|
No
other aspect of e-business has garnered more attention than
e-commerce. After all, consumers spent
$8 billion online in 1998, and that figure is expected to
grow to roughly $130 billion in the next four years.
But that's just the beginning.
According
to Business Week, "e-commerce between businesses is five
times as much as consumer e-commerce, or about $43 billion
last year. And by 2003, Forrester Research predicts that e-commerce
between businesses will balloon to $1.3 trillion. Your
business needs to take advantage of this trend. E-commerce
is about much more than simply opening up a new, online sales
channel.
It's
about using technology to streamline your business model,
creating savings and increasing efficiency. It's about lowering
costs and establishing closer, more responsive relationships
with your customers, suppliers and partners.
The bottom line? While building
customer loyalty, companies can reduce costs by improving
order processing efficiency, maintaining fill rates while
reducing inventory and warehousing expenses, and lowering
the actual dollar costs of sales transactions. It means higher
margins: - the cost of acquiring customers online and processing
transactions is significantly less than in the conventional
business world.
E-commerce
- $2500 for an on-line store.
This covers the configuration of your shopping cart plus
the on-line store 'main' entrance page.
- $25 per product. This covers
image, description and price integrated into the client's
on-line store.
- On-site and in-house shopping
cart training is available.
- $75/hour for additional work.
This covers most of our skills listed above. On-site photography
may be more.
- The above prices are a basic
guideline and are subject to change.
- Additional restrictions may
apply.
Proud member of 
|