Category Archives: eCommerce

Online Shop Checklist – Good Practice & Information for Legal Compliance

Online Shop owner checklist

1. Contact, trading and pricing details clearly displayed

2. Terms & Conditions

3. ‘Delivery and Returns’ information (in your t’s and c’s, on a special page or both)

4. Register as a controller with the Data Protection Act

5. Have a page especially for ‘Privacy and Cookies’

6. PCI compliance – use a hosted payment gateway

7. Acknowledge orders and send written confirmation (invoice)

 

Read the full article here: https://help.ekm.com/hc/en-gb/articles/204050425-Getting-your-shop-legit-7-steps-to-trading-online-legally

Read more about legal requirements for your online shop here: https://help.ekm.com/hc/en-gb/articles/204050325-Legal-Requirements-for-eCommerce-Websites

All the info you need regarding the rights as for online sales and the Consumer Rights Directive – covers returns & refunds etc: http://www.ekm.com/blog/consumer-rights-directive-what-does-it-mean-for-you/

 

 

 

Debit cards ‘first choice for online shopping’

Debit card spending by internet shoppers overtook the use of credit cards online for the first time last year, industry figures show.Debit Cards first choice for online shoppers

Online spending using a debit card hit £35bn compared with £34bn on credit cards, the UK Cards Association said.

Shoppers are also using debit cards more frequently in stores.

Each debit card holder made an average of 205 transactions with their cards last year, the data shows, an increase of 10 on the previous year.

Some 91% of the UK adult population have a debit card and 61% have a credit card.

Use of these cards has increased as more shops have accepted them, and as more stores use devices such as chip-and-pin machines.

The association predicts that spending on cards in the next 10 years will nearly double from £477bn to £840bn.

 

source BBC News

Back-to-School Shopping – Online v Traditional

According to a recent infographic from AdRoll, 44 percent of parents start their ‘back-to-school’ shopping in August with many of these parents looking toward online shopping. The infographic also reveals that online school shopping is expected to increase by 10 percent this year – meaning that 79 percent of ‘back-to-school’ shoppers are buying supplies online.

The most popular reasons why parents are turning to the Web is because it offers an easier way to shop, avoiding all the queues, the stress and the added expense of hauling their children around town – after all, theres the parking fees, the lunch, the snacks and drinks, the impulse buying and the boredom not to mention a whole day taken up running around (if not more). Parents shopping online avoid all this hassel and save money too. They are able to find discounts by quickly shopping around as well as researching products and pricing.

In order to grab some of the ‘back-to-school’ traffic, merchants must be prepared to entice customers to not only visit their online shopping destinations, but also provide them with incentives to make purchases.

So get your thinking caps on and entice those shoppers in!

Why the Smart Money is on Paypal

Of all of the titans of the Web industry right now, few have put themselves in as enviable a position as PayPal.

Apple has skyrocketing stock values and two of the hottestselling products ever made. Google and Facebook have more website visitors than most countries have citizens — not to mention all of their personal data. And Amazon has set the bar so high in e-commerce that it controls much of the movement throughout the industry.

The same was true for e-commerce pioneer eBay just a few years back, but its auction marketplace has been gradually fading into the background of the company’s operations. Enter PayPal, the online payments service purchased by eBay in 2002 — and which is rapidly becoming its most lucrative property. In fact, each of the aforementioned companies are either forging new relationships with PayPal or sweating the possibility of competing with it in the future.

In the third quarter of 2010, PayPal accounted for 37 percent of eBay’s overall revenue, compared with 23 percent five years ago. PayPal’s revenues have increased 22 percent in the last year while the revenues from eBay’s retail operations have increased by just 3 percent. With mobile payments on the verge of erupting into a multibillion dollar industry in the next few years, analysts predict that PayPal’s revenues will overtake those from eBay’s marketplace by 2014.

The good news for the rest of the commercial Web is that PayPal is a highly accessible partner for anyone who operates an online business. The company recently announced a handful of new products in the mobile and payments spaces that opportunistic Web professionals should consider:

• PayPal for Digital Goods — a micropayments solution that lets consumers pay for digital goods such as games, music and videos in as little as two clicks, without ever having to leave a publisher’s site. The new solution will be integrated by Facebook to make PayPal the social network’s new digital goods payment method, offering users the fastest, safest and most cost-effective solution for sending and receiving micropayments of under $12. Other companies signed on to use PayPal to monetize the growing opportunity in digital goods include Justin.tv, Ustream, FT.com, Autosport.com, Ooyala, Plimus and Tagged.

• Mobile Express Checkout — A mobile payments system that will initially be available on Apple’s iPhone. Mobile Express Checkout will work across apps and eventually across platforms. Merchant partners such as Starbucks have reported doubledigit sales growth on their mobile stores since adding the feature in beta testing, and PayPal says the product is easy to use for existing merchants who currently use Express Checkout on their Web stores.

• Titanium+Commerce — In partnership with Appcelerator — the makers of the cross-platform mobile development tool, Titanium — Pay- Pal launched this mobile commerce product in the beta development stage at its PayPal X Conference in the fall. It is a developer toolkit that will allow merchants to build cross-platform apps with assorted mobile commerce features that can hook directly into PayPal for payment and processing.

• Mobile Payments Library — A new functionality targeting subscription businesses that will enable preapproved, chain and split mobile payments to be processed through PayPal accounts.

• Mobile Location for iOS — A mobile app that uses geo-location technology to help users find businesses that accept PayPal for payments. The participating merchants can send consumers daily deals, coupons and other promotions through their phones. Initially, the app will have support for the iPhone, but Android and Blackberry support is forthcoming.

• T-commerce—The “T” stands for television — that’s right, television commerce. This product is under development, but the idea is to give consumers access to their digital wallets through a Buy button on their TV remote controls so that they can buy product they see on Internet-connected television. Stay tuned. As some of the most influential companies on the Web are realizing, PayPal is a partner worth having right now.

About the Author: Linc Wonham