Archive for the ‘internet usage’ Category

Toby Hartnoll-White Designated as Leader of “Best Online Home Business Team”

Friday, August 2nd, 2013

Toby Hartnoll-White came out on top in a recent online poll to identify the Best Online Home Business Team Leader in Australia.

Hartnoll-White likely won the poll due to his work helping people set up an online business and making money from home using simple step by step strategies and advertising tactics.

In an attempt to maintain the survey fair to all participants, the competition was implemented via the internet and the winner was chosen by internet marketing peers independently.

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StageBitz deserves props for its success

Thursday, August 1st, 2013

Founded in 2010 by Catherine Prosser and based in Canberra, StageBitz is a web-based system designed to simplify prop management for production professionals, allowing them to manage the lifecycle of prop sourcing, maintenance and tracking.

“Each year millions of props, scenery and costume items are created at a cost of billions of dollars,” Prosser says. “Many of these items are used only once, resulting in a massive waste of time, effort, resources and money for the industry. This is a common and constant problem faced by the entertainment industry in Australia, USA, the UK and the world over.

“StageBitz solves this problem by providing a collaboration platform in the cloud for directors, designers, makers, buyers and managers to capture the design, technical and usage information they need to get their projects up and running. It also provides an automatic company inventory feature which will allow companies to manage their assets as well as hire or sell unwanted items online.”

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Big online player says Australian businesses must adapt to digital or perish

Wednesday, July 31st, 2013

The CEO of one of Australia’s biggest online real estate advertising companies says businesses in the country need to adapt to the digital future in a hurry or risk being shut out by international competitors who are further ahead.

Greg Ellis, CEO of REA Group, said companies in all sectors in Australia are struggling to adapt to the digital economy and will lose market share to international rivals if they did not change their management ­strategies.

“On a bigger scale Australia needs a damn big wake-up call,” he told a Melbourne Press Club luncheon last week. “We’ve got some material competitors coming who could take a significant percentage of market share and jobs away through the strength of their digital offering.”

He said managers needed to better tap into the talent in their organisations, saying the best workers found in companies such as his were 30-year-olds familiar with the digital economy.

“There is a significant shortfall of skills to transform Australian business in the digital economy,” Ellis said. “At REA when we bring people in we have to effectively de-program from the historical techniques they have used to manage people. It’s the preparedness to push the responsibility of the decision-making down to the people below you who have the expertise.”

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Solid supply chain better bet for online retailers than fancy websites

Friday, July 26th, 2013

Online retailers with extensive experience have proclaimed that it is the delivery system and not the fanciest new technology or the flashiest website that will lure Australian customers to shop at Australian online businesses.

Paul Greenberg, a pioneer in Australia’s online retail sector as co-founder of the DealsDirect Group in 2004, has said that customers want their orders delivered in a timely manner and if Australian businesses can that, they will likely prosper.

“The battleground has shifted to the supply chain,” he says.

This seems to be the philosophy of online fashion retail giant The Iconic, which placed a tremendous amount of importance on getting people their orders as quickly as possible, regardless of the cost. The Iconic has recently been in the spotlight for having to jettison a number of jobs and also for taking big losses in its first two years of operations. But all that is now said to have been a planned growth strategy. Investors ploughed a further $28 million into the business late last week.

As it becomes increasingly more difficult to keep fickle online shoppers happy, fast and reliable delivery is where many online retailers are hoping to set their businesses apart. However, Greenburg notes, that is not easily done, as a distribution network that hums like a well-oiled machine also tends to drive up costs and online retailers will have to make sure that they generate enough revenue to cover those costs.

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National Broadband Network’s future awaits Australian election outcome

Wednesday, July 24th, 2013

The fate of Australia’s National Broadband Network, which aims to bring internet access to the country’s farthest flung outposts, will not be known until the outcome of the country’s federal election is known.

The Labor government and conservative Liberal-led opposition have vastly different plans for the A$37.4 billion for the network (NBN).

A Liberal-led coalition election victory would drastically alter the way the NBN is rolled out, says Melbourne-based RMIT University electrical engineering expert Mark Gregory.

“There will still be activity, but there will definitely be winners and losers,” Gregory says.

While Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s Labor government initially promised to deliver Internet speeds of up to 100 megabits per second (Mbps) to 93% of premises by 2021 using fiber-optic cables, with the remaining remote locations served by satellite and fixed wireless, those goals have been steadily scaled back.

The project has also been plagued with problems and in-fighting among the companies tasked with building the network.

Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott, on the other hand, promises a A$30 billion fiber-to-the-node network. Under this plan, high-speed fiber would be laid to streetside “nodes” but the final connection to homes and businesses would rely on Telstra Corp Ltd’s ageing copper wires, with much slower download speeds than fiber.

The Liberal Party says this would provide 25 Mbps minimum by 2016 and 50 Mbps for the “vast majority of households” by 2019.

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businesses.com.au opens up domain name to subdomain names for small and medium businesses

Tuesday, July 23rd, 2013

Small and medium sized businesses in Australia or from overseas can now adopt a sub-domain name under www.businesses.com.au.

Australian domain name rules outlined by the .au Domain Administration prevent anyone but Australian businesses or companies from owning .com.au or .net.au domains.

But the opening up of business.com.au to subdomain names means that overseas businesses who want to do business in Australia can now have a local domain name.

Local private people, contractors, business owners and incorporated or unincorporated businesses can also have an online presence on the premium domain for a low weekly rental.

Greg Rogers, from Faxts Media which runs Businesses.com.au, said that applications are now open anyone in Australia or overseas to apply for a Businesses.com.au domain.

