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Atricle Dump - Shopping Cart Web Sites: 13 Ways to Evaluate an E-Commerce Provider
Honesty and Integrity in Your New Hire - and How to Identify It see if you can find the site. Try this several times with a few sites- if you can't find any results, chances are no one will find your site either.Is honesty and integrity important to you in a new hire? If so, how do you identify this in your job applicants?Zeroing in on seeming weaknesses in the resume, then asking pointed questions about them at the interview?That might work, but only if your potential employee doesn’t understand the interview “game.” With more and more job seekers either taking courses in both resume writing and interview skills, this strategy is becoming less and less likely to work. The whole focus of interview courses is how to overcome shortcomings at your interview.Perhaps you expect to hear the answer to the honesty question from your applicant’s references?You probably won’t. References are becoming more and more useless and employers become very wary as to what they say about previous employees. Unless your applica Evaluate Features Offered and Costs 6. Look carefully at what features will cost more. Most ecommerce providers offer a base set of features for a low setup cost. In some cases, that is all you will need. You should look carefully at what features will increase the price in order to avoid sticker shock after you get started. 7. Find out what's included in the setup cost. For many providers, you do most of the work of creating your web site. Consider how much you will have to do yourself and how much will be ready to go. Try to place a dollar value on Team Development in the Little Leagues There are hundreds of vendors that provide eCommerce and shopping cart solutions on the internet. Trying to figure out which one offers what you need can seem more like a roll of the dice than an educated decision.A grassy field, two nets, a soccer ball and some playful youth is the ideal setting for a little league soccer game. You may have recalled yourself of a time when you observed these little league events. You enter a spacious field of green, housing numerous miniature soccer fields all lined up next to each other, and young athletes running after a ball. You may have been more overwhelmed by the abundance of children playing, rather than the actual soccer game itself. But what you can appreciate from this is the sight of children utilizing their endless energy and their parents and relatives rooting for them from the sidelines.I attended my young nephew’s soccer game and was amused by the organization of the event. The parents of both teams were the main figures of managing the game as being the referees, coaches, and fans. His t If you're like most people, when looking for an eCommerce solution, you'll go to your favorite search engine and enter terms like: "ecommerce website", "ecommerce web site developer" or "shopping cart web site". You'll find a long list of providers that make plenty of claims indicating their solution is the best one for you. But how can you really tell? You'll find 13 techniques to help you make a decision in this article. Evaluate Real Web Sites 1. Look at sample sites that use the solution you are considering. Visit actual sites that use the software, not just demo sites. If you can't find any real sites, move on. How can you trust a provider who won't show you the product in action? Don't just look at the visual design, but visit the site and click around. I recommend adding items to your cart and starting the checkout process. In many cases you will find shopping is cumbersome, the checkout process is tedious, or there are actually errors on the site. 2. Pay attention to the visual design of the sites. Do the sites look good? Do they use a template that is the same from one site to the next? If you like what you see, add this provider to your 'hot list', but you'll need to ask the provider about web site design costs and who provided the designs you like before you sign up. 3. Do not use a shopping cart that requires the shopper to sign up for an account before they can buy. Requiring a shopper to sign up for an account is a barrier that will reduce your conversion rates. Do not use a cart that doesn't show shipping charges until the end of the checkout process. Shoppers want to know how much shipping will add to the cost of their order and many will abandon their cart if they need to enter personal information just to find out. Evaluate Search Engine Placement 4. Check the google page rank on some of the sites in the providers portfolio. You can find out by visiting this web site: Google Page Rank Checker. Enter the home page url (for example: http://www.thesite.com) of the site you want to check. If the page rank of the home page is not at least 3 or 4, you'll probably want to look elsewhere. Sites with a pagerank of 0 are new and have not been ranked by Google yet. 5. Pick a few sites that use the software you are considering and try to find them in Google, Yahoo, and MSN. If you can't find them, it's not a good sign. I recommend clicking to a product page on the site. Choose a 3 word phrase that you think represents what is found on the page. Your phrase should include words that are on the page you are viewing. Enter that phrase in a search engine and see if you can find the site. Try this several times with a few sites- if you can't find any results, chances are no one will find your site either. Evaluate Features Offered and Costs 6. Look carefully at what features will cost more. Most ecommerce providers offer a base set of features for a low setup cost. In some cases, that is all you will need. You should look carefully at what features will increase the price in order to avoid sticker shock after you get started. 