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(The obstacles to being a successful on-line business)
July 25, 2000
In 1996 the stumbling block for i-commerce was fear of
entering credit card numbers on the
Internet (see 1996 i-commerce politics). The issue
was fanned by the media and grew to significant concern among the public. The
issue proved to be a scarecrow and is no longer relevant to the majority of web
users and in time will completely vanish. People today still list security or trust as an issue, but it is no longer about
on-line credit card vulnerability.
Maintaining control over personal information has
become a popular concern (the codeword for this concern is the Privacy Issue).
Though this may change, for now the Privacy Issue is not receiving the level of
media focus that credit card security once received. Possibly as a result,
Privacy is not currently the same impediment to i-commerce that "credit card security concerns"
were years ago. Like credit card security, the Privacy Issue is not new and has
little to do with the Internet. It is however, another scarecrow (though a small
one) that on-line
businesses will have to address. Insurance companies, credit card companies,
credit reporting agencies, and others have for decades been collecting and
selling personal information on a massive scale. The information collected by on-line
retailers is dwarfed
in comparison to these industries, and in the majority of cases the information
being collecting by on-line businesses is for the sole purpose of providing
better and easier service.
Currently, the public's i-commerce
concerns are mostly general
in nature, and in many cases these same concerns can and do exist for brink & mortar
businesses. As a result these concerns can be dealt with using conventional
solutions. They are not like the credit card scarecrow which became an
irrational fear that was impossible to address with logic. Hopefully this
calming trend will continue, but if
history offers any lessons, the trend will not continue and new bigger scarecrows will emerge.
The current issues that deter people from buying on-line can be found below listed in order of
importance:
- Poorly organized or non-functional web sites.
- Trust in the ability of a business to delivery the product
or service quickly & correctly.
- Basic abilities of a customer to use a computer.
- Ethical trust in a business to not resell or misuse
personal information.
The bottom line that can be taken from this list is that to become a successful on-line
business you must be a successful merchant... the on-line or off-line nature of
your business is not relevant. Even if you only sell your products on-line, you
must do all the same basic things that any brick & mortar business must do.
You need business savvy. You need good products and good services. You need to attract
customers and you need to take care of those customers once you win their
business. Out of all my
clients, the vast majority which are successful on-line have one thing in common.
They were all successful brick & mortar businesses before they began doing business
on-line. The most important lesson of on-line success and failure is distilled by that one
sentence. You cannot expect to just
create a powerful web site then sit back and watch the money roll in. If you are
just starting out, you must be prepared to be in business.... in the
classical sense of the word. If you are not prepared to work long hours for low pay and invest
every dine you have, you will most likely not succeed on-line in
business.
Kevin Bohacz,
President of C:> Prompt
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