Thursday, March 31, 2011

Ecommerce Around the World

Here are some more updates about the state of e-commerce worldwide.

From: http://mashable.com/2011/03/25/e-commerce-infographic/

Ecommerce Around the World [INFOGRAPHIC]

Etsy and Social Commerce

A couple of things jump up at me in terms of social commerce here.

First, DIYers or handicrafters in the US have their own platforms to buy and sell their wares.  In Malaysia and Singapore, blogshops and Facebook storefronts accomodate the same functions.

Secondly, cost free social media enables an explosion of DIY and self-made items, by enabling people to share and express their creations, and by offering a feasible platform for them to sell their creations.

Third, Etsy sounds a lot like blogshops in that it enables buying and selling for a variety of reasons- either to gain an income, or to participate in a hobby.

Lastly, commerce is something that occurs as a result of people in social situations.  Selling what we make or what we like is a kind of SHARING and EXPRESSION of ourselves to other people. Sharing includes selling. Therefore, hobbies like DIY/handicrafts, fashion, photography etc. all would involve some kind of commerce as we set to acquire and let go of various items and artefacts associated with the hobby or interest.

Where the cost barriers to get into business was once prohibitive, the Internet has lowered all that to the point where we can now all be sellers as well as buyers.  Sometimes we buy, and sometimes we sell.  This makes us all into PROSUMERS.


From: http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2009/12/thinking-about-etsy-in-the-san-telmo-markets.html

Thinking About Etsy In The San Telmo Markets

San telmoThe streets of the San Telmo neighborhood of Buenos Aires turn into a big outdoor market on sundays. Our family spent sunday afternoon there this past weekend.

As I strolled around, I could not help but think of 
Etsy, what it has become and what more it needs to do to realize its potential.

But first a little backdrop. This decade we are now ending will be remembered as the time when the web became social. It took us almost a decade once the web became commercial, but we figured out how to make people the atomic element of the web. And now we get to build social gathering places on the web.

My friend 
Mark Pincus told me when he was first starting 
Zynga that social networks had to become like cocktail parties. You needed things for people to do in them so they would stick around and engage. Mark accomplished that goal with social gaming and experiences likeFarmville show that people will indeed 'hang out' with their friends on the social web.

Now back to San Telmo. People do come to the markets on sunday to shop. The artists, entertainers, and merchants who set up shop there do make money. For some it is a hobby, for others it is supplemental income, and for some its their full time business. 
San telmo eatingBut the main thing that is going down in San Telmo on sundays is a social experience. It is seeing and being seen. It is bumping into friends and meeting new ones. It is getting out of the home and into the streets.

People stroll, they chit chat, they sing, they dance, they eat, and they buy and sell.

Etsy is the closest thing to San Telmo on the web. But it doesn't come close in terms of social experience today.

Etsy has done a good job of bringing people (real people) together to buy and sell. There are over 500,000 people who have opened a shop on Etsy and millions who have registered and bought something from a seller on Etsy. Over ten million people visit Etsy every month.

Etsy has mostly focused on handmade goods along with supplies for making things and vintage items. These are things that are made and sold by real people and so Etsy has created the largest marketplace on the web where real people buy and sell things with each other.

There is also a very lively community on Etsy. The chat rooms are full of people talking, listening, and learning all day and all night. There are over 50,000 forum posts on Etsy every day.

But Etsy is not yet as vibrant and diverse an experience as San Telmo. Most people don't go to Etsy to 'stroll" or 'hang out'. Some do and the things they like to do other than shop are favoriting items and curating lists and treasuries.

The people that do use Etsy in this way are starting to have a San Telmo like experience.

What Etsy needs to do next is make this kind of 'strolling' experience work for everyone. We need to bump into our friends on Etsy and we need to make new ones there.

It would be great if we could sing and dance and eat and drink on Etsy too. But somethings don't make it onto the web as easy as others. Etsy will have to find experiences, like Zynga did with Farmville and its other games, that can replace eating, drinking, singing, and dancing. And I am confident they will.

While the web will never replace the real world experience of strolling through a bustling marketplace on sunday afternoon, it offers something else: scale.

There are more tractors sold in Farmville every day than are sold in the US every year. And so the artists and merchants who camp out in San Telmo on sundays can set up a shop on Etsy and be in business 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.  These artists and merchants can sell to tens of millions, maybe hundreds of millions of people someday.

