balancing strategies.
* Enhancing solution and architectural design.
Verify Your Solution
Rerun your performance tests to the point where they failed previously and confirm that your solutions have been effective.
Extrapolation and the Production Question
Extrapolation is a useful tool for determining the theoretical performance capability of a particular environment by scaling the results obtained from another.
Let’s assume performance baselines were obtained on the QA environment. If, for arguments sake, one has determined that, on paper, Production has five times the effective server capacity of QA, then one can expect Production to handle up to fie times the concurrent user load that was generated on QA – give or take 15%.
Naturally, real world results may differ, but this provides a starting point from which further verification can take place.
If you still need convincing that performance testing is critical to your ecommerce site, here are a few stats from last year’s Black Friday sales to make you think:
* Amazon’s Black Friday 2017 sales hit a record high of $2,4-billion across its three major sites in the US, UK and Germany.
* In a report released by Adobe, Cyber Monday hit a new record of $6,59-billion in sales, making it the largest US online shopping day ever.
* Online sales volume on the Black Friday shopping day grew 24% year-over-year, according to data from Salesforce’s retail intelligence unit.
* According to Salesforce 42% of Black Friday orders were placed on a smartphone, and only 49% on a desktop or laptop computer. That marks the first year that computers generated less than half of all online orders.
What is apparent is that Black Friday is now a global e-commerce phenomenon and a day of massive potential for online retailers. Can you afford to miss out and have your brand name shamed? If your answer is no, then look at consulting with performance testing experts so that your business can reap the benefits.