Building a Successful Homepage

As successful business owners know, you only get one chance to make a positive first impression with a customer. While that first impression in the off-line world may come from any number of sources, in the online world, there’s one primary source: your homepage. With some simple planning, your homepage can deliver your business message with impact. Here are six tips to guide you.

1. Make the page unique from your competitors’ homepages.
To do this, first use a search engine to find Web sites of businesses similar to yours.
· What do these homepages look like?
· What products, services and specials do your competitors’ Web sites offer?
· How can you distinguish your homepage from theirs?
· What’s unique about your company’s products or services? Make sure you display the most popular products and services and most exceptional facets of your business front and center.

2. Keep the design simple.
Don’t overload your homepage with images, colors and different sizes of text. Large graphics make your Web pages download slowly over a modem and visitors won’t wait to see what’s on a slow-loading page. Filling a page with different images, colors, and many different font combinations will confuse people who visit your Web site and make them unlikely to spend much time there.

3. Create an easy-to-navigate Web site.
Place navigation links where people expect to find them, and make sure all pages of your Web site have a consistent set of navigation links. (Using an integrated e-business service with good design templates makes this kind of decision a snap.) At the least, make sure every page in your Web site includes a link to your homepage.

4. Keep the content fresh.
To show your Web site visitors that your site is worth visiting often, update your homepage frequently-with special offers, information on new products and services, as well as changes to your business operations. Including the date your Web site was last updated at the bottom of your homepage lets visitors know that your Web site is constantly evolving. Fresh content lends credibility to your Web site.

5. Promote your business - online and offline.
List your Web site in the major search engines, and take the time to index your online business with compelling keywords that describe your business. If you use an integrated e-business service, these firms will submit your Web site to search engines for you, based on your individual business needs. Also, include your Web address on all your advertising, letterhead, business cards, brochures, shopping bags, tell your retail customers about online specials to get them to your store.

6. Connect with your customers.
Make it easy for customers to learn more about your business when they come to your homepage:
· Post your email address as a link and create a small footer on every page with information such as your business telephone #, fax #, or mailing/street address if appropriate.
· Create a sign-up box that invites people to subscribe to your mailing list so you can send email updates about your Web site to keep them coming back. With these tips and careful planning, you’ll be well on your way to creating a homepage that supports your business goals and makes a lasting impression.  
 

Building a Successful Homepage

As successful business owners know, you only get one chance to make a positive first impression with a customer. While that first impression in the off-line world may come from any number of sources, in the online world, there’s one primary source: your homepage. With some simple planning, your homepage can deliver your business message with impact. Here are six tips to guide you.

1. Make the page unique from your competitors’ homepages.
To do this, first use a search engine to find Web sites of businesses similar to yours.
· What do these homepages look like?
· What products, services and specials do your competitors’ Web sites offer?
· How can you distinguish your homepage from theirs?
· What’s unique about your company’s products or services? Make sure you display the most popular products and services and most exceptional facets of your business front and center.

2. Keep the design simple.
Don’t overload your homepage with images, colors and different sizes of text. Large graphics make your Web pages download slowly over a modem and visitors won’t wait to see what’s on a slow-loading page. Filling a page with different images, colors, and many different font combinations will confuse people who visit your Web site and make them unlikely to spend much time there.

3. Create an easy-to-navigate Web site.
Place navigation links where people expect to find them, and make sure all pages of your Web site have a consistent set of navigation links. (Using an integrated e-business service with good design templates makes this kind of decision a snap.) At the least, make sure every page in your Web site includes a link to your homepage.

4. Keep the content fresh.
To show your Web site visitors that your site is worth visiting often, update your homepage frequently-with special offers, information on new products and services, as well as changes to your business operations. Including the date your Web site was last updated at the bottom of your homepage lets visitors know that your Web site is constantly evolving. Fresh content lends credibility to your Web site.

5. Promote your business - online and offline.
List your Web site in the major search engines, and take the time to index your online business with compelling keywords that describe your business. If you use an integrated e-business service, these firms will submit your Web site to search engines for you, based on your individual business needs. Also, include your Web address on all your advertising, letterhead, business cards, brochures, shopping bags, tell your retail customers about online specials to get them to your store.

6. Connect with your customers.
Make it easy for customers to learn more about your business when they come to your homepage:
· Post your email address as a link and create a small footer on every page with information such as your business telephone #, fax #, or mailing/street address if appropriate.
· Create a sign-up box that invites people to subscribe to your mailing list so you can send email updates about your Web site to keep them coming back. With these tips and careful planning, you’ll be well on your way to creating a homepage that supports your business goals and makes a lasting impression.  
 

