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Tag Archives: business
What Legal Requirements Apply to Your Small Business Website and Online Store?
The post What Legal Requirements Apply to Your Small Business Website and Online Store? appeared first on HostGator Blog . Are you ready to set up your online store or small business website? Make sure you’re clear on the laws you’ll need to follow. We’ve written before about the permits or licenses your business may need to operate online . In this post, we focus on website-specific legal issues. First, our disclaimer: I’m not an attorney, and you should check in with a business lawyer if you have questions. The Fine Print: Terms of Services Make sure your site complies with your web host’s terms of service (TOS) and acceptable use policy. For example, HostGator’s TOS requires—among other things–that site owners be at least 18 years old and not be in a country under sanction by the US government. The acceptable use policy , meanwhile, prohibits using the service for gambling, bitcoin mining, live sporting event broadcasts, and other heavily regulated or resource-intensive businesses. Next, it’s time to create some fine print of your own. Display your business terms and conditions about pricing, returns, shipping, and billing so customers know what to expect. This is especially important if you’re selling products or digital goods directly from your site. Security and Data Privacy Your customers want to know they can trust you with their information. Data breaches can wreck your business with financial losses, lost trust, and legal penalties. And with the EU’s far-reaching General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) now in effect, even the smallest businesses need to step up their security compliance. GDPR applies to all businesses that offer goods and services to people in the EU , no matter where those businesses are located or how many people they employ. GDPR is a huge law, but the basics for small business owners are: You must have clear consent to collect consumer data. For example, you can add a GDPR-compliant cookie consent banner to your site. You must delete customer data on request. You need to keep customer data safe or face fines. HostGator’s SSL certificates encrypt data to and from your site, making it compliant with privacy laws and PCI-DSS security standards. HostGator’s Security and Privacy Bundle protects your website from viruses, malware, hackers, and spam by automatically scanning your website to detect and remove threats. You must report serious data breaches to law enforcement within 72 hours of discovery. Anti-Spam Laws No one likes spam emails, and lawmakers around the world are serious about stopping it. How serious depends on the region—US anti-spam laws have looser restrictions and lower penalties than those in Canada and the EU. If your new company will do cross-border business with Canadian and European customers, or if there’s a chance you will do so in the future, your best move is to follow the strictest anti-spam protocols. In the US The CAN-SPAM law, which stands for Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing, only deals with business-to-consumer marketing emails. CAN-SPAM requires recipients to opt out of messages they don’t want to get, and the unsubscribe process can be a multi-step hassle. CAN-SPAM violations can result in fines of as much as $40,000 per incident. This law doesn’t clearly address marketing emails sent to US residents from outside the country. In Canada Canada’s Anti-Spam Law (CASL) created an opt-in system, which means people must sign up to get your marketing emails (or texts, voicemails, and other direct marketing digital communications) unless they already have a recent business relationship with you. CASL applies to emails sent to Canadians from outside Canada. Unsubscribing must be easy and fast. CASL violations can result in fines up to $10 million. One more potential penalty for CASL violations hasn’t taken effect yet: the right of individuals to sue companies that spam them for as much as $1 million per day . That part of the law is under review. In the EU GDPR covers spam , and its provisions are stricter than the US and Canadian laws. Not only does GDPR require recipients to opt in to marketing messages, there’s no implied consent by people who are already your customers. To add people, you need to make a separate, specific request, with no pre-checked boxes, and parental consent for anyone under the age of 16. GPDR fines are roughly $11 million per incident. Anti-Spam Best Practices to Follow For your existing list, only send marketing messages to people you’ve done business with within the past two years. For all new sign-ups, create a separate opt-in form that includes a tick box for recipients to indicate whether they’re age 16 or older. Identify your business clearly in all your marketing messages. Include an easy-to-use opt-out tool with every message you send. Comply with opt-out requests quickly. Your Intellectual Property Technically speaking, you hold the copyright to the stuff you create as soon as you create it, but a copyright notice on your site is always a good idea. It accomplishes the obvious goal of letting visitors know that the content on your site belongs to you. If you have registered trademarks for your business name, products, or services, include a trademark notice on your site. We talk about trademarks in our article on small business permits and licenses . Your Website’s Accessibility The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires that most businesses make their websites accessible for people with vision, hearing, and other impairments. The ADA requirement may not apply to your business if you’re very small or just getting started. Businesses that