Melançon Enterprises  Publish > Academic > Computer Ordering Online > SEC Custom Computers

SEC Custom Computers

www.seccomputer.com

2 clicks to start the buying process.

Selection / Customization process

Product Clarity: Moderate.  In one sense you know exactly what you are getting, sometimes including the brand name of the component, but the title of the component is all you get— sometimes with abbreviations customers may not understand.  There is no further information.  Not everyone knows what a KDS XF7 (17) monitor is.

Price Clarity: Low.  The price of the total system is clear, and instantly updated, but the components aren’t priced individually at all.  The total price changes for different processors, but won’t change at all when some other significant options are changed.

Speed: Fast.  No processing time needed.

Range / Power: Moderate.  Choice of 10 CPUs (1.07 GHz to 3.06 GHz), 3 levels of memory (126 MB to 256), and 4 hard drives (40 to 120 GB) is about average or maybe a little below; more (6) options for video card than most other places; but few choices for monitor or operating system and none for mouse and software.

At SEC one could start the buying process in two clicks, despite an animated applet (with sound) that downloaded on the first page.  Clicking on this applet brings one to another applet offering the choice of Budget or Premium systems.  It isn’t clear what need there is for this separation, as the main difference is processor speed, and the two lists of processor speed could be The presentation of each was identical.

There was no pricing information with the components themselves that one chose to put into the computer.  Although the total price was instantly updated at the lower right-hand corner of the page, this was not necessarily on the user’s screen.  More important, even if the updated price were obvious and prominent, it is an awkward way to compare the prices between, say, alternate CD drives.

Arranged in a simple table grid, 3 columns and 6 rows, with a dropdown list of the options under each category.  It is a lot more overwhelming on their page than as presented here:

CPU Memory Network Card
Monitor Video Card Hard Drive
Floppy Drive CD-ROM Sound Card
Modem Case Keyboard
Mouse OS System CD Software Bundle
Printers Other Options Total Price

This overwhelming presentation of the options was not necessary for the range they actually offered.  The depth for some components was so shallow so as to make the real range far smaller than their apparent range.  A number of their drop-down lists, such as for Sound Card, for Case, and for Keyboard, had only one “option”— not even the choice of, for instance, ‘no keyboard.’

The SEC Custom Computers site also displayed the typical problem with the dropdown lists format.  Under “Other Options” were five drop-down lists of the same seven accessories.

When you pick out the components for your system, it is not a direct sale, nor even a final price.  “All prices subject to change without notice.”  From the company’s point of view, the main problem here is that no payment information is collected either.

Problems

Good Features

Created 2003 January 23 ,,, Updated 2003 March 13