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Working the Web


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To eCommerce or Not to eCommerce

There are online options for everything these days, from grocery shopping to buying a car. A recent survey notes that more than 31% of Internet users now make purchases online. Knowing this, you may want to consider an e-commerce component to your Internet presence, so you can conduct business directly.

E-commerce can mean a number of different things. It can mean something as simple as listing all of your products and pricing, and supplying an online form that customers can print out and mail in, or a phone number that they can use to call in orders. Usually, however, it involves actually completing transactions online. Secure online transactions allow you to complete the entire sales cycle on the Internet, enabling your customers to make purchases 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

How E-commmerce Usually Works (the Process)

Orders are accepted and processed online while the customer waits. Then, software charges the credit card and deposits the money into your business bank account. A copy of the order is then e-mailed to your fulfillment company or warehouse, where they ship the order the next day.

Accepting Credit

It is very important to accept credit cards online if you plan to do business on the Net. If you can't, you could lose up to 60% of your potential business. You need to make it easy for customers to order. You stand to lose them if they have to get off the Web to call you, or write a check and fill out an order form. Credit cards will also give you a measure of credibility because your business will not seem like a basement operation.

How Security Works

The consumer lands on your Web site. From there, he or she decides to purchase something, and is moved to the online transaction server, where all personal information is encrypted (coded). Once the order has been placed, the information moves through a private gateway to a Processing Network, where the issuing and acquiring banks complete or deny the transaction. This can take place in under seven seconds! Some businesses even save their customers time by storing names, billing addresses, shipping addresses and credit-card information on their secure servers.

Secured Electronic Transaction (SET) provides encrypted communications for credit-card payments in a three-way transaction between the merchant, the cardholder and the bank. Visa and MasterCard developed SET in an attempt to create a standard protocol for securing online credit-card payments via the Internet. Credit-card data and a digital certificate are stored in a plug-in (a downloadable software module) to the user's Web browser. A SET-enabled merchant server receives the order and then passes encrypted payment information to the bank. The merchant receives approval electronically.

Is There a Market for My Business on the Internet?

Some businesses are more "e-commerce ready" than others. If you sell products from a catalog to users who have computers, Internet marketing can be a logical extension of your existing sales efforts. It can also help you reach prospects who are looking for businesses like yours, prospects you might never find on your own.

How Much Can I Afford to Invest in E-Commerce?

The best way to answer this question is to estimate what you'd spend to grow your business without it. Would you hire a sales representative? Would you spend more on advertising or direct mail? And would an e-commerce Web site reduce the cost of selling to existing customers? What you can and want to afford, in money as well as time, is proportionate to the benefits you see to your revenues.

Placing a site on the Web is the first big step in profiting from e-commerce. Following through with customers and providing excellent service is just as important.


What's the Hold-Up?

  • 57% of small businesses don't think that the Internet is well suited to selling their wares
  • 31% are put off by the upfront costs of site development
  • 27% cite the lack of in-house IT support
  • 14% are worried about security issues
Statistics supplied by Access Markets International (AMI) Partners, and Inc. Magazine


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Topics:
Why Should I Put My Business on the Web? small arrow
How Do I Get Started? small arrow
What Do I Put on My Web Page? small arrow
Content and Design For The Internet small arrow
To eCommerce or Not to eCommerce small arrow
Outshine Your Competitors With Great Customer Service small arrow
How Will Potential Customers Know My Web site Exists? small arrow
Pop Quiz - Small-Business Internet Marketing small arrow

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