And getting to that kind of scale, as Facebook has shown us, requires putting people front and center in the experience. Rob Kalin, founder and now CEO of Etsy, prefers the words 'social commerce' over e-commerce for a reason. The emphasis is on social. Commerce is the result. An afternoon in San Telmo makes that point crystal clear.

3 Tips and tricks for a successful Blogshop- Platinum Mall Guide article

 This article is written by someone from Platinum Mall, a major source for blogshop suppliers that is based in Bangkok.  It is clear that Platinum Mall understands the importance of blogshop owners as the customers of their tenants who are major suppliers for these blogshop owners.

The whole blog serves the purpose of helping blogshop sellers to shop more effectively at Platinum Mall.

This is an indication of the significance of blogshops to the Thai fashion industry who act as suppliers.

From: http://platinummallguide.com/wordpress/?p=266

3 Tips and tricks for a successful Blogshop

By andrian on March 26, 2011
 
1. Photos
You’re selling clothes, accessories, bags or shoes, and the only point of contact the prospects have are your photos on your website. I’ve seen many blogshops who have poor quality photos of their products.
The 2 main culprit for poor quality is lighting and poor styling, not the MP or whether your camera is an SLR

a) Lighting
It makes and break a photo, some landscape photographers wait days just for the optimal lighting. Do not use flash is possible, and if you do, let the flash bounce off the ceiling to obtain natural lighting. Trying to obtain bright natural lighting is key to make your clothes look natural and not odd

b) Styling
I’ve seen many placing their clothes on their beds, or on their floors, please hang it up and use a nice hanger.
Remember you’re selling clothes here! If your pictures are not nice, they will think like wise for your actual product.

2. Marketing
Why does your blogshop need marketing? You might be thinking that you’re just looking to earn some extra cash and do not want to come out with more money to do marketing. With many blogshops closing down within the 1st year. It is paramount that you do marketing online. You’re not a physical shop that can rely on human traffic passing your shop.

Most blogshops just create a website/blog and expect through their their friends that word-of-mouth would work.

What tools are available for budget conscious blogshops?

a) Facebook
The most powerful social media right now, if you can harness the power of facebook, you easily have thousands of viewers each day. The easiest method is to create a profile and add your friends on it, after that upload the photos and tagged every of your friend on the photo. This would appear on your friend’s feeds which their friends will be able to see.

I don’t recommend this method, I suggest taking a different harder approach by creating good original content via good quality photos so that prospects are more inclined to view your page rather than being forced fed

b) Updates
Updates are paramount, in this age of the Internet, we are being fed vast amounts of information daily, and if you do not update your content, stock or status, you will be forgotten easily

c) Differentiation
This is something I would like to touch on which is sorely lacking in the blogshop landscape. I’m not talking about selling niche items, but how are you different from the other blogshop that is targeting the same consumers as you are?

I’ve browsed hundreds of blogshops and have found that a lot pictures that were provided by their distributors have been recycled over and over again. Afterall you realise that all blogshops are the same, they offer the same price point, the clothes are similar and they offer the same guarantee and features.

Offer different clothes, take your photos differently, create your profile differently, don’t be generic, you need to differentiate so that prospect would want to buy from you

3. Ready-stock
You know why just because the cashier at supermarkets are small items like sweets, batteries, and chewing gums? Because they are considered compulsive buys, and the cheaper the item, the easier it is to be a compulsive buy.

Many blogshops do not have ready-stock, and do not have an automated pay system. Why this is important is because it provides a conducive environment for the prospect to compulsively buy your product.



E-Commerce To Reach Nearly $300 Billion in U.S. by 2015

Here are some latest stats that indicate the size of e-commerce in the US.  It does not seem to be slowing.

 

 

From: http://mashable.com/2011/02/28/forrester-e-commerce/

 

Forrester: E-Commerce To Reach Nearly $300 Billion in U.S. by 2015 [STATS]



