
How to run an online business and grow sales
So you had this great idea to sell your product or service online, you looked around, got a few quotes and found a clever bunch of people (they seemed technical!), they built the site for you and then you launched. But then you had trouble convincing your customers to buy online from you. So how can you make the most of your online business to grow sales and keep the customers coming back again and again?
Unfortunately for many sites there is no Kevin Costner ending, this is no Field of Dreams. You may have built it and but they are just not coming. What has gone wrong? How can you make the most of your new asset?
The first thing to do is get into the right mindset to run an online business. If it was a retail store at your local mall you would plan the store layout, have inviting signage, endeavour to make potential customers feel comfortable and generally provide an appealing place to be. This has to be done online as well. The number of online businesses that merely cobble something together, skimp on budgets and generally present badly is staggering. This is even the case in some online offerings where online is the only channel that the product is sold. Online is cost-effective compared with offline but it is not a freebie. The more you invest in your online business the better the results.
The problem can usually be split into two areas: a lack of sales from those who find your site, and no one actually coming to the site.
Site not converting – lack of sales
Although you have reasonable traffic levels you find that you just aren’t closing the sale. People are looking in your shop but not buying. Why is this?
The rapid increase in internet access has of course led to an increase in online purchases but not everyone is comfortable with making purchases online. There is still a fear factor in the community. Is this fear justified? Yes and no. Can it be addressed? Absolutely it can. The four main areas of concern in online purchases are security, delivery, quality and privacy.
Security
The single biggest worry in the online purchase community is security and what happens to credit card numbers and who has access to personal details. The fact that the people with these worries are the same ones who will happily hand their credit card to a waiter at a restaurant who then disappears out the back with the keys to the kingdom is of no consequence if you can’t get them to part with their information online.
Starting at the top of the tree, the best method—for both customer and seller—is a bank’s payment gateway or a third party payment gateway, such as Paypal. This method is best for the client as no credit card details are stored and everything is fully encrypted. It is also superior for the supplier as not only are the credit card details validated but also the capacity to pay is all done in real time.

The next step down is called a secure socket layer (SSL) which is a method where data is entered on a front end form, encrypted in the transfer process and fed down to a backend database. During the transfer a little padlock will appear on the browser which means that the data cannot be read by any external hackers or programs. There are different methods of implementing SSL and each method gives rise to their own pros and cons. However, the best method is to buy a dedicated SSL. This means that you will be able to secure your whole domain by redirecting your non-secure domain to your secure one, enabling full protection for the user. This method typically avoids the message “You are now entering a secure part of the site,” and, more importantly, the one after completing a transaction “You are now entering a non-secure part of the site.” These messages can cause (unfounded) worry and confusion and it is this worry that major companies—such as banks—aim to alleviate by using dedicated SSL hosting. The only con to hosting a dedicated SSL is the cost. It will set you back $1500 for set-up and $750 a year thereafter.
Shared SSL gives all the security of dedicated SSL but the perception of full security is lost when a customer moves from unsecured areas of your site to secure areas—the payment form—because the domain name changes. Although this may seem minor but there is significant industry data which shows the high number of customers that drop out of a purchase on a shared SSL as opposed to a dedicated SSL. The financial aspect of a shared SSL is the real draw card with prices of around $25 a month being commonplace.
Finally, non-secured data transfer, including emailing of form contents, is the last method used. The use of these methods is still amazingly high. Put simply you are asking your client to write the details down on a piece of paper and post it in a clear plastic sleeve. The consequences can be dire and such a method can never really be justified.
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Hi, I have business idea to which i have created a website for. I have checked the netand there is no ther service like this, thus no competition . The problem is to do justice to this business it needs to go national. I dont really want to run it and would like to get someone else to run it and just take a monthly fee. I do not know where to go from here. Is there anyone you could recomend who can help me get to the next step.
Thank you for your time,
David
Hi David. I have contacted the author and asked him to come back and reply to your question so keep checking back. Regards, Jen.
My business is currently looking to improve our marketing and it seems online is the most cost effective to implement and measurable.
You have given some great advice to a novice…..
If there is one thing to learn from online marketing it is that \”if you build it, they might not come!\” Getting the word out about your site and the services you offer is just as important as the design and implementation processes you invest in. As James points out in the article it\’s important to not just \’cobble together\’ your site, and the same should go for your advertising and marketing plan. It\’s something too important to leave as an afterthought, though, unfortunately that is just what many companies do.