Archive for September 2008


Where can I find freelancers who work with OsCommerce?

September 30th, 2008 — 11:54 am
oscommerce
Cisco asked:


Need some assistance with some minor modifications and configs with an OsCommerce shopping cart. Is there a site where I could find individuals who freelance and take small jobs? I contacted a few companies and they charge quite a bit and wanted to do more than what I need at this time.

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4 comments » | Programming Design

Ecommerce Shopping Cart Software

September 27th, 2008 — 06:41 am
shopping cart systems
 

Choosing the right ecommerce shopping cart software is crucial to the success of your business. The right ecommerce shopping cart software needs to have two premium qualities: customers should find it easy to make safe online transactions; owners should find it easy to install and use a wide variety of powerful features.

 

There are a number of shopping cart software solutions available in the marketplace: some are free, many are paid. While that is good news, such a wide variety of choice makes it overwhelmingly difficult for you to select the ecommerce shopping cart software that is just right for your online business.

 

Paid or free: The first point to mull over is whether you need free or paid software. Consider your budget. If your company is a fledgling that is struggling to make ends meet, you may have no choice but to go for a free shopping cart. However, before you choose a free shopping cart, take a few minutes to consider your long term goals. Today, your company may be a one-man endeavor and you may need only a simple shopping cart minus the whistles and bells, but what happens when your business grows? Shifting from free to paid solutions at a later point of time is time consuming and expensive.

 

Versatile: A good ecommerce shopping cart software consists of a pack of complete turnkey software solutions. This makes it possible for you to build a sophisticated store with an attractive storefront design and integrated back ends. Such a comprehensive ecommerce shopping cart software makes it possible for you to design an attractive website, add products at will, set up an inventory, accept payments and start making money in a matter of minutes.

 

SEO savvy: A powerful ecommerce shopping cart should have a powerful in-built search engine that will help you promote your site automatically. It will generate strategic search engine friendly page titles and catalogs. Search engine optimization strategies like building a well defined sitemap, generation of title and meta tags and forming of search engine friendly links are all taken care of automatically.

 

Customizability: A robust ecommerce shopping cart software must allow you to customize your pages at will, even though you have no knowledge of web design or coding. Point and click – that is all you should have to do. It should allow you to choose any delivery

mechanism from a number of friendly options and it must extend sufficient support to whichever system you choose. It should also provide additional products and third party integration software so you can enhance the shopping experience you offer.

 

Support: Most important of all, always select a company that offers you excellent customer service. Check whether the ecommerce hosting company you choose extends support in the guise of forums, support tickets, easy to use guides and tutorials. When you’re just starting out, you’ll need all the help you can get.

 

Ease, powerful features, friendly support and watertight security should be your main concerns when you go shopping for the best ecommerce shopping cart software. A good shopping cart software solution is one which offers a plethora of useful features at a desirable cost.

 



By: lexiemarine

About the Author:

Pinnacle Cart is a custom Ecommerce shopping cart software and web site builder application that allows you to create, manage and effectively market your store online.



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Comment » | Software

What is a good web host with a user-friendly ecommerce solution?

September 25th, 2008 — 12:45 pm
ecommerce
stevemdfwtx asked:


Looking for a web host that provides a solid, user-friendly shopping cart that can be integrated with Paypal and is not buggy. Which web hosts do you like for ecommerce? Thanks for your help!

P.S. Experienced web developer looking for a new host for my personal web site after using the same company for many years. Just looking to find out which ecommerce hosts people like these days. Thanks!

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5 comments » | Programming Design

I need to build my own website with a shopping cart. What is a good company that is low in cost and technical

September 24th, 2008 — 01:02 pm
shopping cart systems
marmstrong1877 asked:


issues…I need like a point and click system to build my website and it needs to offer a built in shopping cart/system. I currently use www.eventwebsitebuilder.com but they have poor customer service and they use frames which make it hard for the search engines to pick up your site.

Thanks!

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6 comments » | Search Engine Optimization

Finding the Right Company to Do your Oscommerce Search Engine Optimisation

September 19th, 2008 — 08:49 am
oscommerce
When installing osCommerce on your website, there are a few things to keep in mind, the most important being the ability of your shopping cart and website to be found on the internet and thus gain traffic and potential customers.

To ensure your site ranks as high as possible on major search engines like Google, Yahoo and MSN, there are a number of things to keep in mind, and that is why this task is often outsourced to another company.

The right search engine optimisation company can make all the difference in the ease with which the major search engines find and list your website and products in their results. They can help you produce strong, effective optimised content to market your products and create an entire website focused on one thing: getting you customers and business.