After a healthy 12.6% increase to $176.2 billion in 2010, U.S. online retail sales are expected to reach $278.9 billion in 2015.
Online shopping will continue to cannibalize in-store shopping as consumers become more familiar and begin, in many cases, to prefer the convenience of online shopping, Forrester says.
Increased Internet connectivity via devices like smartphones, tablets and game consoles will also drive growth, as well as new e-commerce models like flash sales (i.e. Gilt Groupe, Neiman Marcus Mid-Day Dash), daily deals (Groupon, LivingSocial) and digital downloads of media (Netflix, iTunes), all of which have enjoyed rapid adoption in recent years.
E-commerce growth in 2010 was driven primarily by existing online shoppers who increased their online spending in traditional categories like books and media, and also began to purchase in less popular categories like furniture and home appliances. Thirty percent of growth was attributed to the 5.5 million consumers who shopped online for the first time in 2010.
E-commerce now makes up 8% of total retail sales, says Forrester — 11% if grocery sales are excluded from the equation.
In Europe, online sales grew by 18% in 2010 compared to 2009, and they are expected to grow 13% in 2011, Forrester stated in a separate report. The number of online buyers in Europe is expected to grow from 157 million to 205 million by 2015; total sales are forecast to reach 133.6 billion euros.

Multiply looks to Southeast Asia for growth

Blogshopping  and social commerce are very strong in SE Asia.  Where Blogspot, Life Journal, Word Press and Facebook are the preferred social platforms for commerce in Malaysia and Singapore, other social media brands like Multiply rule in other parts of the region like The Philippines and Indonesia.

From this article, it appears that these other social media are being used to support very similar modes of business that we see with blogshops in Malaysia and Singapore.  for instance, they usually do not have standard payment facilities like Paypal or credit cards but they make use of simpler facilities like bank transfers and orders through email, text messages, etc.

From: http://e27.sg/2011/02/07/multiply-southeast-asia/

 

Multiply staffs up in Philippines and Indonesia, looks to Southeast Asia for growth



Also-ran social network Multiply is trying to staff up in Southeast Asia as it tries to reshape the network into an e-commerce platform followingthe opening of its offices in Jakarta and Manila late last year.
Multiply, which calls itself a ‘social shopping’ site, is looking to fill a range of vacancies in Indonesia and the Philippines, according to postings on its website. The company is trying to fill full-time positions ranging from sales representatives, software developers, all the way to executive levels.
The Indonesian jobs post says that Multiply hosts 90,000 stores worldwide and has 20,000 unique users. That second figure seems to be a typographical error as Wikipedia puts the number at 20 million users worldwide, with 5 million from the Philippines. It is a far cry however, from Facebook’s 34 million Indonesian users, many of whom use it as a place for social shopping as well.
Thousands of Indonesians use their Facebook profile pages as store fronts for home industries and online shops. While this is no different than what some do at Multiply, Facebook isn’t focused on that particular user behavior and it’s this opportunity that Multiply is hoping to take advantage of. In fact, from the outside it looks to be what local site plasa.com wants to become — a collection of online stores.
Multiply, realizing that it has lost significant global traction, appears to be trying to move in a new direction, with Southeast Asia as a new outpost for future development. Indeed, the site’s ‘about’ page says that it is Southeast Asia’s “biggest marketplace”. Indonesia and The Philippines have been identified as strong regional bases from which Multiply will formulate its strategy for the Southeast Asian region. The company claimed US$124 million in transaction value annually from the Philippines alone, according to a piece in Entrepreneur Philippines magazine (link to a blog that republished the story) last year.
Transactions on Multiply tend to be more traditional in nature, often completed by phone calls, SMS or email. Merchants disclose their bank account numbers and buyers would transfer their payments accordingly, although more tech-savvy merchants may choose to use PayPal.
Multiply offers free listing and use of its general facilities and it also does not collect any fee from any transaction. Instead, it has a three-tiered trusted seller program which is renewable on a yearly basis and an advertising program.
Multiply’s big move in Indonesia has been to hire Daniel Tumiwa from Indonesian BlackBerry app development company 7 Langit as its Indonesia country manager. Tumiwa had previously been involved in the digital space with local tobacco giant Djarum, Universal Music and Soundbuzz, as well as running MTV Indonesia in its early days. He also held consulting positions with Air Asia, Yahoo, and CNBC in the past.
Tumiwa told us about his joining Multiply at the BlackBerry Devcon Asia in Bali last month but requested that it be kept private until now. In late January however, he tweeted that he was looking for executives to join a foreign internet based social shopping company though he wouldn’t name it publicly.
It’s clear that Multiply is looking to Southeast Asia for new growth. The company seems to to be following the steps of fellow early social network Friendster – now owned by Malaysian company MOL – in developing a new base in Southeast Asia, hoping to reinvent itself. With the explosion in social media usage and rapidly growing mobile internet adoption, who could blame them for giving the region a shot?

