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Informative Small Business Articles

Dealing with Your Pending PC Disaster: A Guide for Small Business
It isn't a matter of if it will happen to you but -- when. PC users may be divided into two groups -- those who have had a disaster and those who will have to deal with a PC disaster. For you, more to the point is how you will react to it! Will it...

"How to give your small business web site a corporate look"
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If Big Ad Agencies Can’t Handle Search Engine Marketing, What’s A Small Business To Do?
A recent online news article entitled “Five Reasons Why Ad Agencies Hate Search Engine Marketing” struck a responsive chord in the search engine marketing (SEM) community. Lots of posts, both critical and supportive, showed up in online forums....

Small Business Success - It’s a Matter of Confidence
I was floored! I couldn’t believe what they were saying! But there they sat -- three of the biggest film stars of our age -- telling the world they had issues with confidence. I was watching an interview where Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman and...

The First Law of Gravitational Marketing for Small Businesses: Why Your Marketing Doesn't Work
Traditional Sales and Marketing Tactics are DEAD In your heart and in your mind you already know this is true. That's why we've come together...you're seeking a solution. What you're doing is not working the way it should be - or the way it...

 
Google
Small Business Q & A: Turnkey Dropship Websites Save You Time, Trouble and Money

Q: I would like to start an online dropshipping business, but I
have no idea how to get started. I would like to specialize in
giftware and accessories. Where do I find products and how do I
get set up a website without any technical knowledge?

A: In the good old days of the Internet, i.e. last year, it took
a considerable amount of effort to launch an ecommerce website,
especially one that offered dropship merchandise.

The to-do list for building even a small site was extensive.

You first had to find a company who would dropship merchandise
for you. Believe it or not, there was not a dropshipper on every
corner of the Web back then.

Once you found such a company, you had to set up a formal business
account with them, which often meant filling out forms, jumping
through hoops, providing them with proof of a business license, a
tax ID number, a pint of blood, the promise of your first born,
and on and on.

Then the real fun began.

You had to tear apart the company's print catalogs and scan in the
pictures of merchandise you wanted to sell on the site.

You had to build the website by hand with an HTML editor, and type
in all the product descriptions and prices, which made updating
the site a manual nightmare. Changing $1.95 to $2.95 could
literally take half an hour.

You had to find a dependable hosting company to host the site.
This was harder than you might think. Finding a dependable hosting
company in the golden age of the Internet was like finding a
painless dentist in the old west. They just didn't exist. You
had to opt for the hosting company that you hoped would cause you
the least amount of pain. And you were always wrong.

You had to register a domain name. This part was fairly simple,
IF you had the genius IQ required to think up a coherent domain
name that was not already taken by another business or a &^%$#
cyber-squatter (low level life forms who register domain names
and ransom them to individuals and companies that could really
use them).

And when you finally think you have thought of everything


there
is to think of, that you have done everything that needs to be
done, you launch the site amid little fanfare and much prayer.

Then it suddenly occurs to you (always in the middle of the night)
that the only thing you forgot to build in to your new site is a
way for your customers to pay for their purchase online with a
credit card (there was no Pay Pal in the dark ages, my child…).

You awake in a cold sweat and finally understand why you haven't
sold a single Beanie Baby since your site was launched.

Ah, the good old days… Thank God they are gone.

Lucky for you and me, Beth, there are now a number of companies
on the Web that can help folks like us set up a turnkey dropship
website without ever breaking a sweat.

By turnkey, I mean they will provide you with a complete, payment-
enabled website and the merchandise to sell on the site. All you
do is turn the key (so to speak) to start your new business.

You select the design of the site, the products you want to sell,
and they do the rest. They can show you how to setup an online
payment system, help you register a domain name, offer technical
support, and more.

It is up to you to market the site and drive customers to it, but
in some cases the companies will even help you do that with free
search engine submissions and marketing tips.

You can also sell the merchandise at online auctions like eBay
and Yahoo! Auctions. There is no quicker way to get your dropship
business up and running in a matter of days.

Here's to your success!

Tim Knox
tim@dropshipwholesale.net
For information on starting your own online or eBay business,
visit http://www.dropshipwholesale.net

About the Author

Tim Knox as the president and CEO of two successful technology
companies: B2Secure Inc., a Web-based hiring management software
company; and Digital Graphiti Inc., a software development company.
Tim is also the founder of dropshipwholesale.net, an ebusiness
dedicated to the success of online entrepreneurs.
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net
http://www.smallbusinessqa.com