However, all search engine optimisation companies are not created equal, so take your time and read through their websites, call them and ask the right questions; take the time to do it right and you’ll be well on your way to finding a company that fits your particular needs. Here are some general things to remember when looking for a good osCommerce SEO firm:

First and most important, the company should specialize in promoting and creating sites built on an osCommerce platform. This is key and should be determined before anything else.

Second, they should be able to tell you how they are going to be optimising your sites, such as which keywords to use in your content, fix your title and meta tags, etc.

Third, they should be reputable. This doesn’t man big or necessarily well-known; it means that when you Google their name nothing bad comes up.

Fourth, make sure the company has references and a portfolio that backs up their services. If the company is lacking in either one, take it as a warning sign and move on.

If you take the simple steps outlined above, you’ll be on the right path to finding an osCommerce search engine optimisation company who will work with you to provide the best possible solution for your website and its continued online presence.

To find out more information about Oscommerce Search Engine Optmisation please

visit visit http://www.bluesock.com /.



By: Kausik Dutta

About the Author:

To find out more information about Oscommerce Search Engine Optmisation please
visit visit http://www.bluesock.com /.



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Comment » | Seo

I am looking for an easy shopping cart system that I can integrate into my website. Any suggestions?

September 18th, 2008 — 05:33 pm
shopping cart systems
bodo1182 asked:


I am looking for an easy shopping cart system that I can integrate into my website.
The Website is conventional HTML, PHP and Javascirpt but nothing special. Is there an easy (and maybe free) shopping cart that I can integrate into my shop? I am not looking for a whole online shop solution like OSCommerce, just the shopping cart.

I appreciate the help. Thank you!

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2 comments » | Programming Design

What Ecommerce sales-tax rate do I charge buyers if I have a retail store in Maui, but drop-ship from Oregon?

September 18th, 2008 — 11:31 am
ecommerce
Shanook asked:


I am starting an ecommerce store, and I own a physical retail store associated with it in Maui, but the ecommerce goods will be warehoused drop-shipped from Oregon. What sales tax rate do I charge to buyers, and does it differ based on what state the buyer is located in? Hawaii sales tax is 4.166% and Oregon does not have sales tax.

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3 comments » | United States

You and your Shopping Cart

September 17th, 2008 — 04:49 am
shopping cart systems
The last time I spoke of ecommerce, I believe I was complaining about how I may (may) have had my credit card info compromised. To this day I’m uncertain of how it happened, or what, exactly, even happened. Just that there was that nagging little unknown five bucks on the statement, and, well, better safe than sorry. No further issues have occurred, but it’s always enjoyable to sit back and take a moment to peruse the old online statement with some regularity.

Especially nice are the “Oh, wait, I really did buy that” moments such reviews engender.

My spotty purchasing record is not the subject of this blog, though perhaps it might be far more entertaining if it was. No, we’re going to revisit the world of ecommerce, however briefly, to commemorate of recent addition of a new MIVA product to the Apollo family.

Some Advice on Carting Things Around

Lift with your knees, not your back. Wait… shopping carts, right. Well, I have covered some of the territory here in an article or two on our articles site. I’ll try to pretend to be a little more entertaining here in terms of presentation.

Picking Your Poison and Sticking With It. Quite possibly the most important step is the actual choice of shopping cart. Picking your cart is important primarily because, though not impossible, it is no simple task to change, especially for larger stores. Those lucky folks with two or three products have a unique luxury in being able to bounce around from cart to cart if they desire. Their set-up time will always be pretty small. Get up to 30, 50, 100, 1000 products… and you’ve got quite a lot time on your hands if you suddenly decide a shopping cart “isn’t right for you.”

Keeping A Skeleton Key In Your Back Pocket. So, you have a big catalog and want to minimize the risk if you need to change your cart? One method, that will require a little extra work (of course), is keeping a platform independent backup of your catalog. Basic stuff, like CSV files, can be imported into a variety of shopping cart programs, even vastly different ones. Some shopping carts can export to these simple formats, so perhaps you won’t have to maintain a separate copy of your catalog manually. Still, it’s worth the additional effort even if you do, as this is one of those all too common “you may regret it if you don’t” kind of things.

Basically, keeping some updated, backed-up CSV files handy will make any transition safer and easier. Most modern carts have some sort of product import capability, and more often than not, they’ll support CSVs.

Substance Over Style. What else to consider? Looks are important, but don’t leap at the first pretty face you see. Though there is certainly something to be said for having an “attractive” store, there’s a fair amount “leeway” between something so bad that people leave, and something that’s acceptable but won’t win any Internet beauty pageants.

The bottom line is people will abandon carts more often for usability issues than purely aesthetic concerns. If your cart is hard to use, you’ll lose more customers than if your cart is just “plain looking.” Someone who has already been motivated to buy will not care what color the screen is, just that he can move smoothly and clearly from “add to cart” to “submit order”. Always consider how the cart handles as your primary concern, over and above simple aesthetics.