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Why Women Rule The Internet

It seems that the phenomenon of women using freely available social media like blogs to start businesses is looking like a global phenomenon rather than a South-east Asian one. as evidenced from this article.

Where in SE Asia, women have been able to leverage social tools like blogs for entrepreneurship, others in other parts of the world are utilizing other Internet tools for the same purpose.

I agree that the role and contribution of women to e-commerce has not always been given its fair share of coverage in the past. 

From: http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/20/why-women-rule-the-internet/

Why Women Rule The Internet
Aileen LeeMar 20, 2011
Editor’s note:  This guest post is written byAileen Lee, Partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.  Aileen focuses on investing in early stage consumer internet ventures and previously  worked at Gap, Odwalla, The Northface and Morgan Stanley.  She was also founding CEO of KP-backed RMG Networks.  Full disclosure: some of the companies mentioned below are KP-backed companies.  You can read more about Aileen atKPCB.com and follow her on twitter at@aileenlee.
It feels like we’re in a Golden Age of the web, led by consumer internet services and e-commerce.  Just consider these stats: Facebook—over 600 million users.  Twitter—25 billion tweets last year. Tumblr—1 billion page views a week.  Zynga—100 million users on Cityville in just 6 weeks.  We’re witnessing a generation of consumer web companies growing at an unprecedented rate in terms of both user adoption and revenue.
But here’s a little secret that’s gone unnoticed by most.  It’s women.  Female users are the unsung heroines behind the most engaging, fastest growing, and most valuable consumer internet and e-commerce companies.  Especially when it comes to social and shopping, women rule the Internet.
Consider some more data. Comscore, Nielsen, MediaMetrix and Quantcast studies all show women are the driving force of the most important net trend of the decade, the social web.Comscore says women are the majority of users of social networking sites and spend 30% more time on these sites than men; mobile social network usage is 55% female according toNielsen.
In e-commerce, female purchasing power is also pretty clear.  Sites like Zappos (>$1 billion in revenue last year), Groupon ($760m last year), Gilt Groupe ($500m projected revenue this year), Etsy (over $300m in GMV last year), and Diapers ($300m estimated revenue last year) are all driven by a majority of female customers.  According to Gilt Groupe, women are 70% of the customer base and they drive 74% of revenue.  And 77% of Groupon’s customers are female according to their site.
Women even shop more on Chegg, which offers textbook rentals on college campuses across the country. Males and females attend college at an almost even rate. Renting would seem an equal opportunity money saver, plus it’s better for the planet.  But according to Chegg, females are 65% of renters.  Why? Renting requires a little more advanced planning.  Chegg’s research shows women are more inclined to plan ahead than men. And, they seem to care more about saving money, and are more likely to be influenced by a friend’s recommendation.
It’s no accident Amazon.com launched a program called “Amazon Mom” last year, or that they bought both Zappos and Quidsi (parent company of Diapers.com, BeautyBar.com and Soap.com) for almost $1.8 billion in total.  According to the US Census Bureau, women oversee over 80% of consumer spending, or about $5 trillion dollars annually. Women control the purse strings when it comes to disposable income. That’s long been the case.
But what’s different now is that there is an exciting new crop of e-commerce companies building real revenue and real community, really fast, by purposefully harnessing the power of female consumers.  One Kings Lane, Plum District, Stella & Dot, Rent the Runway,Modcloth, BirchBox, Shoedazzle, Zazzle, Callaway Digital Arts, and Shopkick are just a few examples of companies leveraging “girl power.”  The majority of these companies were also founded by women, which is also an exciting trend.
And take a look at four of the new “horsemen” of the consumer web—Facebook, Zynga,Groupon and Twitter.  This may surprise you, the majority of all four properties’ users are female.  Make that “horsewomen”.
Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook, has talked about how women are not only the majority of its users, but drive 62% of activity in terms of messages, updates and comments, and 71% of the daily fan activity.  Women have 8% more Facebook friends on average than men, and spend more time on the site.  According to an early Facebook team member, women played a key role in the early days by adopting three core activities—posting to walls, adding photos and joining groups—at a much higher rate than males.  If females had not adopted in the early days, I wonder if Facebook would be what it is today. (Why do you think all the guys showed up?)
How about gaming, seemingly a bastion of men in their man caves?  The titan of social gaming,Zynga, says 60% of players are female.  And a survey by PopCap shows females are the majority of social and casual game players. In fact, they note the average social gamer is likely a 43-year-old woman.
And more women use Twitter, which has a reputation for being a techie insider’s (i.e., male) product.  Women follow more people, tweet more, and have more followers on average than men, according to bloggers Dan Zarella and Darmesh Shaw’s analyses.
Brian Solis’s analysis shows females are the majority of visitors on the following sites, which he calls “matriarchys”:  Twitter, Facebook, Deli.ci.ous, Docstoc, Flickr, Myspace, Ning, Upcoming.org, uStream, Classmates.com, Bebo and Yelp.  The one “patriarchy” site he notes, where males > females:  Digg.
Yes, women also rock sites like Opentable and Yelp. According to Yelp, while half of their traffic is male, the majority of contributors and ecommerce purchasers are female.  And according to OpenTable, the majority of bookings are overwhelmingly made by females.  Why?  Likely because women drive most decisions about where to go and where to eat.
Perhaps none of this is surprising.  Women are thought to be more social, more interested in relationships and connections, better at multi-tasking.  There is also anthropological research to back this up.  Dave Morin of Path introduced me to Dunbar’s Number, proposed by the anthropologist Robin Dunbar.  The number is the theoretical limit of how many people with whom one can maintain stable relationships (thought to be 150).  But Dunbar’s most recent research shows there are different numbers for women than men—that women are able to maintain quantitatively more relationships within every ring of closeness than men.  Knowing that is an important factor if you want to build and stoke social network effects.  More female users will likely help your company grow faster.
So, if you’re at a consumer web company, how can this insight help you.  Would you like to lower your cost of customer acquisition?  Or grow revenue faster?  Take a look at your product, your marketing, your customer base.  Maybe you would benefit from having a larger base of female customers.  If so, what would you change to make your product/service more attractive to female customers?  Do you do enough product and user interface testing with female users?  Have you figured out how to truly unleash the shopping and social power of women?
You could also take a look at your team.  Do you have women in key positions? If you’re planning on targeting female customers, I can’t imagine why you wouldn’t want to have great women on your team.
If you are already targeting female customers, have great women working in your company, and are seeing strong commerce and social network effects, congratulations.  You are likely trying to figure out how to handle hypergrowth right now.  Plus your office probably smells pretty good.
Women are the routers and amplifiers of the social web.  And they are the rocket fuel of ecommerce.  The ongoing debate about women in tech has been missing a key insight. If you figure out how to harness the power of female customers, you can rock the world.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Are Malaysians buying from overseas EC sites?

