I've been doing business online
since 1999. In that time, I've looked at several different
options for ways to sell things online, and finally,
in 2003, decided that I had wasted too much time in
doing things the old-fashioned way (having customers
call me with credit card numbers or mailing me a check),
and that I was long overdue to finally use an online
shopping cart as a way to sell products and services
online.
But, there seemed to be so many options out there.
Where should I start?
The first thing I had to do was find a merchant card
provider. Since I do little face-to-face business,
I chose a provider who deals almost exclusively with professional coaches,
consultants, and speakers, Practice Pay Solutions.,
http://www.profcs.com/app/aftrack.asp?afid=127926 I generally
advocate that you need to be processing at least $1000/month
in credit card charges to make a merchant account
financially viable for you, as you will be charged
a setup fee, a percentage per transaction fee, as
well as a monthly statement fee. Merchant Warehouse,
http://merchantwarehouse.com/,
is another option for your merchant account.
Practice Pay Solutions also provides a virtual terminal
to permit you to go in and manually enter transactions
via an online interface, as well as a secure payment
gateway, which allows your customer's credit card
data to be secure as they place orders. The other
aspect I love about Practice Pay Solutions is that
fact that I can do a batch upload of transactions.
For example, I have a number of clients who pay their
fees monthly, outside of the shopping cart system.
All I have to do is maintain their information in
an Excel spreadsheet, and update it on a monthly basis
(changing the invoice description or amount, as applicable,
for example), save it as a tab delimited file and
upload all of my charges at once. This is a wonderful
time-saving feature over manually inputting 10-15
charges each month.
After securing my merchant account, the hunt began
for a suitable shopping cart system. Several friends
tried to interest me in some open-source shopping
carts, like OS Commerce,
www.oscommerce.com or
ZenCart,http://www.zencart.com/, but I found
the learning curve too steep for these carts. I like
to be able to go in and tinker with my products and
not have to call a programmer every time I make a
change. Additionally, these carts lacked some features
that I had seen in other shopping carts. Ultimately,
I decided to go with Kickstart Shopping Cart,
http://www.kickstartcart.com/app/?pr=31&id=59401
Here are the money-making
features you'll want in a shopping cart:
1. Calculate shipping and tax. Make
sure you have several options for calculating basic
shipping, including overnight shipping.
2. Sell hard or electronic goods.
If you sell physical items that must be sent to a
consumer as well as electronic items (audio files,
ebooks), your shopping cart should be able to handle
both types of products in the same transaction. In
addition, when your cart is delivering an electronic
item, it should generate a webpage for the downloadable
file that disappears within a certain time-frame so
that the purchaser doesn't provide the download link
to 100 of his closest friends.
3. Special offer management. A full-fledged
shopping cart should be able to offer discounts for
multiple purchases, a "free when you buy 3" type of
promotion, or other similar special offers.
4. Receipt and confirmation emails.
An email confirmation of purchase to the customer
as well as a receipt for you as the business owner
to place in packages that have to be shipped are a
great convenience for both you and your customer.
5. Web-based administration page.
An online interface should be provided so that you
can log in and add products, change prices, generate
special offers, etc. from anywhere in the world.
6. Affiliate program compatible.
Instead of buying a separate piece of software to
create an affiliate program to help you sell your
goods and services, your shopping cart system should
have one that is integrated and permit you to manage
it from your web-based administration page.
7. Upsell modules. Good shopping
carts will have the ability to suggest related products
to the shopper based on what they have already purchased,
or what's already in their checkout cart.
8. Coupons and discounts. The ability
to offer coupons and discounts can mean a tremendous
boost in your sales. A good shopping card will enable
you to offer percentage and fixed discounts when selling
your products.
9. Multiple website capability. Shopping
cart systems that can handle products from a variety
of websites (various one-page sales websites you might
have, for example) will save you tons of money and
aggravation.
10. Integrated autoresponders. Sequential
autoresponders can be your best online sales tool.
Autoresponder systems can send follow-up messages
to your customers automatically to ensure they're
happy with their purchase and to tell them about special
offers and promotions you have for them. Or, you can
use the system for those who don't buy your product
and offer them an e-course, for example, that will
give them a small taste of the product you're selling.
To integrate all of the features that I mention above
using stand-alone applications could run into many
thousand dollars. I like the one-stop shopping concept,
and want my software to be a workhorse and fulfill
as many functions as it can. Let the features of your
full-fledge shopping cart regularly earn you money
in your online business!
Online Business Coach Donna Gunter helps self-employed
professionals make more profit in less time online.
To sign up for more FREE tips like these and claim
your FREE ebook, TurboCharge Your Productivity: 50
+ Tools To Help You Automate Your Business and Make
More Profit in Less Time Online!, visit her site at
http://www.OnlineBizCoachingCompany.com.
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