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Turning Your Website Into A Revenue Generator

By: Jason Smith

There are three broad ways to turn your web site into a place where
your customers can buy your products and services and pay you
money for them.

The first is to get a merchant account and set up a professional private
shopping cart. This makes sense if you also do consumer shows
where you can take credit card orders, or otherwise have reason to
take credit card orders in person. However, if you're predominantly a
web-based business, it's probably overkill. It requires installing
somewhat arcane software, it requires going through and configuring
said software, and getting a signed security certificate, and the list of
things that can go wrong (without you being aware of themˇ­) is long
and somewhat scary.

The second is to get a payment transaction service. There are a few
of them, though the market leader is PayPal, with StormPay being a
good secondary source. The major benefit of a Payment Transaction
Service is that all the risks of running a shopping cart are run by them
- this means that your customers will perceive them as being more
trustworthy and less risky. These services do charge a small
percentage of each transaction, roughly comparable to using a
merchant account, so it's a net wash. Most of them will also let you
accrue interest on any balance sitting in your account.

The major drawback to these third party payment transaction services
come down to regulations. They are not banks, they are not regulated
like banks, and they have less legal protection than banks do. This
means that they WILL seize accounts or close accounts as part of
dispute transactions, and will be very pro-active in doing so. There are
lots of tales of woe about PayPal in particular for companies and
consumers who got accounts seized and closed, or hacked into. This
can generally be avoided by the simple expedient of having good
customer service, emailing your customers regularly, and shipping
whatever you're selling in a timely fashion with a tracking number.

The third option is to get an eBay shop or an Amazon.com shop. If
you sell electronic products that are downloadable, there are other
sources to sell ebooks, like fictionwise. While a PayPal transaction
fee will be in the realm of 2-3% of the purchase price, these shops will
take a cut of anywhere from 10 to 25%. However, they'll almost all
calculate shipping in ways favorable to you, and they get you
something that's very important:

Exposure.

Your web site will get exposure from people who know your products.
No small business web site can get exposure like Amazon.com or
eBay; fortunately, you can create your own web site and use Amazon
shops plus eBay shops to make one combined multi-dimensional
sales process.

All of these techniques have their place and their proper time - and
most of them just take a little bit of studying to figure out what needs
to be done to set them up.

Article Source: http://www.articlewheel.com

For more website tips and to see my XSite Pro Review, and bonus pack, please visit my webiste.

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