The majority of academic research papers on the state of EC in Malaysia claims that EC has been slow to take off.  Of course, all that is suspect because many of those studies did not factor in  blogshops.

Here is another finding that says Malaysians do shop online and that they buy from overseas EC sites.  While I agree this is the case, I do not think that the conventional EC scene in Malaysia is developed at all.  Reconciling this finding with others I have read, I would venture to guess that those people with credit card and/paypal shop overseas as indicated here.  A bigger chunk with no access to credit cards and/or paypal shop on local online boutiques and blogshops.

From: http://techcentral.my/news/story.aspx?file=%2F2011%2F3%2F23%2Fit_news%2F20110323161307&sec=it_news



Many Malaysians buying from overseas sites

KUALA LUMPUR: Many Malaysians on the Internet are shopping overseas. A consumer survey shows that one in three websurfers here are patronising international retail sites.
And the reason they prefer to buy from overseas merchants? It's because they get a wider selection of items, the products or services they want are not available locally, prices are lower, and/or they get better discounts from the foreign vendors.
The 2010 Visa eCommerce Consumer Monitor surveyed 558 Malaysian websurfers from August to September last year. It found that 36% of the respondents had shopped at an overseas website in the past 12 months.
Websites in the United States were the most popular for these shoppers; 31% of the respondents who shopped overseas said they had bought from these sites at least once in that period.
Most of the shoppers bought clothing and shoes (23%) while the others bought airline tickets (21%) and books (20%).
According to Visa Malaysia country manager Stuart Tomlinson, the increased Internet penetration in the country is fuelling the growing popularity of online shopping among Malaysians.
"An Internet-savvy nation will see more of its people, especially those keeping up with the latest fashion trends, turn to shopping at overseas retail websites," he said.
The survey also revealed that three quarters of the respondents were confident that their payments online were secure.
"We know that online shoppers consider payment security an important factor when transacting over the Web," Tomlinson said.
"Visa provides its cardholders an added layer of security with its Verified by Visa online authentication platform."