operate at least 20 weeks each year *and* have 15 or more full-time employees must maintain accessible web sites. “Public accommodation” businesses like transportation and hotels must also comply. Even if you’re not required to make your website accessible, it’s a good idea, because more than 12% of Americans have some form of disability . Not only that, accessible features like larger fonts, clear contrast between fonts and backgrounds, transcripts of videos, and written descriptions of images can be useful to everyone—think about how many people watch videos with the sound off and you’ll see why captions or transcripts are a smart move. UC Berkeley has a great guide to making your site accessible . Make Your Small Business Website Legally Compliant Creating a compliant site takes some work, but the payoff is a safer business web site, stronger customer trust, and a lower risk of privacy and security related fines and losses later on. If you’re a HostGator customer, contact us to add the Privacy and Security Bundle to your website now. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged business, european, intellectual, legal, marketing, security, security-bundle, small-business
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Best Website Builder for Small Businesses
The post Best Website Builder for Small Businesses appeared first on HostGator Blog . Small business owners have a lot to deal with. No matter the day, you can pretty much count on an overwhelming to-do list. When it comes to building and maintaining a website for your small business, it’s hard to know how to fit it all in. You know you need one—no small business can get by these days without a website. But how are you supposed to find the time to get it done, or the budget to hire someone to do it? It doesn’t have to take as long as you may think. Small business owners can get a website ready and online with little effort by choosing a website builder . Why Small Businesses Should Use a Website Builder For small businesses with limited time and budget, a website builder is the best choice to start enjoying the benefits a website brings. There are a few solid reasons to go with a website builder: It’s fast. If you don’t have a website up yet, then you should prioritize getting one up fast. A small business website makes it easier for people to find you and gives you legitimacy in the eyes of potential customers. The longer you wait, the more business you’ll lose. With a good website builder, you can potentially have your website ready in a matter of days, or even hours. It’s easy. You don’t have to learn to code or spend time training on how to use complicated software. The right website builder will be intuitive enough that you can figure it out as you go. And in addition to making the initial website creation process easier, a website builder makes ongoing maintenance easy as well. When you need to make updates to your site (and you will), each little tweak will be quick and easy. It’s affordable. While a good website builder will cost you money, the cost is much less than what you would spend on hiring a professional website designer to build a website. And you won’t have to worry about hiring someone to help you make changes down the line because you don’t know how. It’s effective. The best website builders supply a large number of templates that are designed to meet website best practices. That makes it easy for you to build a website that adheres to the general advice on what works well on the web, without having to learn it all yourself. And even with starting from a template, you can make all the changes you need to make sure your website is uniquely yours and does a good job of selling your business to your visitors. Once you’ve decided that a website builder is the right choice for you, it’s time to find the best website builder for your business needs . What to Look for in a Small Business Website Builder With quite a few website builders on the market, you have to figure out which ones provide the features and functionality you need. Many options make it hard to move your website to a new builder once you’ve created it, so it’s important to make the right choice early on. For a small business website, there are a few main features you should look for in your website builder. Many Templates Part of what makes website builders so easy to use is that you start with a template. By having a basic design and website structure in place, you don’t have to start from scratch, just make changes to what’s there to create something new. The process of building your website will be easier if you’re able to start with a template that comes close to what you want your website to look like. Make sure you go with a website builder that offers a lot of templates—at least 100. Finding one you really like will save you work and time once you start customizing it. Branding Options Some website builders (especially free or low-cost ones) won’t allow you to remove the website builder’s branding from your site. That might not be a problem for personal websites, but for a business website, it makes you look unprofessional and distracts from your own branding. When your visitors see a logo, you want it to be yours. Another good way to differentiate your website’s brand is to include a favicon on your website. These are the little images that show up in the browser tab when your website is open, next to your page’s title. This gives your site a little extra branding and makes it easier for visitors to find your site amongst their open tabs or in their bookmarks. Try to find a website builder that allows the option to add your own favicon and makes it easy to do so. Security The scary part of getting a website for your small business is security concerns. We’re all used to hearing