 
Paul Graham
At Viaweb we're often asked, what is the secret of
selling online? We're happy to tell you. We make tools
that help you sell online. So we don't want these secrets
to stay secret. We want you to succeed.
Viaweb was founded in July 1995, so we have seen almost
the entire history of Internet commerce. We have seen
what works, and what doesn't. This page is a brief guide
to what works.
As examples, I am going to include links to good and bad
Web sites. So note that the opinions expressed here are
my own, and not necessarily those of Viaweb Inc.

If there is a single secret to selling online, it is to
work hard. Hard work is the secret to succeeding in
almost anything, but it is especially important on the
Web.
It's true what they say: the Web levels the playing
field. A high school can make a better Web
site than a multinational company. On a level playing
field, how big you are matters less than how hard you
work.
There are millions of consumers out there, but lots of
other Web sites are competing for their attention. So you
can't just build an online store and walk away from it.
You have to work hard to draw visitors to your site, work
hard to create a site that those visitors want to buy
from, and work hard to give those buyers such good
service that they and their friends will buy again in the
future.
So the bad news is that starting a business on the
Internet is just like starting any other business: work,
work, work. The good news is that it is a lot cheaper.
The Web gives you something that has never existed before
in history: an inexpensive sales channel direct to
consumers. Before the Web, if you wanted to sell direct
to consumers, you either had to build retail stores or do
catalog mailings. In either case the entry fee is
hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars.
On the Web, you can sell direct to consumers worldwide
for a hundred dollars a month. You have to work hard to
exploit this opportunity. But if you are willing to work
hard, you don't need a lot of money to get started.

What sells online? That is probably the question we get
asked most. At the risk of being repetitive, what sells
online is work. In our experience, the difference in
success between one store and another depends a lot more
on how hard they work than on what they are selling.
I know of two stores, Store A and Store B, that are
selling exactly the same products. Store A sells three
times as much as Store B. The reason is, Store A
works a lot harder. They work on their site almost every
day, and they also do more to promote it.
But although work is the decisive factor, what you sell
matters too. As a general rule, whatever sells in print
catalogs will also sell on the Internet. If the customer
has to see something before buying it, then you probably
can't sell it in a print catalog, or online. Otherwise,
you should be able to sell almost anything.
It's true that more men use the Internet now than women,
so if you sell something that men buy, you are likely to
have a slight edge. Someone who works with computers is
almost certain to have Web access, so anything
computer-related is likely to do comparatively well. And
Internet users are richer and better educated than the
population as a whole, so luxury items may do well.
But these trends are not set in stone. When televisions
first became available, the first buyers were probably
richer and more technologically inclined than the
population as a whole. But TV rapidly became mainstream,
and the same thing is happening to the Web.
More important than the type of products you sell is the
size of the niche you choose.
In the physical world, niches are based on geography. I
often buy food at the corner store near my house, despite
the small selection and high prices. If this store were
more than 100 yards away, I would never buy anything
there. But in the physical world, proximity is king.
Not on the Internet. Geography is almost irrelevant on
the Internet. Niches on the Internet are based on what
you sell, not where you are. And whatever you sell, you
have to be the place to buy it, because your
customers can just as easily visit any other online
store.
So you have to choose a niche small enough that you can
dominate it. For example, if you are a tiny company, it
would probably be a mistake to try selling top-40 CDs
online. You would have a hard time competing with CDNOW. But you would probably have a
chance at becoming the site for European folk
music.
One certain way to dominate a niche is to be the
manufacturer. For example, Harbor Sweets is going to be the
site for buying Harbor Sweets, because they make them.
Manufacturers may be the biggest winners on the Internet,
especially small manufacturers who have till now been at
the mercy of the channel.

In a print catalog, "production values" refers
to the quality of the paper and printing processes used,
the number and quality of images, and the care taken with
graphic design. High production values are critically
important in catalogs, which have to convince consumers
to buy based on a few sheets of paper.
Production values are even more important on the Web.
Consumers will not buy from an amateurish Web site.
Most of the people who visit your site will still find
the idea of ordering online unusual. I have been buying
online for over a year, and I still find it a little
unusual. So your site needs to inspire visitors with
confidence. It should say that yours is the kind of
company that does things right, and that if I order
something from you, it will be a good experience.
Of course there is no direct connection between the
quality of your site and the quality of your company. A
company could have a brilliant graphic designer and lousy
products. But usually there is a connection, and that is
what visitors to your site will assume. If your company
is unable to put up a good Web site, then it seems
natural to assume that your company cannot deliver good
products or services.