One Blogshop Reviews Another

Blogshop owners have varying degrees of influence in their area.  In fashion, a blogshop owner's collection (those with handpicked stocks) reflects her personal tastes.  Thus, some buyers may be attracted to a particular blogshop because the blogshop's collection is in line with their personal likes and styles. 

This puts blogshop owners in a position of influence, akin to that of celebrity fashion designers whose styles and designs influence the fashionista masses.   

The type or degree of influence a blogshop owner can exert can take on the following forms:
  • as a fashion consultant/expert to buyers
  • as a fashion reviewer
  • as a blogshop reviewer
From: http://ai-kiyomi.blogspot.com/2011/03/reviews-on-blogshops-ive-visited.html

Reviews on Blogshops I've visited.

* Word heavy.

Hi everyone !

Here is a review on the Singapore's blogshops that I've visited.

Hmmm, I myself have a blogshop but I'm still an online shopper.

I love the stuffs that I can buy online and also I'm a lazy girl that is lazy to go shopping.

As a shopper, I also understands how other shoppers feel.

So here are some review on blogshops.

SGLady.com (Review)
I rate this blogshop 2.5/5
Why only 2.5 ?!

Ok, they have super fast delivery.
But some items are just so lousy !
*WARNING : Please do NOT buy cosmetics/beauty tools from here.

I regretted buying things from here because it does not help,
eyelashes I bought from there, totally dirty and cheap.

But seriously heed my advice, you can buy stickers or notepads or boxes.
BUT NOT COSMETICS. You will regret 200000%.

Okay, I don't want to talk too much about it.


BEST BUY WORLD sg.bestbuy-world.com (Review)
I rate is 4/5

Ok, prompt delivery but delivery fee is expensive.
Bought BRA from here and others.
BRA size not very fittable.
But all the others are great.

Good quality and branded stuffs.
I love it.

Rosebelle.org (Review)
I rate 4.5/5

Where does the 0.5 goes to?!
It went to the expensive price of the products.

Other than that, everything is nice, pretty.
Prompt delivery and e-mail updates.

That's all for now, I might just do up a few more ! =D

Blogshop or Shopping Cart?

E-commerce application providers would love for blogshop owners to adopt their applications, but the fact is that many established and successful blogshops have done well keeping to their blog format.

As the following article notes, the key difference is that blogs are not designed to support a business.  Yet, it remains amazing how they have become the standard platform to start businesses for the many amateur online entrepreneurs in this part of the world. 

From: http://www.100webhosting.com/blogshop-or-hosted-e-commerce-website-with-shopping-cart-which-to-choose/

Blogshop or Hosted E-commerce Website with Shopping Cart – which to choose?

Everyone wants to sell something nowadays, be it the young girl out of school, the small-time entrepreneur who works from home or the working professional who seeks side income. With the influence of the Internet coupled with the availability of various platforms and tools today, anything ranging from clothing to multi-vitamins and pets can be sold online, all from the comfort of the home without having to step outside anymore.
Blogshops
There are two ways that online entrepreneurs use to market and sell their wares. The first is to set up a blogshop and the other is to set up a hosted website with a shopping cart feature. A blogshop is a site that runs from a blog, usually Blogger or WordPress. In this instance, the URL of your blogshop will be either blogshopname.blogspot.com or blogshopname.WordPress.com, depending on the blog platform that you are using.
Of course, you could also use your own .com domain name on the blogshop which will make your blog look more professional and the blogshop address easier to remember and type.
On the other hand if you have a website hosted, you will have a simpler domain name which is easy to remember and easy to type. Both a blogshop and a hosted e-commerce website have its advantages.

Why Blogshop is Good?

