E-COMMERCE WEBSITE DESIGN SERVICE
Do you know if an e-commerce website design is required for clients to find you, understand how you surpass your rivals, make online purchases of your goods and services, and handle payments? All of this and more is possible with our e-commerce website design.
“Discovery” is critical to an excellent e-commerce website design. No matter how great your business is, it will eventually die if your prospects cannot “discover” that you exist.
One saying that comes to mind is, “You never get a second chance to make a first impression.”
Is an e-commerce website design required for clients to find you, understand how you surpass your rivals, make online purchases of your goods and services, and handle payments?
According to Wikipedia, “electronic commerce” refers to the online buying or selling of products or services. E-commerce uses technologies such as electronic data interchange (EDI), supply chain management, mobile commerce, electronic funds transfers, Internet marketing, online transaction processing, inventory management systems, and automated data collection systems. Technological developments in the semiconductor industry drive e-commerce, the largest sector of the electronics industry.”
“E-commerce typically uses the web for at least a part of a transaction’s life cycle, although it may also use other technologies such as email. Typical e-commerce transactions include purchases of products (such as books from Amazon) or services (such as music downloads in digital distribution from the iTunes Store). There are three areas of e-commerce: online retailing, electronic markets, and online auctions. E-commerce issupports by electronic business.”
E-commerce businesses may also make use of some or all of the following:
- Online shopping for retail sales direct to consumers via websites and mobile apps, and conversational commerce via live chat, chatbots, and voice assistants;
- Providing or participating in online marketplaces, which process third-party business-to-consumer (B2C) or consumer-to-consumer (C2C) sales;
- Business-to-business (B2B) buying and selling;
- Using online contacts and social media to gather and use demographic data;
- B2B electronic data interchange;
- Marketing to prospective and established customers by email or fax (for example, with newsletters);
- Engaging in retail to launch new products and services;
- Online financial transactions for trading or currency exchange;