7. Find out what's included in the setup cost. For many providers, you do most of the work of creating your web site. Consider how much you will have to do yourself and how much will be ready to go. Try to place a dollar value on 10 Mindsets Web Entrepreneurs Must Have To Succeed u are considering. Visit actual sites that use the software, not just demo sites. If you can't find any real sites, move on. How can you trust a provider who won't show you the product in action? Don't just look at the visual design, but visit the site and click around. I recommend adding items to your cart and starting the checkout process. In many cases you will find shopping is cumbersome, the checkout process is tedious, or there are actually errors on the site.Entrepreneurship is a dynamic process of creating incremental wealth. Entrepreneurs willingly take part in the process of creating something new that has value by devoting time and effort and assuming the financial, psychic, and social risks. Luckily, we, as entrepreneurs, also receive the resulting rewards of independence, monetary profits from our endeavors, and the personal satisfaction of creating something viable.As the president and founder of the Association of Web Entrepreneurs and the National Association of Women Writers, I have had the pleasure of networking with, collaborating with, and learning from web entrepreneurs on a daily basis for the last six years. It has been an ever-changing, exciting, and passionate journey!My journey helped me discover 10 mindsets I believe every entrepreneur must 2. Pay attention to the visual design of the sites. Do the sites look good? Do they use a template that is the same from one site to the next? If you like what you see, add this provider to your 'hot list', but you'll need to ask the provider about web site design costs and who provided the designs you like before you sign up. 3. Do not use a shopping cart that requires the shopper to sign up for an account before they can buy. Requiring a shopper to sign up for an account is a barrier that will reduce your conversion rates. Do not use a cart that doesn't show shipping charges until the end of the checkout process. Shoppers want to know how much shipping will add to the cost of their order and many will abandon their cart if they need to enter personal information just to find out. Evaluate Search Engine Placement 4. Check the google page rank on some of the sites in the providers portfolio. You can find out by visiting this web site: Google Page Rank Checker. Enter the home page url (for example: http://www.thesite.com) of the site you want to check. If the page rank of the home page is not at least 3 or 4, you'll probably want to look elsewhere. Sites with a pagerank of 0 are new and have not been ranked by Google yet. 5. Pick a few sites that use the software you are considering and try to find them in Google, Yahoo, and MSN. If you can't find them, it's not a good sign. I recommend clicking to a product page on the site. Choose a 3 word phrase that you think represents what is found on the page. Your phrase should include words that are on the page you are viewing. Enter that phrase in a search engine and see if you can find the site. Try this several times with a few sites- if you can't find any results, chances are no one will find your site either. Evaluate Features Offered and Costs 6. Look carefully at what features will cost more. Most ecommerce providers offer a base set of features for a low setup cost. In some cases, that is all you will need. You should look carefully at what features will increase the price in order to avoid sticker shock after you get started. 7. Find out what's included in the setup cost. For many providers, you do most of the work of creating your web site. Consider how much you will have to do yourself and how much will be ready to go. Try to place a dollar value on The Effect Of A Good Business Card Design Part I sts and who provided the designs you like before you sign up.A good design is mandatory when creating a business card. This article will help you formulate an attractive card.The minimum amount of work necessary to create an effective business card: one that not only clearly shows your contacts how to get in touch with you, but also gives them some incentive to do so by giving them a sense of what your business is all about. The next factor in creating an effective business card--literally, designing for effect--is the icing on the cake baked by the first two factors. You already have a business card that does an adequate job. What designing for effect gives you, however, is a business card that does a superlative job--one that not only gives your clients an incentive to contact you, but one that makes them remember you, appreciate you, and above all makes them likely to contact you before 3. Do not use a shopping cart that requires the shopper to sign up for an account before they can buy. Requiring a shopper to sign up for an account is a barrier that will reduce your conversion rates. Do not use a cart that doesn't show shipping charges until the end of the checkout process. Shoppers want to know how much shipping will add to the cost of their order and many will abandon their cart if they need to enter personal information just to find out. Evaluate Search Engine Placement 4. Check the google page rank on some of the sites in the providers portfolio. You can find out by visiting this web site: Google Page Rank Checker. Enter the home page url (for example: http://www.thesite.com) of the site you want to check. If the page rank of the home page is not at least 3 or 4, you'll probably want to look elsewhere. Sites with a pagerank of 0 are new and have not been ranked by Google yet. 5. Pick a few sites that use the software you are considering and try to find them in Google, Yahoo, and MSN. If you can't find them, it's not a good sign. I recommend clicking to a product page on the site. Choose a 3 word phrase that you think represents what is found on the page. Your phrase should include words that are on the page you are viewing. Enter that phrase in a search engine and see if you can find the site. Try this several times with a few sites- if you can't find any results, chances are no one will find your site either. Evaluate Features Offered and Costs 6. Look carefully at what features will cost more. Most ecommerce providers offer a base set of features for a low setup cost. In some cases, that is all you will need. You should look carefully at what features will increase the price in order to avoid sticker shock after you get started. 