“The Ecommerce Tutorial”This is Lesson 4 of your 10 part course

The Internet Levels the Playing Field for Small BusinessesSmall businesses on the Internet are quickly gaining ground on large multi-national corporations and giving them quite a scare. On the Internet a small business can compete with, and even surpass, large firms. But can all businesses profit online? The best selling products online appeal to the technology savvy or a wide geographic audience. They are computer related items, specialty items difficult to locate elsewhere, or items that can be purchased less expensively over the Internet.E-Commerce Lowers Operating Costs
A business on the Internet does not require bricks and mortar or staff around the world, just a Web site and perhaps one central warehouse, garage or the like. An e-commerce (electronic commerce) website cost can vary greatly but are generally between $20 and $1000. Because business transactions are primarily handled electronically, there is no need for a large sales staff. The internet storefront also minimizes theft, damage, or breakage of the inventory.

E-Commerce Is Available Anywhere, Anytime
The audience on the Internet is global. Consumers all over the world are shopping online. When it is 1AM here, a customer in France, where it is the morning, can make a purchase. A business online is open seven days a week, 24 hours a day. Customers can shop at their convenience. The cash register is open all day and night, even while the business owner is sleeping.

E-Commerce Reinforces Customer Service
A Web site allows a business track customer’s buying trends so the business owner can market accordingly. A website automatically tracks every order placed and can be used to find out what items are good sellers, what needs to be reordered and more.

E-Commerce Develops Customer Loyalty
How often do you learn all about a business upon entering a store? How often do you walk away with a free sample? A Web site allows businesses the opportunity to give customers information about their company while offering something of value. For example a company selling t-shirt printing could provide articles on how to design a t-shirt log, a company selling kitchenware could provide free recipes, or a company selling software could provide a free trial or limited version. By reading about the history and background of a company, the customer feels they have chatted with the owner. Personalizing a company creates customer loyalty. A website is soft sell. It gives the business an opportunity to market itself while gently leading the audience to purchase its products. 

The Ecommerce Tutorial

This is the third lesson in our series “The Ecommerce Tutorial”

Is Ecommerce Right for Your Small Business?

Getting a solid handle on what’s actually a quivering mass of Jell-o requires attention to a pair of practical issues about e-commerce: what it really is and who it’s for. Only after considering these basics can you determine what your specific e-commerce strategy could or couldn’t be, or should or shouldn’t be. What follows is my attempt to break down the issues into five statements that I hope will guide your thinking.

1. In your business, e-commerce is a concept that is aligned with, if not directly related to, your presence on the Internet.
When the Internet was “new,” which I define as the time it was opened to the general public as opposed to the academic or scientific world (before Al Gore invented it, right?), everyone “had to have the Internet” to be competitive, and heck, to keep their doors opened. A lot of flutter swirled around getting on the Internet and not nearly enough around what that meant.
During this new era, I counseled many a worried business owner about what to do. At that time, the Internet was thought to be a marketing tool-no more, no less. So my counsel went like this: “The Internet is just another way to share information. It’s just another tool.”
My message, then and now, is that the Internet can enable you to sell and deliver products to your customers. If it’s the appropriate tool, then use it! If it isn’t the appropriate tool, then don’t use it.

2. E-commerce allows you to gather information from customers, while delivering a marketing-and-sales pitch through a Web site.
Although the information you gather concerns orders, you can also ask customers or clients questions about who they are, where they want products shipped and billed to, what method of shipping they would like you to use-indeed, just about any question you would like to ask! In addition, e-commerce could enable you to process credit card information on the Internet, as well as take “cyber cash” from customers.
As an information dispensing-and-gathering device, e-commerce becomes a catch-all for using the Internet to conduct business per se. It allows you not only to advertise, market, and sell, but also to keep track of accounts receivables and payables, provide technology support…you get the idea, all from a single source: your Web site.

3. E-commerce can be a fully integrated solution or a technical “front-end” to a business that otherwise isn’t wired.
Once you look at an e-commerce solution, you will need to consider the flow of information from your Web site into your back-office operations. Do you want a customer pushing a button to enter data into your client database, send shipping instructions to a warehouse, charge a credit card, enter information into your accounting system, and, for that matter, deliver a cup of coffee to your desk as you sit reading your morning paper? It’s up to you to decide how much or how little of the process you want to “go electronic.”
Regardless of your approach-full integration, partial integration or no integration-you need to understand the process from start to finish before you proceed. If you don’t understand the process up front, you run the risk of designing, redesigning, throwing out, starting over, and redesigning again, all of which is very, very expensive. The cost can range from $200 a month for a simple setup to hundreds of thousands a month, all of which is comparable to the difference between using Quicken versus an enterprise-wide accounting package.