The most extreme case, of course, is when your company
does not have a Web site at all. Occasionally I go to
look for information about some product, but find that
the company either doesn't have a Web site, or has a site
with nothing in it. Not impressive.
Almost as bad as the empty site is the site that looks
amateurish: for example Newbury Comics or Cajun Made Golf Products.
In contrast, take a look at Frederick's of Hollywood. Here is a site that
says, we mean business. What makes a site say that? The
same thing that makes a Ferrari look like it means
business: good design. On the Web, good design means good
proportions, appropriate typefaces, clear layout, and
color combinations that work.
Overall the most important feature of a Web page is the
organization. That is what visitors will notice first. It
should be possible to "read" the structure of a
page at a glance. A high quality Web site looks clear. A badly designed site looks haphazard.
Of the elements on the page, the most important are the
images. A Web page consists of text and images, and
everyone's text looks the same, so the difference in
production values between good sites and mediocre ones
depends almost entirely on images.
By images I do not necessarily mean product images. I
mean gifs and jpegs, whether they are product images,
display text, logos, button bars, bullets, or what have
you.
To start with, better Web sites usually have more images.
For example, they tend to have button bars at the top of
each page, to brand the site and to aid in navigation.
And instead of displayingTitles Like This
in screen text, they often display
as gifs. Text
rendered as a gif can be antialiased, meaning you don't
see jagged edges. You can use any
font,
not just whatever the browser has, and you can also get
3D effects like bevelled edges and drop shadows, which
(used sparingly) make a site look richer.
When I say that better sites use more images, I do not
mean that they use more k of images. Big images take a
long time to download, and that is the kiss of death in
an online store. If your site is slow, visitors will
leave quickly. In a top-quality site, images are the
seasoning, not the foundation of the site. Use small,
punchy images that will carry a lot of the surrounding
area.
In particular, avoid the common mistake of putting a huge
company logo on your front page. By all means put your
logo on the front page, and in fact on every page, but
make it small. Your logo is is not what your customers
came to see.
They came to see your products. But don't throw
full-size product images at your visitors until they ask
for them. Sophisticated sites begin with a page of
smaller thumbnail images, which visitors
can click on when they want to see more.
If you don't use thumbnail images, your section pages
will be too slow. For example, this page was made with iCat,
which cannot generate thumbnail images automatically.
Instead, the designer has included full size images of
each product. So the page weighs in at 289k, which takes
1 minute and 40 seconds to download with a typical
(28.8kb) modem. You can't expect Web surfers to wait
almost two minutes for a page.
Make your product images as high quality as possible.
Consumers won't buy from an image that looks like a badly
lit polaroid. So have a professional photographer take
your photos. Images shot with a top-quality digital camera look brightest,
but you can also scan transparencies or even scan images
right out of your print catalog.
If possible, try to make the background color for the
product images either the same color as your pages, or
transparent. Product shots look better when the object
seems to sit right on the page.
Finally, don't make spelling mistakes in your site. A few
of those will undo all the other work you've done to make
your site look professional.

It is no accident that the people who visit your site are
called "Web surfers". They have the same short
attention span as TV "channel surfers". The
average visitor to a Web site looks at only three or four
pages before going somewhere else. Visitors will leave at
the slightest obstacle.
So if you want people to explore your site and see more
of your products, don't put any obstacles in their way.
Whatever you do, don't make them register to view your
site. They will just go somewhere else where they don't
have to register.
Most major sites have learned that lesson. They have also
learned not to use frames. Frames are a lot more
gratifying to the site designer than the visitor. To
visitors, frames are merely confusing.
For example, frames make the Coach site so hard to
understand that nearly all the text on the first page is
navigation instructions. If the site were easy to
navigate, Coach could use that space to present their
products instead.
Another big disadvantage of frames: most search
engines don't index sites that use frames. Most sites
get most of their hits from search engines, so not being
included would put you at a crushing disadvantage.
None of the most heavily visited sites use frames. In
fact, the more important the site, the simpler the
design. Look at what is probably the most important site
on the Web, Yahoo. There are no bells and
whistles to distract you. The design of the site is so
simple that you get it at a glance.
Most of your visitors will not start at your front page.
Most of your hits will come from search engines, and when
someone searches for a phrase in a search engine, they
are sent directly to the page in your site that contains
that phrase. So most of your visitors will drop right
into the middle of your site, like paratroopers. The
design of your site has to tell them immediately where
they are, and what their choices are.
