Monday, February 9, 2009

My Internet Business Review: Where To Sell On The Internet

By Trisha Frauenhofer

Before you launch your own webpage, there are a few options that you could try first. These options will give you a better feel for the internet in regards to buying and selling. These are a few of the website options and assistance with how to decide what to sell such as eBay and Etsy.

The first option is eBay. It is a widely known site and there are endless possibilities to selling here. It is also something that you can stop or start anytime. If you decide you don't like it, you haven't invested a lot of money and time into a web page of your own.

eBay is the second most widely known sales site on the Internet, after Amazon.com. It has millions of visitors each and every day, and uses the "auction" mechanism to keep people coming back. From the perspective of someone selling products on the internet, it has an easy setup procedure, and you can start or stop at any time. If you don't like it, you haven't sunk a lot of money into it to get it running.

eBay offers several options, including having your own eCommerce store, or even a custom auction site. You can personalize it to suit your own business, and there's a lot of flexibility in setting the sale price, descriptions and pictures, even shipping options. eBay's primary strength is the user community; everything on eBay has been tested repeatedly, and there's extensive documentation that's very good to work from. Do avoid any service that offers to "list things for you" on eBay. It's easy enough to figure out how to do it on your own.

The all time champion for people selling things online is eBay. It effectively defined (and dominates) the online auction business. eBay is more than auctions, however. You can set up your own eBay shop with a lot of custom options, including setting the price, setting shipping options, and more. Plus, there's always the auctions.

So, now that you've picked a sales venue, what next? First, save any item descriptions for things you'll regularly have in stock in a text file or word processing file. It allows you to cut and paste whenever a new item shows up. Next is to figure out what you're going to sell - the most common choice is to buy items at wholesale (or as remaindered goods) and sell lots on eBay. You'll need to do some research to find a supplier (and a good price) and to research what your sales niche is.

Deciding what to sell is the next step - you'll want something that's distinctive, and that you can get at a reasonable price, and can sell for a reasonable markup. Again, Amazon and eBay are good places to do the research. Any time you think of something you might sell, do a search for it on eBay or Amazon and see how many other people are selling it. Also look at how they're selling it; the mistakes of your competition are how you propel yourself in this business.

Finally, keep your options open. Never ever sign an exclusive deal, and always be on the lookout for new products you can sell; not all products have to be made of atoms, Informational products are also a natural product for the Internet, and may be the product type that catapults you into doing your own web shop. - 21151

About the Author:

No comments:

Post a Comment