Building the Perfect List. Customers have to use the cart, but so do you, and you’ll be using it a lot more than they will. Don’t tackle something that’s too big or too complex to start off with. If you absolutely have to have a powerful, feature-packed cart, then give yourself time to learn the basics. Since your store is a source, if not your primary source, of income, this isn’t something to leave to chance or to trust with “on-the-job” training.

Create a list of what you absolutely need to have the shopping cart do and make your choices from there. Be thorough but don’t overreach. The list should have only what you need to get your products online and allow people to order them. Expand the list to include where you want to go, and make sure the cart you choose will serve you now and in the future. Again, the idea is to minimize the chance you’ll have to move to a different shopping cart solution entirely. This goes back to that “it’s a real pain in the butt” thing to which I alluded earlier.

Finally: Get Online. Hosting considerations for your cart are just as complex as picking one in the first place. Obviously you’ll need to find a host that offers the cart you want (and we have many fine choices, of course), but you’ll need to carefully consider how much power your store will need. This may be difficult to really pin down, especially if the store is brand-new, but a basic rule of thumb will be “more products, more power.”

Pretty much all shopping carts are databases. Whether they use their own proprietary database format, or one of the many open source ones, these databases require server interactivity to build the catalog and product pages whenever a customer starts browsing. Storefront pages essentially require more “effort” on the part of the server to display than do regular, static HTML pages.

The bigger the database the server has to sift through to provide the right information, the more power is needed in order to keep everything running along at a decent rate. Factor this in with popularity (more people browsing at the same time), and you may end up needing some serious power.

That about covers the basics. Selling online, like most things, online, takes a little preparation. If you’re willing to do the required prep work, think about what you need, and make good choices, it will be a lot easier than just jumping with fingers crossed.



By: Zoviet

About the Author:



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Comment » | Software

What is the best epayment solution for an international ecommerce website?

September 16th, 2008 — 04:02 pm
ecommerce
quest1 asked:


What would be the best epayment solution for an international ecommerce website?
An international Visa, Mastercard, AmEx card would be great, but most US or European customers they only have credit/debit cards issued by local banks only.
Also, I have heard about draconian monopolist practices taken by PayPal towards international sellers, including freezing of funds for several months, very bad customer services, etc.
Please tell us about your genuine experience. Many Thanks

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1 comment » | Other - Business Finance

Decreased Abandoned Shopping Carts, Increase Sales

September 12th, 2008 — 05:44 pm
shopping cart systems
The virtual market has arrived and with the growing number of online stores, it seems like the trend is here to stay. Unlike real time stores, one does not need to invest heavily in virtual stores, and so even small business owners find the deal lucrative. Virtual stores are easy to create and manage, which has added immensely to their popularity. Depending upon the investment that a business owner would like to make, both in terms of time and money, one can create a virtual store for the business.

The convenience that these virtual stores offer to the online shopper cannot be matched by real time stores. The ease of begin able to compare several different manufacturers of a product and then purchase it online, along with having it delivered to your door step is indeed  magnetic. While initially buyers were skeptical of products that they saw online and not in reality, over the years, online dealers have established a gold reputation for themselves, which has added to an increase in online shoppers. Most online stores offer money back guarantees, much like real time stores, which takes away the fear of being cheated from the prospects mind. Almost all commercial ventures today understand the growing importance of E commerce, and virtual stores are the gateway of commercial activities on the internet.

Though having concluded that virtual stores are convenient to both the seller and the buyer, it is a know fact that simply setting up a virtual store is not the answer to increasing online sales. In fact, despite adopting extremely sophisticated advertising and quality products, it is a fact that for every online transaction that is completed, almost four times as many are deserted. Apparently putting up several payment gateways and adopting highly developed shopping cart software does not seem to seal the deal either. These techniques work at only drawing the prospects attention and moving towards a possible sale. However, despite these efforts, it has been estimated that on an average 75% of shopping carts are abandoned before the deal can be closed. It is no wonder then that abandoned shopping carts are considered the biggest ‘bane of ecommerce’. 

An abandoned shopping cart is an incomplete transaction, which the prospect deserts before the final deal is sealed. Since the ultimate goal of all E commerce activity is sales, of course a conversion left half way is extremely damaging to the business. Businesses that operate online spend huge sums of money to setup a commercially viable virtual stores and are then aghast at the large number of abandoned shopping carts. Therefore, one can safely conclude that as important as setting up a virtual store, is decreasing abandoned shopping carts so that the sales maybe increased.

The solution comes in a two phase package. First is, understanding the reason why the percentage of abandoned shopping carts is so high, and the second phase is ensuring that these hurdles and problems are done away with.