Most major sites solve this problem by putting a row of
buttons at the top of each page. Within the buttons they
include a small version of their logo. The logo serves
two purposes: it brands the site, and it serves as a link
back to the homepage. For example, look at these interior
pages from CDNOW, ISN, and Frederick's of Hollywood. They all use this
approach. So does Yahoo. It has become the accepted
convention for the way a site should be organized.
Make sure you put these links at the top of the
page. You don't want new arrivals to have to scroll down
to the bottom of the page just to find out where they've
landed.
Many of the people who arrive at your site will be
searching for a specific product. We find that almost
half the people who place orders were searching for that
particular product. You have to pay special attention to
these visitors, because they are the ones who actually
spend money. Every online store should be searchable, and
there should be a search button on the home page, if
not on every page. Every store with less than 2000 pages
should also have an alphabetical index. (All Viaweb sites
automatically have both.)

Anyone planning to sell online should start by shopping
online. Next time you need to buy something, look for it
on the Web.
When you put yourself in the consumer's place, you'll
find it is not hackers you worry about, but the merchant.
Almost anyone can set up a Web site. So visitors need to
be reassured that they are ordering from a real company,
and not just a teenager running the site out of his
bedroom. Anything you can do to show that you are real
will help increase orders. Include your name, phone
number, and street address. Toll-free numbers are
especially good. If possible, put an image of your catalog or building in your site, or even a
brief company history.
The best way to show that you mean business may be to
include a full selection of products. One of the things
that distinguishes winners like Amazon and CDNOW is their huge inventories, which
show that they are serious about selling online.
A surprising number of companies have online stores that
send the opposite message. For example, LL Bean has only a tiny selection of
their merchandise for sale online. Presumably, like a lot
of companies, they have decided to set up a test store
with a couple of items, and see how many orders they get.
This is a big mistake. If your company is thinking of
taking this route, I can save you the trouble, because I
can tell you now what is going to happen. You are not
going to get many orders.
Put yourself in the consumer's place. Suppose LL Bean set
up an actual physical store in your neighborhood, but
this new store was a test store containing only 20 or 30
of their products. Would you even bother going to this
store? Probably not.
Worse still, if you did go, you would not leave with a
good impression of LL Bean. A store with a small
selection is such a depressing experience. Although a Web
site with a few items is better than one with no items,
it is still a big prestige leak for your company.
Our company recently wanted to buy a lot of polo shirts.
So we went to LL Bean's Web site, and what did we find?
Not only couldn't we buy the shirts online, we couldn't
even find the price. So even though I would have
preferred to have LL Bean shirts, we bought all our
shirts from Land's End instead.
Meanwhile, LL Bean lost both our business and our
respect. A lame Web site is better than no Web site, but
not much better. Especially since the latest generation
of Web tools make it so easy to build big sites. The Frederick's online store has
hundreds of items, and it was built by one person in a
couple of days.

As I mentioned before, most of the people who visit your
store will still find the idea of buying online a little
strange. You have to reassure them. The most powerful
confidence builder is a top-quality site: high production
values go to work directly on the visitor's subconscious.
But it's also important to reassure visitors explicitly.
For example, if you are determined to provide great
customer service, tell your visitors so, right on your
site. Guarantee that they will be
satisfied with what they buy from you, or you will refund
their money with no questions asked.
Your site should offer secure online ordering, and you
should advertise this to visitors. Some sites put the Netscape key icon right on the front
page.
But If you try ordering online yourself, you'll find the
biggest concern that you have is not security. I bet what
you'll find yourself thinking is, who are these guys? Did
they actually get my order? Are they going to send me the
products? When?
When someone places an order from a Viaweb store, we
always generate a confirmation page thanking them for
their order, and telling them their order number. That is
a good first start, but you as the merchant should also
send them an email thanking them for their order and
telling them when it will arrive.
And make sure that you ship orders quickly. Web users
want fast results. They don't want to hear that they
should expect to wait 4-6 weeks for delivery. This is not
1910. Tell them they will get their order in 3 days.
And make sure they do. The consumers ordering on the Web
this year are like the scouts of an oncoming army. They
will determine your reputation for service for years to
come. If you do a great job, they will tell all their
friends about you.
Ordering online is still an unusual thing to do, so
people who do it are proud of how adventurous they are.