7. Find out what's included in the setup cost. For many providers, you do most of the work of creating your web site. Consider how much you will have to do yourself and how much will be ready to go. Try to place a dollar value on An Introductino to Insurance Lead Generation f = "http://www.prchecker.info/check_page_rank.php">Google Page Rank Checker. Enter the home page url (for example: http://www.thesite.com) of the site you want to check. If the page rank of the home page is not at least 3 or 4, you'll probably want to look elsewhere. Sites with a pagerank of 0 are new and have not been ranked by Google yet.It is vital that insurance salespeople have a steady stream of leads. Often, people don’t even know about a particular type on insurance and it is up to a salesperson to explain it to them. The salespeople must have good leads in order to know who may be more open to purchasing certain types of insurance.Insurance lead generation is done in a couple of ways. One common strategy is the use of a list service. A list compiling company generates the leads by gathering extensive information on people and then selling either the entire list or individual leads to the insurance salesperson. Insurance companies also offer free quotes in order to create awareness and interest in their services. Of course, advertising is another insurance lead generation technique.List compiling services sell their lists to insurance companies. T 5. Pick a few sites that use the software you are considering and try to find them in Google, Yahoo, and MSN. If you can't find them, it's not a good sign. I recommend clicking to a product page on the site. Choose a 3 word phrase that you think represents what is found on the page. Your phrase should include words that are on the page you are viewing. Enter that phrase in a search engine and see if you can find the site. Try this several times with a few sites- if you can't find any results, chances are no one will find your site either. Evaluate Features Offered and Costs 6. Look carefully at what features will cost more. Most ecommerce providers offer a base set of features for a low setup cost. In some cases, that is all you will need. You should look carefully at what features will increase the price in order to avoid sticker shock after you get started. 7. Find out what's included in the setup cost. For many providers, you do most of the work of creating your web site. Consider how much you will have to do yourself and how much will be ready to go. Try to place a dollar value on Project Management: History and Evolution see if you can find the site. Try this several times with a few sites- if you can't find any results, chances are no one will find your site either.Project management, as we know it at present began to stretch its branches only a few decades ago, yet it was mounting around civilization from the beginning of history.With an objective of maximum productivity with minimum participation, and to breed imagination into realism, human need for an optimal management system that can trigger workforce efficiency to yield product, that is predetermined and objectified was outlining a management system within the growth of human perception though out its evolution.This stream of development in its respective path also had marked its course from its source, and events in its voyages were observed and registered in the pages of history.Turning these pages, today we witness a simple endeavor to illustrate and analyze tasks through simple bar charts cultivated seed yesterda Evaluate Features Offered and Costs 6. Look carefully at what features will cost more. Most ecommerce providers offer a base set of features for a low setup cost. In some cases, that is all you will need. You should look carefully at what features will increase the price in order to avoid sticker shock after you get started. 7. Find out what's included in the setup cost. For many providers, you do most of the work of creating your web site. Consider how much you will have to do yourself and how much will be ready to go. Try to place a dollar value on your time. 8. Are merchandising tools available or included? Are features such as free shipping offers, featured products, sale items, customer testimonials, email newsletter signup, and email this page to a friend available? All of these tools increase the selling power of your site. 9. Try out the administration tool. There are a world of solutions out there, from simple 'buy now' buttons you add to your existing site which require a moderate level of technical knowledge, to complete site management tools that let you control just about everything on your web site with little technical knowledge. The solution that is right for you depends on your needs, your time, your budget, and your expertise. If you don't understand the steps required to use the software, you should continue your search. 10. Does the solution allow you to easily create additional pages? Does the solution allow/provide that each of your products has it's own web page? This key feature will pay big dividends in the long run. More pages means the search engines will index more pages and that means more chances for shoppers to land on your pages when they are searching for your products. Evaluate Customer Service 12. Get references. Contact a few current customers and ask if they are happy. Be specific. Do they get good service? Do they feel they are getting a good value? Do they get sales? You can't lay all the blame for a site with low sales on the ecommerce provider, but hearing from current customers that they do get sales is a positive indicator. 13. Pick up the phone and call the provider. Are you connected with a knowledgeable sales rep? If you end up in a phone queue, try choosing the selection for existing customer tech support. Are you connected to a tech support person? How long do you have to hold? Use this guide to develop a list of questions for the provider. Making an informed decision when choosing a solution for your ecommerce web site can make or break your online success. Evaluating the options will take some time, but the investment in reviewing your options carefully will be well worth it as your online business develops. This is an original article written by Staci Schipporeit of Datahost. Datahost is the maker of the MightyMerchant eCommerce Solution. Copyright 2005 Data
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