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It's cheap. There is no more inexpensive way to open a business than to mount a Web site. While you could spend up to many millions of dollars to get started, low-budget Web sites (started with as little as $100) remain viable businesses.
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You cut your order fulfillment costs. Handling orders by phone is expensive. Ditto for incoming mail orders. There's no more efficient--cheap, fast, accurate--way to process orders than via a Web site.
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Your catalog is always current. A print catalog can cost big bucks, and nobody wants to order a reprint just to change one price or to correct a few typos. A Web site can be updated in minutes.
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High printing and mailing costs are history. Your customers can download any information you want them to have from your Web site. Sure, you'll still want to print some materials, but lots can now be distributed via the Web.
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You cut staffing costs. A Web site can be a low-manpower operation.
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You can stay open 24 hours daily. And you'll still get your sleep because your site will be open even when your eyes are closed.
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You're in front of a global audience. Watch your site log, and you'll see visitors streaming in from Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Malaysia--wherever there are computers and phone
lines.
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There are no city permits and no hassles. It could change, but in most parts of the country, small Web businesses can be run without permits and with little government involvement. As you expand and add employees, you'll start to bump into laws and regulations, but it's certainly nice to be able to kick off a business without first filling out reams of city and state forms.
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There are no angry customers in your face. You can't ignore unhappy customers in any business; in fact, how well you deliver customer service will go far toward determining how successful you are. But at least with a Web business you'll never have to stand eyeball-to-eyeball with a
screamer.
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It's easy to get your message out. Between your Web site and your smart use of e-mail, you'll have complete control over when and how your message goes out. You can't beat a Web site for its immediacy, and when a site is done well, it's hard to top its ability to grab and hold the attention of potential
customers.