4. The online world has as many e-commerce solutions that suit a specific need as The Body Shop has bath products. If you don’t feel you have the data to sort through and choose the best solution, you’re hardly alone!
You can lick this problem easily. Work with a knowledgeable person you trust to help you understand not just the technical issues of the e-commerce solution you’re considering, but also the business issues. Examples of such professionals include consultants for the Internet, systems integrators, and technology-savvy marketing types.

5. E-commerce is not about technology-it’s about your business. While it is tempting to think of your e-commerce solution as something “the geeks need to worry about,” don’t go there.
E-commerce is a part of how you run your business. It will be expensive to implement and should be seen as an investment. You should exercise the same care that you would use in choosing a 401K provider, suitable office space, your key personnel, or your enterprise-wide accounting package.
The e-commerce decision is one that you, the entrepreneur, have a choice in making. Do you want to conduct your day-to-day business online? If the answer is yes, then you need to work with sales, marketing, finance, tech support, customer service, information systems, network administration, support staff, and the receptionist to make sure you incorporate all pieces of a solution and inform all people about the purpose of the solution. 

Second lesson “The Ecommerce Tutorial

Choosing a Vendor To Process Your Online Transactions

To process online orders, you must offer online payment options. The most widely used form of payment currently is the credit card. Marketing studies show that you’ll lose 60 percent to 80 percent of your potential orders if your Web site is not set up to accept credit cards; they also show that if you offer credit card payment, not only will you receive more orders, but those orders will be substantially larger.

Credit cards enable impulse buying, reassure customers of your legitimacy, and simplify your billing. Other methods of collecting payment are becoming available and include charging purchases to a phone bill, using electronic funds transfers (EFT), paying by electronic check and various forms of prepayment. Each of these methods requires payment processing either in the form of software added to your Web site or by linking to a payment processing service.

Understand Merchant Accounts and Their Fees
To accept credit cards, you must establish a merchant account, a special bank account for handling the revenue (and fees) from credit card transactions. Your merchant account provider (MAP)-a bank or other institution that processes online credit card transactions-will verify the credit card, process the transaction, and deposit the results into your account, usually within two to four days.

Evaluate Alternative Online Payment Methods
Credit cards still reign as the leading method of payment for online purchases, but other payment options are available. Your product and your customers’ buying preferences will influence which payment methods you accept. In other countries, credit cards are not as pervasive, so you may want to consider offering alternatives for your international customers. Offering multiple payment options on your Web site, if you can afford it and maintain your profit margin, is a means to increase sales by increasing customer convenience and confidence. Many alternative methods are better suited to micro-payments, charges under $1, because the processing costs are often lower and credit card merchant-account fees don’t apply.

Determine The Fee Structure That Maximizes Your Profit Margin
Not every product sells the same way, and not every merchant account provider charges you the same way. Choose a provider that suits your business. Begin by considering the nature of the products you sell-are they large and expensive? Perhaps then you ought to seek a MAP that offers a higher flat-rate transaction fee and minimizes the discount rate, since even a hefty $1 transaction fee will be far lower than a 2.5 percent deduction from the charge. On the other hand, if you rely on small, high-volume sales, even a $0.30 transaction fee can erase your profits.

Specify Your Technical Requirements
Different MAPs require different “gateways” on your site. These gateways are the pieces of code that transmit your customers’ orders to and from your bank’s transaction authorizing agent. If you plan to manually process your orders, a secure Web form might be good enough to capture credit card information that you can process offline.

Evaluate Your Business’s Credit-Worthiness
MAPs, like most banks, pay close attention to the companies with which they do business. Such factors as your company’s length of time in business, outstanding debt, debt payment history, goods and services offered and even your personal history (for new businesses) will affect the fees your company pays to process credit card transactions on the Net.

Find MAPs You Can Work With
Many merchant account providers refuse accounts to start-up firms or firms and individuals with bad credit histories. Some MAPs will not accept “high-risk” accounts, a term that usually encompasses adult sites, online casinos, and sites operated by firms outside the MAP’s own nation. Others refuse to process any transactions that originate on the Internet-even from their own existing brick-and-mortar clients-or may require that you create a separate merchant account to process orders that are not taken face-to-face but are received by mail, phone, or via the Internet.