“AuDA rules are strict. An Australian business name or ABN is an essential requirement to own a .com.au domain name,” Rogers said. “I checked with AuDA myself and there are no restrictions on sub domains if the main site is owned by Australians”

“Netregistry owns a .com domain www.au.com. They have been selling and hosting websites as www.sample.au.com which are sub domains of .au.com, for years. There are 1000′s of them. Businesses.com.au is Australian and perfect for any business.”

“Businesses.com.au will allocate sub domains on a first come first served basis. We will not allow trademarks to be used unless the applicant has permission or is the holder of the trademark.”

To apply for a domain name with businesses.com.au, email ceo@businesses.com.au.

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Australian businesses playing catch up to Australian consumers when it comes to online business

Tuesday, July 16th, 2013

Australian consumers are giving a clear indication of what they want from businesses and now it’s up to those businesses to respond.

At a recent retail summit held by the Australian Information Industry Association and Australian Retailers Association, industry experts said Australian businesses need to increase their presence online to keep up with the customers they are trying to cater to.

The latest Roy Morgan State of the Nation report found internet shopping has experience more than a decade of year-on-year growth and now over 50% of Australians shop online, with total spending equating to $24.3 billion online for the 12 months to March this year.

This figure was an increase of 11.9% from March 2012 and outstripped total retail sales growth for the same period by 8.5%.

However, despite the continual increase in consumers shopping online, the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show only 43% of Australian businesses have a web presence. Those figures reflect especially poorly on small businesses, with only one-third of micro businesses online.

With eCommerce quickly becoming the favoured way of shopping for many consumers, Google’s retail industry leader Ross McDonald says Australian businesses are playing catch-up.

“Australian businesses are years behind Australian consumers,” McDonald says. “Measure your business from what your next-door neighbour, brother, mother, nieces and nephews expect of today’s retailer.”

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Australian businesses hope that falling Australian dollar helps them to lure back locals

Tuesday, July 16th, 2013

Australian businesses owners are turning a hopeful eye toward the falling Australian dollar.

The Australian currency has dropped by 15% against the US dollar since April and looks like it will continue to fall. This has Australian businesses hopeful that Australians will start spending their Australian dollars in Australia, whether at bricks and mortar shops in the country, or at Australian websites.

When the Australian dollar was at parity with the American dollar earlier this year, it meant that buying online at offshore websites was a lot cheaper for Australians, as the prices from overseas were typically much lower than in Australia. But now that the dollar has fallen, it should, in theory, close the price gap between Australian retailers and websites from overseas.

However, shopping online at foreign websites has to do with more than just price alone, analysts have noted.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia retail analyst Andrew McLennan said shoppers also like to have more options.

”There is no doubt that one of the key factors that gets consumers spending online internationally is the relative pricing, but it’s also the great range available, which is most often far broader internationally than is available in Australia,” McLennan said.

”There are brands you just can’t get in Australia, there are ranges you simply can’t get in Australia.”

In addition to that, Australians can often end up receiving purchases from overseas faster than they can when they buy them right in their own back yard.

”A lot of these overseas online players have far better developed online capabilities,” McLennan said. ”So you end up getting products that you purchased overseas quicker than you can get it from domestic online retailers.”

And the last rotten cherry on top for Australian businesses is that according to recent research from Ernst & Young, many Australians simply don’t care where they make their purchases from, saying it doesn’t matter to them where a website is based, as long as they get their money’s worth.

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Business Spectator launches online magazine

Thursday, July 11th, 2013

Business Spectator has launched an online family business magazine, appropriately titled Family Business Magazine.

The magazine will be available available online and through the Apple newsstand each month.

Produced in collaboration with Family Business Australia, the magazine will features family business profiles, which will take a close look at a particular family’s business journey, celebrate their success and allow other businesses to learn from their experiences.

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Online business matures in Australia in 2013

Tuesday, July 9th, 2013

2013, although only half over, has been heralded as the year when online retailing in Australia grew up. Even people who were decrying online retailing just a few years ago have come to realize that it’s an essential part of a business plan now and businesses that started online are growing in leaps and bounds.

Telsyte senior research manager Sam Yip says, it’s been a “very big year of change”.

“There have been players early in the space that have dropped out, and a lot of bricks-and-mortar retailers are doing more.”

“We’re not hearing any more Gerry Harvey stories; everyone acknowledges that this is the channel to be operating in.”

Even Australia Post is acknowledging the change, altering its operations to accommodate the influx of parcel shipments it now has to deal with because of the online retail boom.

Now that Australia has embraced online retailing, Yip says, platforms like mobile are up next.

But first, the actual logistics of online selling have to be perfected.

“The other big challenge here is around delivery,” Yip says. “In the past year we’ve seen horror stories of where logistics have gone wrong, with people getting wrong orders all the time.”

“There’s a need to really refine that back-end logistics functionality.”

Considering traffic data from Experian, revenue, and noteworthy achievements (and excluding local divisions of global companies, such as Apple and Amazon, along with auction sites such as eBay and Gumtree), the top 20 online retailers of 2013, in no particular order, are:

  • Kogan
  • Milan Direct
  • Catch of the Day
  • Booktopia
  • JB Hi-Fi
  • Officeworks
  • Specialty Fashion
  • Big W
  • BrandsExclusive
  • The Iconic
  • Shoes of Prey
  • DealsDirect
  • Get Wines Direct
  • Groupon
  • Ozsale
  • StyleTread
  • Dick Smith
  • Appliances Online
  • EB Games
  • Westfield

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