  1. Convenient and Easy to Setup

    Setting up a blogshop is easy. Just select the blog platform (Blogger.com or WordPress.com) you want, think of a name, check its availability, register it and you’re good to go. The setup is immediate and you can start posting photos and details of your items right away. Also, you don’t need to have any technical knowledge of maintaining a website. Thus, you can post, update and edit your blog anytime you want to.
  2. Blogger and WordPress are FREE

    Blogging on Blogger or WordPress, as you all know, is free. By setting up a blogshop, you save on several fees that you have to come up with by having a hosted website. First, there is the domain name, which you need to register prior to having your website. There is also the website hosting fee as well as the need to purchase a shopping cart software (although there are free shopping carts available). You save on all these by running a blogshop!
  3. Quick and Straightforward Communication with Customers

    Visitors are able to inquire, give feedback or place orders by leaving comments on the blog posts. There is also the option of installing a chat box where blogshop owners and their customers can communicate easily. However, there is not much control on how these chat boxes will display and will work, because they are designed for general use and not specifically for doing business online.
However, I think that a hosted website with a shopping cart gives a business leverage because of the following reasons.

Why a Hosted e-Commerce Site with Shopping Cart is Better?

  1. Delivers a Brand Image and Easy Access

    For starters, having your own domain name represents your business well. It is easy to access and remember your website, besides giving customers confidence in your business. Having your own domain indicates that you mean business. To me, I wouldn’t have confidence in dealing with blogshops. With the simplicity in setting a blogshop up, they are just everywhere and I don’t know if the person behind them are serious about the business, reliable or trustworthy.
  2. Real-time Credit Card and Paypal Payments

    This is one great advantage that a blogshop doesn’t have. A hosted website powered by a shopping cart software is able to accept credit card transactions through a payment gateway such as 2Checkout and iPay88 (Malaysia’s most popular online payment gateway that accepts credit cards, Paypal, Maybank2u and many others). The site can also integrate PayPal easily. Having a shopping cart gives your business an edge because customers are not only able to pay for large purchases easily but are also able to shop online in a more secure manner with the SSL and other security measures.
  3. Better Business Management

    Most shopping cart software come with a myriad of features that were created to make business management a breeze. These features include the real time calculation of sales tax, discounts, and shipping cost. Orders, catalogs, inventory and shipping orders can also be managed at ease with the assistance of the shopping cart.
  4. Delivers Auto-responders

    With auto-responders, you can send automated replies and emails to your customers, affiliates, suppliers and prospects easily. By defining an auto-reply and creating multiple mailing lists, your emails will go out automatically to the intended recipients. You can even improve the deliverability of the emails by engaging a third-party auto-responder service. Just imagine if you have to manually send these emails without this auto-responder feature. Most of your time will be spent on emails instead of focusing on your business!
  5. Search Engines Optimized Pages

    Do you know how to get more traffic from Google or other search engines? The average entrepreneur out there most likely doesn’t have this knowledge and using Blogger or WordPress doesn’t help much. But you don’t have to worry about having SEO pages if you have a shopping cart because it provides a search engine friendly environment that will lead to a better ranking on popular search engines such as Google, Yahoo! Search and Bing.

What Shopping Cart do you Recommend?

We strongly recommend CS-Cart shopping cart. It is a really good shopping cart software which is very affordable yet features-rich. CS-Cart is suitable for any online e-commerce sites, such as a fashion or clothing site, a website selling mobile phones, a watches site, and many others.
CS-Cart
For more details, check our complete CS-Cart review.

What about Web Hosting?

Now that you have chosen a good shopping cart software, what about the web hosting? We recommend GreenGeeks. Their Eco Site hosting plan costs as low as $4.95 monthly and it comes with a whole lot of features designed for an e-commerce website. On top of that, you can use a discount coupon which will get you $30 discount instantly!
GreenGeeks
Check out details on our GreenGeeks review.

Editor’s Advice

A blogshop is convenient and needs little effort in maintaining but as its name indicate, they were meant to be just blogs and do not have any features that support a business. Someone who is just starting to dabble in online business and intends to keep it as an additional source of income can remain using blogshops hosted on Blogger or WordPress.
However, if you are serious about being an online entrepreneur, a shopping cart on a hosted website is the better bet for you for the reputation and features that it carries for your business.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Blogshop Suppliers

The whole blogshop concept is built on cost.

It works because blogshops can deliver lower costs than established channels, like brick retailers or the major e-commerce websites.  Therefore, owners must be able to find supply sources that provide costs lower than that in the mainstream market.  This raises the position of blogshop suppliers as a most critical factor for blogshop success.

From: http://hubpages.com/hub/BlogshopSupplierSingapore



Singapore Blogshop Suppliers


Singapore Blogshop Suppliers

In blogshop industry, the most importan success factor is suppliers. Blogshop owners hold this information sacred because if their blogshop suppliers are discovered, other blogshops can then buy directly from them.