Compare Fees and Technical Capabilities
Once you’ve developed a list of merchant account providers who might offer you an account, you need to compare the different MAP offerings. Be certain to ask detailed questions about each MAP’s technical requirements, and make sure your system can work with your MAP’s gateways-the software that actually submits your customers’ credit card information for payment authorization.

Minimize Credit Card Chargebacks
Discussion about consumer credit card protection for Internet purchases has become intense. But the fact is that U.S. federal law limits a consumer’s liability for unauthorized charges to $50, whether the purchase was made face-to-face or on the Internet. No such protective legislation exists for merchants, however, and they bear the full cost of fraudulent charges as chargebacks from their banks. When a fraudulent credit card transaction takes place without the physical card being presented to the merchant, or funds are uncollectible for some other reason, merchants are charged the sale amount by the cardholder’s bank. This is known in the industry as a chargeback. Merchants may also be asked to pay penalty fees in addition to the cost of the original charge. Though it has not been as hot a topic for e-tailers, credit card chargebacks pose a serious threat to profits. To reduce revenue losses due to credit card fraud, online businesses need to take steps to reduce the risk !
 they take with every order received through their Web sites. Find out how credit card chargebacks occur and what you can do to protect yourself.

Secure All Your Transaction Data and Prevent Fraud
Credit card information is extremely sensitive, and plenty of villains are waiting to exploit any breach in your security. Additionally, online merchants are as susceptible to credit-card fraud as face-to-face retailers. Make sure your merchant account provider has addressed these issues.

Prepare for International Payment Processing
Many payment processing and merchant account providers do not accommodate international commerce. If you plan to market your product globally, you may need to search specifically for an international provider. 
 
If you need help choosing a merchant account provider to process your credit card transactions please contact me.  We offer a free analysis of your company and suggest the best merchant account providers for your situation.

This is the 1st ecommerce Tutorial

This is the first lesson in our series “The Ecommerce Tutorial”

You might think that the only reason to put your business online is to sell things but there are many other reasons why your business should go online.

1. To Establish A Online Presence
By 2004, worldwide ecommerce revenues are expected to total $2.7 trillion dollars. No matter what your business is, you can’t ignore 2.7 trillion dollars. To be a part of that community and show that you are interested in serving them, you need to be on the WWW for them. You know your competitors will.

2. To Network
A lot of what passes for business is simply nothing more than making connections with other people. Every successfull business person knows, it’s not what you know, it’s who you know. Passing out your business card is part of every meeting and every person can tell more than one story of how a chance meeting turned into the big deal. Well, what if you could pass out your business card to thousands, maybe millions of potential clients and partners, saying this is what I do and if you are ever in need of my services, this is how you can reach me. You can, 24 hours a day, inexpensively and simply, on the WWW. If you move, or get a new number you still have your virtual location where people can find you.

3. To Make Information Available
What are your hours? What do you do? How can someone contact you? What methods of payment do you take? Where are you located? What is today’s special? Next week’s promotion information? If you could keep your customer informed of every reason why they should do business with you, don’t you think you could do more business? You can on the WWW.

4. To Serve Customers
Making business information available is one of the most important ways to serve your customers. But if you look at serving the customer, you’ll find even more ways to use WWW technology. Allow your customer to search for exactly what they want without hunting through the store, they can find colors, sizes and more without the help of a sales agent, its all right there at their fingertips. All this can be done, simply, quickly and inexpensively, on the WWW.

5. To Increase Public Interest
You won’t get a national magazine to write up your local store opening, but you might get them to write up your Web Page address if it is something new and interesting. Even if Newsweek would write about your local store opening, you wouldn’t benefit from someone in a distant city reading about it, unless of course, they were coming to your town sometime soon. With Web page information, anybody anywhere who can access the Web and hears about you is a potential visitor to your Web site and a potential customer for your information there.

6. To Sell Things
Many people think that this is the number 1 thing to do with the World Wide Web, but here it is number six to make it clear you should consider selling things on the Internet and the World Wide Web after you have done all the things above and maybe even after doing quite a few more things from this list. Why? Well, the answer is complex but the best way to put it is, do you consider the telephone the best place to sell things? Probably not. You probably consider the telephone a tool that allows you to communicate with your customer, which in turn helps you sell things. Well, that’s how we think you should consider the WWW. The technology is different, of course, but before people decide to become customers, they want to know about you, what you do and what you can do for them. Which you can do easily and inexpensively on the WWW. When you are ready to sell, make sure you have the best in current Web technology without paying so much that you won’t make a profit until the next century. That’s smart business.

