Maa Mall : New Arrivals

Showing posts with label Define online shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Define online shopping. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Open a Online Shop FREE in Maldives

Are you looking for Targeted Customers ? Are you worried about the Customers who will pass by your shop not knowing what you have and unable to find what they are looking for ?

We have Created the Solution for you and Its called ( MaaMall ) Maldives First Online Shopping Mall.

Get Ready Reserve your Online Shop, We create the Online Store FREE for you and manage your Customer Service FREE. You Just Need to Show your Interest.
Open a Online Shop in Maldives FREE

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Legal compliance improved in onine Shopping Sites

Internet shoppers are more aware of their rights and more online retailers are complying with consumer protection laws than previously, according to studies by consumer protection regulator the Office of Fair Trading (OFT).

Out-Law.com reports that the OFT has carried out a survey of online shoppers and a study of online retail sites in a follow-up to research published in 2007 which showed that many consumers were ignorant of their rights and many sites broke consumer-protection laws. The report noted OFT said that it found improvements when it conducted follow-up research last year. According to the report, it said: 'Overall assumed compliance and information provision by online businesses has improved with more sites (89% in 2009 compared to 84% in 2006) now providing full geographical addresses, and fewer sites (26% in 2009 compared to 38% in 2006) imposing restrictions on cancellations.'
Full Out-Law.com report
Link to the report

Monday, February 1, 2010

Online Shopping Advantages

We use internet more widely now, and online shopping is  growing Rapidly. As many businesses are trying to capture the global market , Internet Shopping have become more socialized and used as a  primary means of marketing and generating sales Wold Wide.

Here are some of the advantages of shopping Online 
 
Convenient- Convenience includes the overall ease of finding a product, time spent on shopping, minimization of overall shoppoing effort (Schaupp & Belanger, 2005). Online shopping allows consumers to shop at the convenience of their own home, and to save traveling time to retail stores and spend their time on other important tasks and hobbies. Researchers idenfity convenience as a 'fundamental objective' related to online shopping (Schaupp & Belanger, 2005). This is relevant to 72% of online shoppers' claim that they would rather surf online than go to retail store to attain information about a product (Lokken et al., 2003). According to a study, 72% of online shoppers chose convenience over privacy (Bhatnagar, Misra, & Rao, 2000). In addition to ease of finding products online and shopping time reduction, consumers can shop without time limitation with 24-hr access at their convenience because the World Wide Web never closees. Lokken mentions 24-hr access as a beneficial characteristic of online shopping (Lokken et al., 2003). Also, consumers can exchange information online through chatting and discussion forums to help them make wise consumer decisions.

No need for vendors and no pressure to buy - Online shopping benefits both the society as a whole and individuals. The society can save human resources when consumers help themselves by browsing freely online instead of asking for assistance from vendors. In addition, consumers are freed from the pressure to buy from the vendors and can spend more time to make wise purchase decisions. But it is imorpant that Web sites have good product descriptions because it is one of the significant condition that satisfy consumers (Limayem, M., Khalifa, M., & Frini, A., 2000). 

"Infinite shelfspace" available- Consumers desire a variety of products because they look for the right product that will fully satisfy them. There is infinite variety of products available online because online shopping allows consumers to browse through products that are made all around the world without geographical boundaries. 

Able to compare product price and features- With the online tools that enable product comparison, consumers can compare product prices and features to make a better decision with less effort. 

So if you are looking for great online shopping visit MaaMall


Saturday, January 23, 2010

Reality Check : The Truth about Online Shopping


From sizing to no clear idea of consumer rights, U Cicely says there are plenty of reasons why internet shopping isn’t going to take off exponentially in India any time soon.

Getting my Christmas gift list sorted is normally the hardest task of all in the run-up to the festival. Last month, for the first time ever, it was the easiest.

No rushing around like a headless chicken, no last-minute dash to the shops for a gift for Aunty Mary, no endless stress about whether I’d be able to leave work in time to get to the mall before it shut — and all because I chose to properly embrace the internet.

Weeks before the main event, I logged on, sometimes at home, sometimes sneakily at work, and bought all manner of things, from clothes to luggage, books to jewellery and loads and loads of sweets and chocolates.