Have you ever listened to someone talk about ordering
online? "It was no big deal," they say,
swelling visibly. "I just went to their Web site,
found what I wanted, and gave them my credit card number.
Three days later the stuff arrived. No problem."
People love to be able to tell such stories to their
friends. It's the most valuable kind of free advertising
for you. So make sure that your customers have good
stories to tell. If you do a bad job, your customers will
also tell all their friends, and you will be in big
trouble. Word spreads very quickly on the Internet.
Especially this year, treat your Web customers as if each
one were as important as ten customers. Because if you
treat them well, each one will turn into ten customers.
Do you want to hear what your customers have to say about
your Web site or your products? You should. Tell them
that you want to hear from them, and put a prominent
email link and/or phone number in your site. Try
including a link that will let visitors send email
directly to the president of your company. Few will
bother to send mail, but everyone who sees it will be
impressed by your attention to customer service.
When a customer does send you mail, respond promptly!
Customers who have taken the trouble to send you email
are like gold. Talk about qualified prospects. So treat
them like gold. If you can, make it a corporate policy to
respond to email within an hour or two at most. You have
to reply eventually, so why not do it right away?
Customers will be delighted to see that you care about
them.

Having a great Web site is not enough. You also have to
bring people to it. Most sites get most of their hits
from search engines, so step one is to make sure that you
are indexed in all the major search engines. If you are
using Viaweb, our software will do this for you
automatically (except for Yahoo, which you should do by
hand). Otherwise, make sure to submit your site to all
the major search engines.
You don't need to pay a service to submit your site to
hundreds of search engines and indices, because there are
only 7 that matter: Yahoo, AltaVista, Excite, WebCrawler,
InfoSeek, Lycos, and HotBot. All other search engines and
indices might account for 1% of your hits, combined.
Don't expect your site to show up in search engines
immediately. It will show up in AltaVista in a couple
days, but most other search engines are slow to add new
listings. Some only seem to rebuild their databases every
couple months.
The second most common question people ask us is: How do
I get my site to appear first in the search engines?
There is no easy trick that will work in all cases,
because (a) all the search engines are different, and
(b), if there were a trick, everyone would use it, and it
would be just as hard to come up first.
As a general rule, someone searching for
"chocolate" is more likely to get a page in
your site if the word chocolate appears often on that
page, especially if it appears in the title. But it will
not work simply to have your page begin with the word
"chocolate" repeated 100 times. Most search
engines filter out sites that try that. The best approach
is to use key words frequently in your site, but not in a
way that appears unnatural.
For example, Vitanet is a site selling dietary
supplements. The section selling DHEA contains a lot of
information about DHEA. The purpose is not only to sell
the product, but to draw hits from search engines. The
more text in your site, the bigger a target you present
to search engines.
One thing not to do, if you want traffic from
search engines, is use software that generates your pages
dynamically. The new version of iCat works this way, for
example. Search engines don't index
dynamically-generated pages. Any part of your site
that is dynamically generated does not exist, as far as
search engines are concerned.
You may also be able to get crosslinks from related
sites, especially if you are selling the kind of products
for which there are a lot of fan sites on the Web. Which
sites should you get links from? Put yourself in your
customer's position. If you are selling Star Trek
merchandise, go to AltaVista and search for "star
trek". The sites you get sent to are the same ones
your customers will get sent to, so those are where you
want to start asking for links.
To get a crosslink, you have to give one in return. You
can't just write to the webmaster of another site and ask
for a link. Establish your own links page, and then send mail to
the other site saying that you admire their site, would
like to make a link to it, and would they be willing to
make a link to you in return?
Depending on what you sell, you might get a lot of your
sales from links like this. One of the most successful
examples I know is The X-Store. There are links to it
on hundreds of fan sites, and many generate substantial
income.
So far, we have only talked about how to get people to
your site for free. You can also buy banner ads that lead
to your site. For example, you can buy banner ads on
search engines that are tied to particular keywords. When
you search for "books" in most search engines,
you will see a banner ad for Amazon Books.
Be careful when you buy banner ads. Banner ads are
expensive, and even if they bring lots of visitors to
your site, there is no guarantee that these visitors will
place orders. Our data suggests that few
online purchases are impulse purchases. Most buyers show
by the keywords they use that they meant to buy before
they even reached the site where they placed the order.
So if you buy a banner ad that just brings thousands of
random people to your site, few of them will place
orders. I know of one online store that bought a banner
ad on Playboy's Web site. I can't disclose the name, but
let's say they were selling modems. Most of their buyers
were men, and they knew that thousands of men visited
Playboy's site, so where better to put an ad? And in
fact, they did get thousands of visits from this banner.