stories about high-profile security breaches. The last thing you want is for your business to be at the center of a story like that. A good website builder will help you set up the necessary security precautions you need to keep your business and your customers safe. In particular, look for the option to easily get an SSL certificate and install compatible security software. Mobile-Friendly Design You can’t ignore the prominence of mobile. People now use their mobile devices to access the web more often than their computers. If you build a website that doesn’t work well on mobile, a good portion of your visitors won’t be able to use it (and won’t become customers). A good website builder has to make it easy for you to create a website that will work just as well on mobile devices as it does on a full-size computer. Look for a website builder that has responsive options or, even better, responsive templates so you can start with a mobile-friendly structure and not have to do anything special to get there. Media Options Many online marketing strategies include video and audio media. If there’s any chance you’ll be using video or audio on your website—now or ever—then you want a website builder that will make it easy to add media files and embed video on your pages. Check what kind of media features your website builder has before committing. Analytics Access Building a new website is just the first step. Once your website is live, you want to track how people find and interact with it to gain an understanding of what’s working and how to improve your results over time. Find out what kind of analytics your website builder will provide and if it allows you to connect the builder dashboard to Google Analytics . The easier it is to see how your website is performing, the easier it will be to make the kind of updates that help you earn more visitors and new business. Automated Backups If you’ve ever had a computer crash, then you know how important backups are. Even though website builders make creating your website easy, it doesn’t mean you want to have to do it all over again. Manual backups can protect you some, but automated website backups mean you never have to worry about remembering to back your site up yourself. No matter what happens, you’ll always have a recent version of your site you can access and restore as needed. Find a website builder that offers automated backups to make your life easier and your site safer. SEO Features Imagine finally getting your website out there, only for no one to find it. With as crowded as the web is today, that’s a real possibility. One of the best strategies you have to make sure people actually show up to the small business website you create is SEO (search engine optimization) . While there’s a lot to doing good SEO for a new website, one of the first parts is optimizing your individual pages for the primary keywords you want to rank for. A website builder that includes SEO features will make customizing the most important parts of the page for SEO a lot easier so you can get an edge in the search engines from day one. eCommerce Options Not all small business websites will need this in a website builder, but if you want to sell items through your website, then it’s a necessity. eCommerce software allows you to list products on your website, provide a checkout process, and securely accept payments online . If you’ll need these features, prioritize finding a website builder that offers eCommerce options so adding them onto your website will be a simple task. The Best Website Builder for Your Small Business Don’t drag your feet on building a website for your small business. The benefits it will bring far outweigh the time and expense involved in getting started, especially when that time and expense is cut down by using a good website builder to get your business online fast . HostGator’s website builder not only provides everything mentioned in this post, but it also comes with free website hosting, saving you a little extra on the whole deal. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged business, computers, design, gator-website, hosting, online-marketing, web hosting tips, website-builder
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Top 10 Online Payment Methods for eCommerce Sites
The post Top 10 Online Payment Methods for eCommerce Sites appeared first on HostGator Blog . There are a few main features that every eCommerce website must have to do business. Perhaps the most essential of them all is a way to get paid. If you can’t take online payments, then the main goal of your business—making money—is impossible. In the competitive online marketplace, having one way to accept payments is required, but having multiple could put you at an advantage. eCommerce businesses have a number online payment methods to consider, each promising to provide an intuitive and secure checkout experience. To make sure you’re providing the best payment methods to your visitors (and capturing as many sales as possible), here’s the main information you need to know about online payment methods and the top options available. What are Online Payment Gateways? Online payment gateways are the eCommerce services that process payment information for websites. Online payment gateways offer two main benefits to eCommerce businesses: 1.They make the checkout process fast and easy. Have you ever started to make a purchase only to realize that the process of buying the item took too long and required more work than you were willing to do? The average rate of shopping cart abandonment —people who expressed a clear intent to buy and then didn’t—is around 70%. If your checkout process puts barriers in the way of making a purchase, the likelihood that you’ll lose sales because of it is high. A good online