Forum Moderators: buckworks
I am looking at starting my first e-commerce website. Although I am from the UK, I have lived in Asia in a region renowned for its arts and crafts. It's early days as yet but I have plenty of local contacts, so my plan is to:
1. Set up a shopping cart (I have decided upon oscommerce, although other suggestions are welcome!) offering a variety of these items for sale.
2. Ship the goods from Asia to the customer using national couriers, or UPS, depending on what the customer decides.
3. Offer one of these as a payment method:
a. Worldpay
b. HSBC
c. Protx + some mercant a/c
However, I'm looking to minimise my initial outlay, so any recommendations wrt to these?
4. Base my company in the UK (as a sole trader), since I suspect my customers would prefer to give their CC details to a UK business. I will host the site in the US (with lunarpages), while living in Asia. Does this seem reasonable?
5. What do I have to know wrt UK taxes etc. since I'll be out of the country most of the time? I realise that this is an area where I'll need an accountant, but I'd prefer to sound this here.
Thanks in advance for any advice you can offer me.
Best wishes,
Hamish
Notwithstanding the problems in ensuring the items are posted etc... the lead time alone could be a problem?
I'm trying to think of something that I would order, knowing it would come from Asia, knowing I would have to wait for it and knowing the shipping costs...
It is entirely feasible, we do this from Hong Kong. Unless you are very technically competent, you should look at platforms other than OSC such as litecommerce, cubecart and x-cart. We use Worldpay and it has been fine so far. But there are other solutions that do not take a monthly fee which may be better for start-ups.
If you base your company in the UK, you may be liable for UK taxes which are higher than those in Asia. Since you generate your income in an Asian country, you will probably have to pay taxes in that country as well. You should think this out carefully before you proceed.
If your target customers are in the US, they would have the same issue with shipping times whether you are based in UK or Asia. Although I know it does conversions, our rate is still pretty good.
To <Essex_Boy> I stickied you a few days ago but have not received a reply. Is it possible that your mail box is full? Please sticky me back
Thanks for your responses.
I understand that there might be concerns for customers about having their items shipped from so far away, but I don't see this as being so different from a customer ordering something from *any* overseas company.
Derek: You mention other options for accepting payment; are there any that you'd particularly recommend? I had been considering PayPal because it seemed like a good way to test the waters without too much exposure, but I rejected this on the grounds that:
1. It may appear unprofessional to some customers, and
2. A lot of merchants have reported having bad experiences with their accounts and receiving inadequate customer service.
Once again, many thanks for all of your feedback so far.
Hamish
This is probably not a concern if you ship with UPS/FedEx, since they include custom clearance in their service - however, they charge an arm & a leg for it.