Woocommerce Customer Profiles
See all your customers both registered and guest inside of woocommerce, no more messy user profiles. Easily search for a customer by name or email and see all their details, order history, lifetime value. This plugin is an add-on to woocommerce and there for requires you to have the woocommerce plugin installed.
THIS PLUGIN IS CURRENTLY IN BETA
WooCustomer Features
See Guest Customers & Registered Customers
Full Customer Details
All Order History
Customer Search
Lifetime Value
Number of purchases
Last purchase date
螢幕擷圖
See a list of all your customers. sort them and search for customers by name or email address.
Get all the information about a customer in one place.
See all there order history with itemised list of what they ordered and a link to view the order
Upload woocustomers to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory
Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress
View your new customers profiles in Woocommerce > Customers
常見問題集
do i need to have woocommerce installed?
Yes. you must have woocommerce installed for this plugin to work as it is an extension of woocommerce. you can download it here. https://wordpress.org/plugins/woocommerce/
where do i find my customer profiles?
In the wordpress admin panel, navigate to the woocommerce tab and you will see a new sub navigation item called customers. this is where you can view all your customer profiles
I'd be willing to pay for this plug-in but some big deficiencies need to be addressed:
1. Whenever the regenerate button is hit, all transactions are given the current date, and the actual transaction date is lost on main page. The transaction date can be found in each customer file, but the overall database can no longer be sorted by date
2. Sorting of customers by number of orders works only on individual pages, not the entire database. For example, our customer list is currently 41 pages long in WooCustomer; each of the pages sorts the customers by # of orders separately, but we cannot list all customers sorted by # of orders. Thus the only way to find the customer with the highest # of orders would be to scroll through each page separately.
I'm running this on Wordpress 4.4.1 and Woocommerce 2.4.7 on our live site and 4.4.2 / 2.5.5 on out test site; same problems in both.