Reasons for shopping cart abandonment:-

1) Shipping cost – Over 72% of prospects who leave the deal half way through, do so due to the high shipping cost that the site charges. The advantage of shopping in the convenience of ones home is definitely attractive to the customer, but is marred by high cost of delivery. Also since shipping charges are as a rule not refundable, prospects are deterred from closing the deal.

2) Competition comparisons – One of the major attractions of online shopping is begin able to easily compare several manufacturers of similar products, so as to choose the most feasible deal. It has been observed that 61% prospects move on to greener pastures and abandon their shopping carts midway, when they find that the competition has more to offer.

3) Second thoughts- While initially taken in by the product and its cost, at the time of final payment, 51% of online shoppers abandon the shopping cart due to second thoughts. Wanting to think over the deal a little more, these prospects are likely to simply abandon the shopping cart and maybe come back later for the purchase. It is also a fact that 96% of browsers never return to a site even if they did buy something from that site.

4) Decide otherwise- While second thoughts do leave some room for a comeback, there are 56% prospects that choose items but give up the idea of buying them completely while going through the process of the ultimate purchase. They may decide that the item is not required or not as attractive that they had thought before.

5) Collective cost of products – While shopping, prospects tend to pick up several products and dump them in their shopping carts. On finally viewing the total cost of these products, 43% find them too high and therefore completely abandon the shopping cart that they had selected rather than go through the items again.

6) Length of check out process- 41% buyers abandon shopping carts because they find that the time required for the final check out is too lengthy. Irritated by the time that the check out process is taking, these buyers despite being committed to the deal simply abandon the shopping cart and move on.

7) Personal information for check out process- There are several website that seem to go on and on asking the prospect to give their personal information for the final deal to go through. Irritated by this, 35 % buyers tend to leave the cart and move away from the final transaction.

8) Registration process- There are several sites who have a pre requisite to register before the final buying process can be undertaken. 34% buyers decide that they would rather abandon the shopping cart than register for the site. 

9) Complicated check out process- Confused by complicated check out process 27% buyers decide to give up buying the product(s) online rather than try and figure out how the system works.

10) Reliability of the site- Cautious about the site’s authenticity and reliability, 31% buyers decide to not go through with the deal despite having started it. The fear of begin cheated online is much more than being cheated in the real world, since it is much easier to disappear in the virtual world.

Having nailed most of the reasons for abandoned shopping carts, the next phase involves finding solutions for these problems.

Solutions for shopping cart abandonment:-

1) Quick downloads- It is crucial for the sale to meet its final transaction that the web page does not take too long to download. On an average the shopper will not give your site more than 10 seconds to download. It is therefore important that the web page is not filled with images and that the graphics if any, are compressed for easy downloads.

2) Easy navigation – If the buyer wanted to solve a jig saw puzzle, a games site is what he/she would be visiting. Keep navigation and links of the website clear and simple. Golden rules like a right hand index, links to the buy tab and home page on all sub pages and pastels backgrounds should never be overlooked. Over decades people have come to expect certain tabs at certain spots on a website and not finding them there, tends to make the prospect move on.

3) Short sale routine – There are many sites that go on forcing a sales pitch on the prospect despite the customer already begin sold to the idea. Allow the client to buy the product as soon as he/she is convinced. Close the deal quickly, so as to not allow time to the prospect to rethink. For this it is important that the journey between the sales pitch and the payment gateway be as short as possible.

4) Lay down facts – Do not allow grey area to creep into your sales pitch. State the facts about the product in clear black and white terms. The price, the shipping cost, the availability and other such facts must be laid down in simple and clear terms to the prospect, so that it does not come as a shock later.

5) Offer attractions – If you find that the customer is leaving the site without purchasing what was placed in the shopping cart, step in with an attractive offer, which may be introduced via a pop up window. This works very well in cases where the prospect is half sold to the idea and just needs a bit more cajoling to undertake the final transaction.

6) Avoid distractions – Do not place banner ads or other similar distractions on your shopping cart. While the prospect is having a look at the product(s) you do not want to distract him/her. It is therefore very important that you do not fall into the trap of allowing other sites to take your prospect away by letting a small blinking advertisement break the shopper’s concentration.

While there are several other tips that help increase conversion rates for commercial websites, the basic essence of each trick is to add to the shopping experience of the customer. It is imperative that problems and solutions both be figured out from the client’s point of view. Be it a real time store or a virtual one, the customer is the final and most crucial link of the sales process and therefore must be kept happy at all given times.



By: Justin Pinkus

About the Author:

President, Creative and Marketing Director of a full service creative design, web and business marketing company:

Mantic Business Brand Solutions
www.manticbbs.com



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Comment » | Ecommerce

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