payment gateway makes the process simple and intuitive so you capture most of those sales rather than losing them. 2. They provide encryption to keep your customer’s information secure. The threat of identity theft means that every online transaction a customer makes requires trust. You have to make sure that the sensitive information they provide you is protected from hackers around the web that seek to steal credit card information from vulnerable sites. Since online payment gateways specialize in processing financial information, they have the proper encryption and safety features to keep your customers’ information safe. Why Offer Multiple Online Payment Methods? While it’s possible to get by with one safe and easy online payment method, many customers are starting to have the expectation of using their favorite payment methods on sites across the web. With the growing popularity of services like PayPal, Square, and Apple Pay, customers are increasingly able to checkout on a variety of websites without having to spend time adding all their payment and address information for each purchase. Instead they only have to log into an account they use regularly, and in many cases may not even have to do that if their device remembers it. That creates a more seamless and convenient experience for them— especially on mobile, where a growing number of online purchases are taking place. The more your visitors come to expect this kind of convenience, the less likely they are to bother with a website that makes them do more work. Is It Really Worth the Time and Effort to Add New Payment Options? Bayard found that 19% of shoppers who have abandoned a cart said they didn’t trust the site with their card information. And another 8% directly said there weren’t enough payment options. So, let’s do some quick math: for the average eCommerce store, 70 out of every 100 shoppers who add an item to their cart will bail. And anywhere from 8-19% of those will do so because they’re not satisfied with the current online payment methods you offer. By adding additional online payment options, you could convert up to 13 (that’s 19%) of those 70 shoppers. And if you add the payment methods your target audience prefers, you could convert another 5 or so (the 8% who want other options). Earning up to 18 more conversions per 100 potential shoppers seems like a worthwhile use of your time. Let’s look at some methods to consider. 10 Online Payment Methods to Consider The online payment services on the market all aim to offer easy and secure ways to pay. Each has different reasons to consider using them. 1. Paypal Paypal is one of the biggest and most familiar of all the online payment options. The site has over 254 million users . That’s a lot of people who would have an easier time making a purchase on your website if you let them check out with Paypal. The service boasts that it’s currently used by over 17 million businesses and that customers who use PayPal to check out convert at 82% higher rates than with other payment options. That’s a pretty compelling reason to use PayPal. Luckily, adding a PayPal button to your checkout process is pretty simple (although you may need to work with a developer if you don’t use an eCommerce solution). Expect to pay 30 cents plus 2.9% for each purchase processed through PayPal. 2. Amazon Pay Paypal may be popular, but Amazon is undisputedly one of the most popular sites across the whole web, and one that almost all your customers will have accounts with already. Adding Amazon Pay to your store can make it easier for Amazon customers to shop with you without having to key in their payment data in your checkout. You’ll reduce barriers to purchase for hundreds of millions of customers, while also offering a payment option that the company promises has proven fraud protection. Amazon’s payment method works well on mobile devices, offering a seamless experience where it matters most. Setting up an Amazon Pay button your website with their Express Integration option can take a matter of minutes. Or you can use their API, which takes a little longer, but allows you to customize the experience to better fit in with your website. As with PayPal, the cost of using Amazon Pay is 30 cents plus 2.9% for each purchase. 3. Google Pay If anyone can compete with PayPal and Amazon for market share, it’s Google. The company now offers their own online payment method, Google Pay . Google says hundreds of millions their users already have card information saved to their Google accounts, which means providing a Google Pay option offers added convenience for a significant number of people. As with the other options, they promise an intuitive process—on desktop and mobile—and top-notch security through encryption. Google Pay also lets retailers set up loyalty programs, digital gift cards, and deals for customers so everyone can skip the paper and plastic cards. And Google Pay works with PayPal and Visa Checkout for added reach. Notably, they don’t charge you anything for using the service. It’s free for both you and your customers. 4. A meric an Express American Express might not have the market share that our first three online payment gateways do, but it has something just as valuable: consumer trust. While American Express is not as ubiquitous as some its credit card competitors, it has one of the highest satisfaction rates in the industry and tends to target a higher-income consumer than other credit card companies. As such, the people who would find an American Express checkout option attractive are likely to be some of the top visitors you’d want to attract. They promise fraud protection, 24/7 customer support, and the flexibility to work with a number of payment processors and consider different add-on features. And they can accept over 120 currencies, so if you’re interested in attracting international customers, that’s a big benefit. The catch, as you might expect, is that the option costs more than most of your other choices. Prices for American Express’s gateway start at $20 a month for up to 100 transactions, but go up for additional transactions. And they have a setup fee on top of that number which starts at $99. If you think you’ll have enough high-value customers likely to see a benefit in using the AmEx gateway to check out, the cost may be worth it though. 