Owning a blogshop is the best way to earn money online! The main problem in starting a new blogshop is finding the perfect blogshop supplier. The blogshop supplier must supply blogshop products low cost enough for you to earn a nice profit, yet the quality of the product must be good enough. The suppliers must also be reliable and not cheat your money. One good wayis to see how well they design their website, the amount of effort they spend to make their webpage look professional. They must also have a .com web address and not afraid of answering your questions with emails and contact information. If the blogshop supplier cannot do all these, DO NOT buy from them!

Let me tell you the big secret: www.blogshopsupplier.com is the best blogshop supplier you can get! I am distributing the important info because I have stopped doing my blogshop which earned me $20,000 monthly on a normal month.

Blogshop Supplier .com was my only supplier as they gave me the latest designs from Taiwan/Korea/Japan/HK at the best prices around, and has a low minimum ordering quantity of 15 in total, and also free import shipping. The owner Lilly is soooo nice and I love how she work so closely with me. This is the best best best deal I can find in Singapore, and trust me I spend so much time searching Singapore and even Malaysia for blogshop supplier and finally found Lilly's Blogshopsupplier.com. OMG i was so happy!

Initially I had all sorts of problems with my suppliers! Those people from C*** P**** were very unfriendly, too much, must take S,M,L and have to order minimum 300 clothing from them! This is insane for new blogshop owners. They only entertain big blogshops who can afford to buy alot at a time. No new blogshop can start like this! Other suppliers were not reliable.

So I strongly really recommend Blogshop Supplier.com to you, they are really the best supplier that will help your blogshop launch and grow, just like mine. I have done it, and so can you!


Source:
Singapore logshop Supplierss
Blogshop Supplier

Friday, March 4, 2011

Blogshop Haul

This is an example of a 'HAUL'.  It works like this: someone goes on a shopping spree, buys (or hauls) a bunch of fashion items, and then share it all online.  It gives them a chance to dress up in what they have bought, take pictures and post on their blogs.  Sometimes they do this on You Tube.

In a way, they play the role of fashion consultants, or experts, and they get to show off their purchases.

From: http://cloverbeautyinn.blogspot.com/2011/01/massive-haul-from-singapore-blog-shop.html

Friday, January 21, 2011

Massive Haul from Singapore Blog Shop: Love, Bonito

Recently I have fallen in love with the clothes from a Singapore Blog Shop "Love, Bonito". Not only are the designs very trendy and cutting flattering, the prices are really REALLY reasonable too. The prices of most of their clothes range from SGD25-50. They carry a lower end range called "Love, Bonito", and a higher end range called "COVET". All their designs are original and the fabrics used are nothing short of excellent =) I buy most of my clothes from them now and here I post only some of my more recent purchases. I just made another huge order from them yesterday, and probably I will post some photos of that order when it arrives!

Byzantine Curve Dress in fuschia, SGD30, S size


COVET Charis Amour Dress in red, SGD45, S size

Red satin underneath black lace and mesh

Best Sunday Tog in cool blue, SGD28, free size


Labyrinth Maze Dress in Royal Purple, SGD29, free size


Au Courant Shrug in cream, SGD28, free size

Love, Bonito usually launches a new collection every week, and when they do, some designs get SOLD OUT within minutes! So if you are keen to buy their clothes, make sure you have fast fingers to add items to cart and fast internet connection! =)

10 comments:


Becky said...
All the clothes are really cute, but I specially like the last one
Anna Crystal said...
You look so incredibly cute and you have a fantastic taste!
ashura said...
Thank you Anna, I am flattered =)
Steph said...
they look so cute on you =D especially the second && last one ~
나니 said...
LOVE the exotic look of the first dress. SUPER pretty : D
InsideOut Elle said...
these are adorable! I LOVE the first one especially ;) sexy~~
Sophie-Lou-J said...
aww you look super cute in all these outfits. I love the 3rd dress!! Sophie-Lou x www.sophie-Lou-j-says.blogspot.com
mineral lipstick said...
Love the pretty dresses...and the crochet stole looks like a steal.It is elegant and multipurpose.It is nice to see the new fashions when dressing...the color combination and styles which are always evolving.
Nic Nic said...
my fave no2 and the purple dress!! lovely picks :)
Marina said...
so so pretty!!! xx Marina