Pageville
Shopping Carts |
||
|
|
Pageville |
|
| With more than ten years experience
with shopping cart programs two things standout in the majority of
them. They are inflexible and expensive to purchase and use, until
now that is. After years of searching, wishing and hoping we have found a shopping cart for small and large businesses that is extremely flexible and very affordable. In addition the team of programmers at Pageville is very responsive to the needs of webmasters as we develop our customer's sites. Unlike the standard shopping carts where you must conform to their model, Pageville allows us to meet our customer's design and concept needs first and include the shopping cart as a function of the design. Many features are available including on-line merchant credit card processing, payment thru PayPal or you can even use your own in-house credit card processing if you choose. UPS shipping calculations from the site will be available very soon, it's being beta tested now. We are proud to be a Pageville e-commerce Solution Provider and welcome the opportunity to discuss your on-line store with you. You have made a huge investment in your retail business and on-line shopping can keep you selling 24/7. Call Paul T. at 603-286-3857 for a no obligation presentation.
|
||
| F.Y.I. | ||
| online sales (including travel) will grow to $144 billion in 2004, representing 27 percent growth over 2003. | ||
| online sales increase will fuel double-digit growth in categories such as health and beauty (61 percent); apparel (42 percent); and flowers, cards, and gifts (41 percent). | ||
| total online sales to account for 6.6 percent of total retail sales in 2004, compared to 5.4 percent in 2003, and 3.6 percent on 2002. | ||
| Online sales figures were broken in 2003 when revenues climbed to $114 billion — a 51 percent increase over 2002. Compounding the good news about the sales figures, the study found that 79 percent of retailers were profitable in 2003, compared to 70 percent in 2002. | ||
| Online shopping captured nearly 2 percent of retail sales during the last quarter of 2003, ringing up more than $17 billion. | ||