5. Apple Pay For people who use Apple devices—and that’s more than 64% of people in the U.S. — Apple Pay works as a mobile wallet when they’re out and about, and a one-click payment option on websites that accept it. For mobile users, customers can even check out with Apple Pay by using their touch identification—it doesn’t get much easier than that. Apple Pay uses tokenization to keep credit card information secure, meaning that once a user provides their credit card information to the service, the device communicates with the issuing bank to create a randomly generated number (or token) to represent that card. That obscures the information from hackers, keeping consumers’ financial data safe while working quickly. You can set your website up to accept Apple Pay by using their API, as long as you already use one of the compatible platforms or payment providers . Like Google, Apple’s payment gateway is completely free for both merchants and customers. 6. Stripe Stripe provides an feature-rich payment processing platform that makes it easy to accept payments from a range of sources (credit cards, digital wallets, ACH transfers, and different currencies). They also provide a number of options for the checkout process. If you have limited coding skills, you can add their embedded checkout to your site with one simple line of Javascript, or you can create a more unique payment form with their custom UI toolkit. Where some of the options we’ve looked at so far are primarily useful as an add-on checkout option, Stripe provides a good basis for other online payment methods to be added onto. As with some of the other options, Stripe costs 30 cents plus 2.9% for domestic credit card processing, and .8% for ACH payments. 7. Square While Square is mostly associated with in-person point-of-sale (POS) payment processing, the company also offers eCommerce options. They have an online payment API that accepts many of the payment methods we’ve included here (Google Pay, Apple Pay, Masterclass), as well as credit card payments. In addition to payment processing, they offer an easy checkout solution that allows customers to set up profiles at the same time that they provide their payment information. Like many of the other solutions, Square charges 2.9% plus $.30 per payment. 8. Visa Checkout Like the payment gateway from American Express, Visa Checkout makes it extra easy for all Visa cardholders to check out on your website without having to fill in all their payment information. There are over 2 million people enrolled in Visa Checkout, so you’d be making the checkout process easier for a significant portion of your audience. That convenience clearly makes a difference, since Visa’s data shows that offering Visa Checkout can increase conversions by 42%. The payment option includes advanced security features and easy setup options. 9. Masterpass Mastercard’s Masterpass payment option is similar to those offered by American Express and Visa. It makes it easy for any Mastercard holders to quickly and easily check out from your website. And it provides the kind of advanced security in the payment process you’d expect from a credit card company—including user verification, tokenization, issuer authentication, and fraud monitoring. Mastercard doesn’t charge any fees to either you or the customer. And the company has developers available to help you get set up . 10. 2Checkout 2Checkout is a global payment processing solution that accepts payments from across the world in a number of different currencies. They provide a customizable checkout that you can design and add to your website, extensive fraud protection, and a responsive design that ensures customers can easily check out across devices. They offer an API that makes adding the processing solution to your website fairly simple, while also providing the flexibility to customize it as needed. The company charges 2.9% plus 30 cents per transaction, with extra fees for foreign customers. Choosing Your eCommerce Payment Gateway As you can see, when it comes to getting paid, you have options. But it’s less a matter of finding the right one, and more a matter of determining just how many different online payment methods you want to make available to your customers. If adding more options to your checkout process makes buying products from you faster and more convenient, you’re likely to see an increase in sales as a result—so the question may really be, can you afford not to add more payment options? Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
[Adcdata] – Hong Kong Dedicated Server – with Direct China Route
https://www.Adcdata.com We are introducing our new line of servers to support your business. Best su… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1747861&goto=newpost Continue reading
Small Hosting Business Website for sale – Start selling today!
A business partner has asked us to assist in closing his business for reasons of time and to sell the web portal. It is an online shop reg… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1747811&goto=newpost Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost
Tagged business, hosting, online-shop, php, read-the-rest, rest, sell-the-web, the-rest, vodahost, web hosting
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