But not one order. Why? Because those people were not
thinking about buying modems. The mere fact that they
were at the Playboy Web site showed that.
In retrospect the advertiser might have done better to
put an ad on a site giving advice about which modems to
buy. An ad like that might bring far fewer visitors than
a Playboy ad, but they would all be people who actually
meant to buy modems.
If all you know about your site is how many hits you get,
then of course you tend to think that hits are what you
should maximize. But hits are not what you need in an
online store. Sales are what you need. So you should find
the sources of hits that turn into the most sales, and
focus on them.
How do you do that? Tracking tools. Good tracking tools
can tell you where all your visitors come from, and how
much visitors from each source spend. Viaweb's tracking tools can even tell you which
search keywords your visitors used in search engines, and
how much money people searching for each phrase spent.
(Viaweb's tracking tools are currently the best in the
business. They've earned rave reviews from press and
analysts.)
For example, if you are selling Star Wars products, you
will get a lot of hits from search engines. You may find
that you get ten times as many hits from people searching
for "darth vader" as for "darth vader
figurine". But I would bet that the people searching
for "darth vader figurine" spend more money at
your site. So what keyword do you buy from search
engines? If you want sales, buy "figurine", not
"darth vader".
Finally, if you have a catalog business or retail stores,
don't forget to promote your site to your existing
customers. If you have a catalog, include your URL in it.
Your Web site is the perfect place to sell limited
quantities of closeout items that would not be worth
including in your print catalog. I know one company that
includes messages throughout their print catalog telling
customers that closeouts are available on their Web site
at special prices. They say there is a noticeable jump in
orders each time their catalog goes out.

The best way to spend money promoting your Web site is to
lower your prices. You can't lose. When you spend money
on a banner ad, you have to pay for everyone who sees it,
whether they buy anything or not. But when you
"spend" money by charging less, you only have
to pay for the people who actually place orders. So you
never pay for this form of promotion unless it works.
Security concerns are not what prevent people from
ordering online. The real problem is that online shopping
is just not a regular part of people's lives yet. Most
people have a collection of physical stores and mail
order catalogs that they buy from regularly. But online
shopping is so new that most Web users haven't yet found
their regular Web stores.
This is good news for you. It means that there is room
for you in their list of regular online stores. But you
need to nudge them into ordering from you, if you want to
become part of their regular routine. And there are few
more effective nudges than the prospect of getting the
very cheapest price for something.
The emotional satisfaction of getting something at the
cheapest price is almost like a drug. People will go to
any length to get it. If you want to see online commerce
happen, take some commodity item like a Sony Walkman and
offer it for sale on the Web for $10 less than people can
get it anywhere else.
It will be worth it, believe me, if you can establish
yourself as one of everyone's regular stores. Amazon
Books has done that, and now they have every prospect of
being the place to buy books online. If Borders
and Barnes & Noble are not panicking, they should be.
They waited too long. Someone else has occupied the space
they thought was reserved for them, and it's going to be
very expensive, and perhaps even impossible, to dislodge
them.
If you use lower prices to make your site a habit with
some group of consumers, you can likewise lock up a
valuable piece of real estate. (Hint: start today.)
Lowering prices is not just a good trick to jump-start
sales. It also makes economic sense in the long run. It's
much cheaper to sell on the Web. If you split the savings
with the consumer, you both win.
Many Viaweb users are catalog companies, and they tell us
it costs between 40 cents and a dollar apiece to print
and mail catalogs. The percentage of people who order
from your catalog is called the conversion rate. You're
lucky if you get a conversion rate of 5%. A 5% conversion
rate means that 1 person out of 20 orders. So that 1
person has to pay for printing and mailing 20 catalogs!
If the catalogs cost 50 cents each, that's $10 right off
the top of the order.
Under conditions like these, it is a testament to the
drive and ingenuity of the catalog companies that they
can make a profit at all. And those who do make a profit
are totally at the mercy of postal rates and paper costs.
If you can convert a substantial fraction of your
consumers to the Web, you can not only increase your
profits, but also decrease your vulnerability to factors
like paper costs, which are outside your control. From
this point of view, lower prices are a strategic
investment.

Want to know how your online store did last week? Here is
a quick way to estimate your sales: How much time have
you spent working on, and promoting, the site over the
last couple weeks?