I’d gotten everything done, bought all the final bits and wrapped what hadn’t been delivered directly to the recipient well in time for the big day. As a result, I was calm, stress-free and actually kicking back with a glass of wine on Christmas Eve, when I’d normally be making a frantic, last-minute round of the shops. Bliss indeed.

Retail therapy anytime

I’d sat in the comfort of my home and made my decisions, coolly and calmly, without being pestered by an endless stream of arrogant/ ingratiating/ mindless salespeople. No wondering if I was missing out on a better deal elsewhere because I’d comparison shopped and determined who offered the best value of all without actually having to zip around the city from point to point in an endless loop.

Is it any wonder, then, that I am not alone?

Indeed, more and more we are buying online. The internet retail sector in India is reportedly growing at a rate of 30 per cent per year over the last few years and the country is poised to have third largest population of internet users within the next four years, by 2013. Add to that traffic that is getting progressively worse in the major cities and more spending power as the economy continues to hurtle along, growing between six and eight per cent annually — and that can only mean we’re all going to shopping over the internet even more.

Of course, like I learned at Christmas, the main reason we like shopping online is the sheer convenience of it all. Not only can we debate the merits and demerits of a pair of sandals from the comfort of our armchairs, we get to avoid having to tramp up and down town looking through shops for what we want. And it’s much worse when the sales are on — fighting off manic crowds and waiting endlessly to try on what you want to buy.

But much of this seems to apply largely to shopping for gifts.

Right now at least, the Indian online retail market is estimated at a mere Rs 1,105 crore or $230 million, according to the Internet and Mobile Association of India, as compared to the UK’s $15 billion. By contrast, the entire Indian retail market is estimated at between $350 billion and $400 billion — so clearly, the sector really is only a niche market.

Touch & feel factor

While internet connectivity — and familiarity — is the dominant reason why we’re not buying as much online as we could, for a large segment of a population still getting used to finding everything available on our own shores, shopping is still a fun way to pass the time. A lot of us enjoy hitting the shops even if we don’t really want to buy anything — particularly with high-end luxury goods, where half the fun is in waltzing into well-finished emporiums and fingering merchandise you’re never going to buy.

Then there’s the issue of sizing, particularly with garments. A shirt labelled extra-large in one store may well be marked medium in another, and often, these variations surface even within the same brand, frustrating the time-conscious shopper no end. Indian manufacturers need to stick to one standardised size, but it seems no industry body is as yet willing to take the lead on this front.

And until this is sorted out, the ‘touch and feel’ factor will continue to remain important.

At least equally as important is being able to trust brands to deliver what we want, in the sizes and colours we want, and should we change our minds, take the items back at no extra cost.

However, by and large, India remains what Western consumer protection agencies privately call cowboy country, with consumers’ rights and buyer protection laws all virtually non-existent. Even when you’ve bought something from a neighbourhood shop, it can often be difficult to exchange it without invoking a generations-old relationship, so why would anyone trust an online retailer to take something back?

Mobile or mouse?

Retailers, on the other hand, don’t trust the consumer either. Once the product has been sold and delivered, who cares if the consumer is unhappy? There are a billion more where she came from.

It would serve retailers well to address these needs, however, if they want internet shopping to take off exponentially any time soon — for canny shoppers have now latched on to another trend and are pushing the envelope even further.

Forget shopping online, consumers everywhere are tapping in — quite literally – to the mobile shopping trend.

But that’s another story, and offers something else for me to test out next Christmas!

Source : Deccan Herald

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Definitions of Online Shopping

online shopping: A process in which images or listings of goods and services are viewed remotely via electronic means, e.g., a vendor's Web site, items are selected for purchase, and the transaction is completed electronically with a credit card or an established credit account. Note: Various encryption schemes may be, and usually are, used to reduce the risks of sending sensitive information, such as credit-card numbers, over the Internet or other telecommunications facility.

and On Wikipedia
Online shopping is the process consumers go through to purchase products or services over the Internet. An online shop, eshop, e-store, internet shop, webshop, webstore, online store, or virtual store evokes the physical analogy of buying products or services at a bricks-and-mortar retailer or in a shopping mall.

The metaphor of an online catalog is also used, by analogy with mail order catalogs. All types of stores have retail web sites, including those that do and do not also have physical storefronts and paper catalogs. Online shopping is a type of electronic commerce used for business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) transactions.

more info