7. To Release Time Sensitive Information
What if your materials need to be released at a certain time? A contest winner, a special promotion, the fall coupon. Now the information can be made available at midnight or any time you specify, with all related materials such as photographs, bios, etc. released at exactly the same time. Imagine the anticipation of “All materials will be made available on our Web site at 12:01 AM”. The scoop goes to those that wait for the information to be posted, not the one who releases your information early.

8. To Make Samples Available
What if your widget is great, but people would really love it if they could see it in action? The album is great but with no airplay, nobody knows that it sounds great? A picture is worth a thousand words, but you don’t have the space for a thousand words? The WWW allows you to add sound, pictures and short movie files to your company’s info if that will serve your potential customers. No brochure will do that. You could potentially send out samples but the cost to do that would be overwhelming for a small business.

9. To Reach a Highly Desirable Demographic
The demographic of the WWW user is probably the highest mass-market demographic available. Usually college-educated or being college educated, making a high salary or soon to make a high salary, it’s no wonder that Wired magazine, the magazine of choice to the Internet community, has no problem getting Lexus and other high-end marketer’s advertising. Even with the addition of the commercial online community, the demographic will remain high for many years to come.

10. To Answer Frequently Asked Questions
Whoever answers the phones in your organization can tell you, their time is usually spent answering the same questions over and over again. These are the questions customers and potential customers want to know the answer to before they deal with you. Post them on a WWW page and you will have removed another barrier to doing business with you and free up some time for that harried phone operator or yourself.

11. To Open International Markets
You may not be able to make sense of the mail, phone and regulation systems in all your potential international markets, but with a Web page, you can open up a dialogue with international markets as easily as with the company across the street. As a matter-of-fact, before you go onto the Web, you should decide how you want to handle the international business that will come your way, because your postings are certain to bring international opportunities your way, whether it is part of your plan or not. Another added benefit; if your company has offices overseas, they can access the home offices information for the price of a local phone call. Plus, you can find markets for your products that could never reach you before at a reasonable cost.

12. To Create A 24-Hour Service
If you’ve ever remembered too late or too early to call the opposite coast, you know the hassle. We’re not all on the same schedule. Business is worldwide but your office hours aren’t. Trying to reach Asia or Europe is even more frustrating. But Web pages serve the client, customer and partner 24 hours a day, seven days a week. No overtime either. It can customize information to match needs and collect important information that will put you ahead of the competition, even before they get into the office.

13. To Keep Updated Information Available Quickly
Sometimes, information changes before it gets off the press. Now you have a pile of expensive, worthless paper. Electronic publishing changes with your needs. No paper, no ink, no printer’s bill. You can even attach your Web page to a database which customizes the page’s output to a database you can change as many times in a day as you need. No printed piece can match that flexibility. Its an instant online full color catalog that is updated in real-time.

14. To Test Market New Services And Products
Tied into the reason above, we all know the cost of rolling out a new product. Advertising, advertising, advertising, PR and advertising. Expensive, expensive, expensive. Once you have been on the Web and know what to expect from those who are seeing your page, they are the least expensive market for you to reach. They will also let you know what they think of your product faster, easier and much less expensively than any other market you may reach. For the cost of a page or two of Web programming, you can have a crystal ball into where to position your product or service in the marketplace. Amazing.

15. To Reach A Specialized Market
Sell fish tanks, art reproductions, flying lessons? You may think that the Internet is not a good place to be. Well, think again. The Internet isn’t just computer geeks anymore. With the millions of the WWW users, even the most specifically defined interest group will be represented in large numbers. Since the Web has several very good search programs, your interest group will be able to find you, or your competitors.

16. To Serve Your Local Market
We’ve talked about the power to serve the world with a Web page. How about your neighborhood? Wherever you are located there is probably enough local customers with Web access to make it worth your while to consider Web marketing. Some local restaurants even take reservations on the web or internet order! You can make the Web a cost-effective retail location no matter where your market is.

Hello world!

Welcome to My first blog. In this blog i would like to start helping people like myself that has had a very hard time with web content(design), HTML, marketing, and learning how to just change my website. Here i will start giving wou all the advise that i have received, all the articles that i have pick up. I would start out with one of the tutoriald that i have received. I’ll be adding new content every 3 days. Please fell free to comment as you like.