Overall, the more time a company spends on its online
store, the better it tends to do. I doubt anyone can say
now what the perfect online store should look like. The
whole business of Internet commerce is only two years
old. You are unlikely to get things exactly right on the
first try. Like most sites, yours will evolve.
So you should be constantly improving your site. And even
if you think your site is perfect, you should still
change it regularly. A Web site that has not changed for
months is boring. It feels abandoned.
Have you ever visited a store in a remote area where the
turnover is obviously very low? Where the items on the
shelves are faded, or have dust on them? Do you want to
buy from a store like that?
Big department stores seem to know that a certain amount
of bustle is necessary to show that they are alive. They
are constantly changing their displays. Change is even
more important on the Web. Especially since so many of
your competitors don't know it, and leave their sites
unchanged for months at a time.
Regular change in a Web site is a form of high production
values. Having high production values means, in short,
looking expensive. And a site that changes regularly
looks expensive: for most online stores it is
expensive, because the site is maintained by Web
consultants who charge by the hour.
Fortunately, with the latest generation of store building
tools, it is easy to change your site regularly. Many of
our users edit their sites several times a week, and some
do every day.
One easy way to make your site change regularly is to
list featured items on the front page, and to rotate them
every few days. In Viaweb, at least, you can do this in
under a minute.
Another slightly more laborious approach is to have some
kind of news component to your site. For example, Softpro Books has a new arrivals
section, which is updated every weekday. This is a big
attraction in a site selling technical books, because
customers always want the very latest. By taking this
extra effort, Softpro has made their online store into
more than a store. Customers return to the site regularly
as a source of news, and that is one of the main reasons
Softpro is so successful.

The remarkable thing about the Web is not just that you
can sell direct to consumers so inexpensively, but that
you can sell to consumers worldwide. Some Viaweb users
get as many as half their orders from overseas. But it is
strange to put it that way, because some of our users are
overseas companies. With Viaweb, you make your store over
the Web. So just as you can shop from any country, you
can also set up shop from any country. The whole idea of
overseas is starting to dissolve.
Sometimes that takes new users by surprise. One Viaweb
merchant is a small manufacturer who had never been able
to afford to sell direct to consumers. Instead they sold
their products to catalog companies, who resold them to
consumers. The low cost of selling online encouraged them
to try and sell to consumers themselves.
They found they had access to a wider audience than they
expected. The day after they opened their site, they got
their first order, and it was from Malta. The island of
Malta, in the Mediterranean. How did one ship a package
to Malta? They figured that out. The last I heard, the
customer in Malta had inquired about being a local
distributor.
You may, like them, go from being taken by surprise by
the international aspect of the Internet, to taking
advantage of it. If you have great products at the best
prices, consumers in Finland and Malaysia and Peru will
find you. Make it easy for them. You don't need to
translate your site into many different languages, but
you should show that you welcome orders from all over the
world, and explain clearly what your shipping rates are
to each country.
With international customers, it is especially important
that your site look legit. Even in the US, consumers who
buy on the Web need to be reassured. Imagine what it is
like for a Japanese consumer. Would you order from a
Japanese site? Just possibly, if the site looked really
professional. Japanese consumers are going to be equally
cautious about ordering from your site. But if your site
is flawlessly professional looking, and your prices are
good, they will take the plunge. Some Viaweb merchants
get significant numbers of orders from Japan.
Ultimately, international orders are going to be a big
source of income for American companies. Americans who go
to Japan are often disappointed to find that Japanese
products cost more in Japan than they do in the US. Why
is that? Because rents are high in Japan, and the
distribution network is inefficient. Retail prices are
lower in the US than in most other countries in the
world, for similar reasons. Americans would be amazed at
the price of a pair of Levis in Italy.
Merchants look at these inequalities and see opportunity.
Trade is all about price differences. For centuries
European merchants made fortunes by buying spices in the
far east, where they were cheap, and selling them in
Europe, where they were expensive. The Web opens up a
similar opportunity, for a lot less than the cost of
outfitting a ship.
Now that the Web offers consumers in other countries a
way to do an end run around their local middlemen, US
companies are going to be the main beneficiaries. I know
one Web merchant who is already selling men's shirts by
the dozen to customers in Europe, where men's shirts are
much more expensive.
Of course the opportunity depends on the product. It may
never apply to products that are hard to ship overseas.
But retail price differences are so pervasive around the
world that there is probably some way to take advantage
of them, no matter what business you're in.
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